Too Much Power To Fight Terrorism?
by
Kerby Anderson
Most Americans are pleased with the progress in fighting
terrorism. But many legislators and political commentators
are becoming increasingly concerned about the abuse
and misuse of laws hastily passed to combat terrorism.
They are beginning to ask if anti-terrorism is anti-Constitution.
Congress overwhelmingly passed the USA Patriot Act
in October. In fact, Russ Feingold (D-WI) was the only
senator to vote against it noting that it would be easier
to catch terrorists in a "police state." And
that is precisely why many are calling for a second
look at the Patriot Act. In fighting terrorism, the
bill also seems to be fighting liberty. Consider some
of its key provisions:
1. The Patriot Act weakens grand jury secrecy. Already
there is criticism that grand juries have become mere
tools of the prosecution and have lost their independence.
By destroying its secrecy, any federal official or bureaucrat
can "share" grand jury testimony or wiretap
information.
2. The Patriot Act weakens Fourth Amendment protection
against unreasonable searches and seizures. Under the
Act, law-enforcement agencies can in "rare instances"
search a person's home without informing that homeowner
for up to 90 days. This so-called "sneak and peek"
provision can be used to sneak into your home, and even
implant a hidden "key logger" device on a
suspect's computer (allowing federal officials to capture
passwords and monitor every keystroke).
3. The Patriot Act weakens equal protection of the
law. Formerly habeas corpus protected citizens and foreigners
from warrantless arrest and imprisonment. Now an alien
can be arrested and held without being charged for six
months. Imprisonment can be continued for another six
months "on suspicion." Apparently the Act
does not specify how many times imprisonment can be
renewed.
4. The Patriot Act weakens financial privacy. The bill
added additional amendments and improvements to the
Bank Secrecy Act which already encourages FDIC member
banks to profile account holders and report to the government
(FBI, IRS, DEA) when you deviate from your usual spending
or deposit habits. The Act exempts bank employees from
liability for false reporting of a money laundering
violation.
5. The Patriot Act expands the definition of terrorism
to include relatively minor offenses. The definition
includes actual terrorist offenses (homicide, arson,
assassination), but also includes other offenses such
as the destruction of government property. One commentator
pointed out this could even include a teenager throwing
rocks through a post office window or a human rights
activist who vandalizes a sign outside a dictatorship's
government office.
I believe Americans should strongly support President
George W. Bush and Attorney General John Ashcroft in
their attempts to track down terrorists and bring them
to justice. But Congress put too much power in the hands
of the executive branch and that power could easily
be abused by this administration or future administrations.
President John Adams used the Alien and Sedition Act
to imprison his political enemies and curb newspaper
editors critical of him. President Woodrow Wilson permitted
his attorney general (Mitchell Palmer) to stop political
dissent during the Palmer Raids. And President Franklin
Delano Roosevelt interned thousands of Japanese-American
citizens during World War II.
But some of the greatest expansion of powers have come
under Republican presidents. The first Republican president,
Abraham Lincoln, suspended the writ of habeas corpus.
This led to the imprisonment of physicians, lawyers,
journalists, soldiers, farmers, and draft resisters.
Sixteen members of the Maryland legislature were arrested
in order to prevent them from voting for their state
to secede from the Union. By the time the Civil War
was over, 13,535 arrests had been made.
And though liberal Democrats are often credited with
expanding the size and scope of the federal government,
Republican administrations are actually the ones that
have expanded various police powers. RICO and nearly
all the seizure laws (where police can confiscate cars,
boats, even homes without due process) were passed by
Republican administrations. Many fear the Patriot Act
of 2001 may be just one more example of expanded police
powers provided to government during a Republican administration.
Dana Milbank wrote in the Washington Post (Nov. 20,
2001) that "The Sept. 11 terrorist attacks and
the war in Afghanistan have dramatically accelerated
a push by the Bush administration to strengthen presidential
powers, giving President Bush a dominance over American
government exceeding that of other post-Watergate presidents
and rivaling even Franklin D. Roosevelt's command."
Tim Lynch (director of the Project on Criminal Justice
at the Cato Institute) said, "A single individual
is going to decide whether the war is expanded to Iraq.
A single individual is going to decide how much privacy
American citizens are going to retain."
Congress must revisit this important topic of anti-terrorism
and modify some of the provisions of the Patriot Act.
Congressional hearings should be convened to fully debate
such controversial proposals as the "roving wiretap"
and the "sneak and peek" provisions.
Congress should also pass legislation that would sunset
all aspects of the Patriot Act. The bill currently has
sunset provisions that apply to selected portions of
the legislation. But sunset provisions do not apply
to the expanded powers given to the federal government
which weaken the Fourth Amendment protections we are
guaranteed under the Bill of Rights. The bill was touted
as an emergency wartime measure, but some of the most
dangerous aspects of the bill would continue on even
after America wins the war on terrorism. Emergency wartime
powers should not continue into peacetime.
This administration needs some powerful weapons to
fight terrorism. But Congress put too many in the hands
of the president and attorney general when they hastily
passed the Patriot Act. It is time to revisit this bill
and make some necessary changes.
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