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Bush "anti-terror" law mandates sweeping attacks
on democratic rights
By Kate Randall
31 October 2001
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The bill signed into law last Friday by George W. Bush provides,
in the name of combating terrorism, sweeping new powers to US
police and intelligence agencies. It marks a major escalation
in the assault on civil liberties and democratic rights.
Named the USA Patriot Act, the bill passed with overwhelming
bipartisan support. It was pushed through Congress in five weeksrecord
speed for legislation that alters many aspects of the criminal
justice code. The vote was 356 to 66 in the House of Representatives
and 98 to 1 in the Senate. Only one senator, Russell D. Feingold,
Democrat from Wisconsin, voted against the measure. Feingold complained
of relentless pressure from the administration to
move quickly on the bill without deliberation or debate.
The Bush administration began its campaign for the bill within
a few days of the September 11 attacks. Many of its provisions
attacking basic rights and constitutional safeguards have long
been sought by sections of the political establishment. The Bush
administration seized on the September 11 tragedy to advance the
anti-democratic agenda associated most closely with the Republican
right. It met with no serious resistance from Democratic liberals.
The USA Patriot Act defines domestic terrorism as an
attempt to intimidate or coerce a civilian population or
change the policy of the government by intimidation or coercion.
The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) complained that this
definition is so broad as to include political dissent by activists
involved in protests against world trade, environmental policies
or other issues. It is clearly broad enough to include labor strikes
or other forms of working class struggle.
The bill provides intelligence and police officials new electronic
surveillance authority and gives police agencies the power to
carry out secret searches. Attorney General John Ashcroft announced
Friday that the government would immediately implement its provisions.
The Bush administration had sought the power to detain indefinitely
and without charges immigrants suspected of terrorist involvement.
While stopping short of this, the bill expands the time a terrorist
suspect can be held in detention without being charged to seven
days from the previous two days. Under some circumstances, however,
immigrant detainees can be held virtually indefinitely.
If an immigrant is taken into custody, ostensibly for deportation
purposes, and the attorney general declares the individual a threat
to national security, the detention can be repeatedly extended
for six-month periods. In addition, a deportee can be held indefinitely
if his home country refuses to take him back.
The attorney general can bring deportation proceedings against
an immigrant on the flimsiest of grounds, including the charge
that the individual had associated with an organization
or group designated by authorities as terrorist. Such guilt
by association opens the way for excluding or deporting
people from the US for ideological reasons, and flouts the basic
rights of freedom of speech and expression.
Non-citizens, including legal permanent residents, can be denied
reentry to the United States for engaging in speech protected
by the First Amendment. It is left up to the attorney general
and the Justice Department to determine which organizations are
terrorist. An individual can be detained and deported
simply for having crossed paths with a targeted group.
Ashcroft signaled his intention to utilize the full strength
of the legislation in a speech last week in Washington to the
US Conference of Mayors: Let the terrorists among us be
warned. If you overstay your visas even by one day, we will arrest
you. If you violate a local law, we will ... work to make sure
that you are put in jail and ... kept in custody as long as possible.
We will use every available statute. We will seek every prosecutorial
advantage.
Roving wiretaps and secret searches
Expanded powers of surveillance in intelligence investigations
include roving wiretaps covering multiple telephones.
A judge can authorize surveillance not simply of a telephone line,
but all phones used by a suspected terrorist, including cellular
phones.
Existing rules governing the type of information that can be
monitored in phone calls are now extended to electronic mail.
A warrant can authorize surveillance not only of the content of
e-mail, but also allow authorities to follow the addresses of
incoming and outgoing e-mail, and the times messages are sent.
Internet service providers can be ordered to provide authorities
with the name, address and credit card information of customers
who sign up for accounts with anonymous or screen names. The administration
sought permanent authority for these increased powers of surveillance,
but the final bill calls for their expiration after four years,
at which time Congress will have the ability to renew them.
One of the most ominous provisions of the bill is the authorization
of secret searches. Using a secret warrant, the Federal Bureau
of Investigation (FBI) can break into homes or businesses to conduct
such searches, without notifying suspects until after the fact.
The government is not required to inform the suspect the content
of that which was found or seized. Federal agents do not need
probable cause to obtain this type of search warrant, only suspicion
of involvement in a crime, and these regulations can be applied
to routine criminal investigations unrelated to terrorism. Federal
officials will also be allowed to obtain nationwide search warrants
for terrorism investigations.
These provisions clearly contravene protections against arbitrary
searches and seizures laid down in the Fourth Amendment of the
US Constitution.
The bill also allows for intelligence wiretaps even if intelligence-gathering
is only a minor reason for seeking the warrant. Warrants for intelligence
gathering are governed by much looser standards than those obtained
in criminal cases, and are often issued in secrecy.
Another provision of the law allows the FBI to share information
collected during grand jury proceedings with the Central Intelligence
Agency, giving the CIA domestic information it has been restricted
from receiving in the past.
Credit, medical and student records can be retrieved secretly
by federal agencies on anyone suspected of involvement in terrorism,
after approval by a secret court, regardless of state privacy
laws. Senator Feingold pointed out that this provision could be
used to obtain the business or medical records of someone who
might have sat on an airplane with a suspected terrorist.
There are also banking provisions aimed at alleged money laundering
by suspected terrorist groups. These include measures allowing
the secretary of the treasury to impose sanctions on countries
that refuse to provide information to American investigators on
large depositors at US banks. American banks will also be banned
from conducting business with so-called shell banks, institutions
that have no physical facilities and are not part of a regulated
banking system.
Criminal sentences for committing acts of terrorism, or harboring
or financing suspected terrorists or their organizations, are
increased. It is now illegal for individuals or groups to possess
biological substances that could be used in a terrorist attack
for any purpose other than a peaceful one, as defined
by the government. A terrorist attack on a mass transit system
now becomes a federal crime.
Over 1,000 detained in federal dragnet
In the course of the government dragnet since September 11,
the FBI, the Immigration and Naturalization Service and other
law enforcement agencies have rounded up more than 1,000 suspects.
On Monday, a coalition of civil rights groups called on the Justice
Department to release the names of those detained or arrested
since the terror attacks.
The 20-member coalitionincluding the ACLU, the American
Immigration Lawyers Association, Amnesty International, and Arab-American
and Muslim organizationshas filed a Freedom of Information
request demanding the government release not only the identities
of the detainees, but also the nature of the charges filed against
them, the dates they were detained and where they are being held.
Kate Martin, director of the Center for National Security Studies,
declared, The secret detention of more than 800 people over
the past few weeks is frighteningly close to the practice of disappearing
people in Latin America.
The new anti-terror law is designed to legitimize
and expand precisely such police-state practices.
See Also:
US considers use of torture in interrogation
of terrorism suspects
[24 October 2001]
Nearly 600 detained
Widespread violations of civil liberties in US dragnet
[6 October 2001]
Democratic rights in America:
the first casualty of Bushs anti-terror war
[19 September 2001]
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