-Caveat Lector-

//search.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WPlate/1999-02/13/091l-021399-idx.html


Clear and Roving Danger
By Nat Hentoff
Saturday, February 13, 1999; Page A27
Deputy Attorney General Eric Holder [letters, Feb. 4] charges that in my
column on roving wiretaps ["Raid on Rights," Jan. 2], I was mistaken as to
the dangers of a new change in the law that, as he says, "allows federal
officials to wiretap conversations of a given suspect regardless of the
phone the suspect uses."
This new provision, Mr. Holder assures us, is "a relatively minor
adjustment to an existing statute that serves to protect privacy rather than
intrude upon it."
At first Mr. Holder says that I suggested roving wiretaps are a new idea.
But in my column, I noted that "since 1986, a very limited multipoint
wiretap [has been] permitted if the target showed a clear intent to evade a
conventional wiretap."
A conventional wiretap -- requiring particular descriptions of the place and
person to be searched -- is supposed to prevent the government from
using a general search warrant of the kind that the British troops so
wantonly used against the colonists.
However, electronic roving wiretaps now authorized for the FBI are the
equivalent in the physical world of giving its agents blanket permission to
follow a suspect around and search every home and business he or she
enters.
This is hardly "a relatively minor adjustment" to the Fourth Amendment.
Mr. Holder claims that roving wiretaps are needed because otherwise, a
suspect will keep changing phones to thwart surveillance. But most of us
could be suspected of such diversionary tactics. The average length of a
federal wiretap in 1997 was 51 days. In that amount of time, many of us
use one phone at work, another at home, a phone at a friend's house, a cell
phone and occasionally a pay phone. So, as I noted, roving wiretaps
actually thwart the purpose of the Fourth Amendment, which requires a
particular description of the place to be searched in addition to "the
persons or things to be searched."
Mr. Holder goes on to say that I am incorrect in stating that the FBI can
listen to the wandering phones even if the owner of the phone and his or
her family -- and not the target -- are using it. Not so, Mr. Holder says.
The official eavesdroppers, he claims, can "listen in only on those criminally
related conversations in which the suspect is a party." That surveillance
must end, he adds, "once the suspect hangs up."
But that is not exactly what the new law says. It states that phones can be
wiretapped so long as the suspect is "reasonably proximate" to those
phones.
If the Department of Justice were serious about not intercepting innocent
conversations, it would support a roving wiretap amendment mandating
that wiretapping not start until the suspect was observed actually using any
phone he or she is "proximate" to. The amendment should also require that
the rule specifically state that the FBI must hang up as soon as the target
does -- instead of recording everything.
Significantly, the Justice Department has been asking the FCC to require
phone companies to adjust their systems so that the FBI can continue to
listen in on conference calls involving the suspect -- even after he or she
has hung up on that conference call. So much for Mr. Holder's insistence
that innocent conversations not be recorded.
Mr. Holder says that I have left "the misapprehension that roving wiretaps
are used frequently." He notes that, "of all the federal electronic
surveillance requests reviewed in the Department of Justice last year, less
than one percent involved roving wiretaps."
But the new law allowing expansion of roving wiretaps was not signed until
Oct. 20 of last year and could not be implemented until guidelines were
promulgated. It may be instructive to see the 1999 figures, since the new
law is intended to increase electronic surveillance by the Justice
Department.
In any case, Mr. Holder emphasizes, wiretaps "enabled the FBI to prevent
terrorists from blowing up the bridges and tunnels leading into New York
City in 1994."
But according to the Administrative Office of the United States Courts,
from 1987 to 1997, only 0.13 percent of authorized wiretaps were used to
"investigate crimes involving arson, bombing and firearms violations." The
FBI understandably likes to use the specter of terrorism as a reason to
expand its wiretapping powers.
Mr. Holder says that he is opposed to the government's unreasonable
intrusion on an individual's privacy. Yet the Clinton administration, in which
he serves, put in place more federal wiretaps in 1995 and 1996 than all
those put in place by the individual states in those years.
>From the new increase in roving wiretaps to those placed for "intelligence"
purposes -- without probable cause of crime -- by the secret Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Court, housed at the Justice Department, this is an
administration, as Marc Rotenberg of the Electronic Privacy Information
Center says, that "has less regard for the privacy of American citizens" than
any since Richard Nixon.
© Copyright 1999 The Washington Post Company




Clear and Roving Danger
By Nat Hentoff
Saturday, February 13, 1999; Page A27
Deputy Attorney General Eric Holder [letters, Feb. 4] charges that in my
column on roving wiretaps ["Raid on Rights," Jan. 2], I was mistaken as to
the dangers of a new change in the law that, as he says, "allows federal
officials to wiretap conversations of a given suspect regardless of the
phone the suspect uses."
This new provision, Mr. Holder assures us, is "a relatively minor
adjustment to an existing statute that serves to protect privacy rather than
intrude upon it."
At first Mr. Holder says that I suggested roving wiretaps are a new idea.
But in my column, I noted that "since 1986, a very limited multipoint
wiretap [has been] permitted if the target showed a clear intent to evade a
conventional wiretap."
A conventional wiretap -- requiring particular descriptions of the place and
person to be searched -- is supposed to prevent the government from
using a general search warrant of the kind that the British troops so
wantonly used against the colonists.
However, electronic roving wiretaps now authorized for the FBI are the
equivalent in the physical world of giving its agents blanket permission to
follow a suspect around and search every home and business he or she
enters.
This is hardly "a relatively minor adjustment" to the Fourth Amendment.
Mr. Holder claims that roving wiretaps are needed because otherwise, a
suspect will keep changing phones to thwart surveillance. But most of us
could be suspected of such diversionary tactics. The average length of a
federal wiretap in 1997 was 51 days. In that amount of time, many of us
use one phone at work, another at home, a phone at a friend's house, a cell
phone and occasionally a pay phone. So, as I noted, roving wiretaps
actually thwart the purpose of the Fourth Amendment, which requires a
particular description of the place to be searched in addition to "the
persons or things to be searched."
Mr. Holder goes on to say that I am incorrect in stating that the FBI can
listen to the wandering phones even if the owner of the phone and his or
her family -- and not the target -- are using it. Not so, Mr. Holder says.
The official eavesdroppers, he claims, can "listen in only on those criminally
related conversations in which the suspect is a party." That surveillance
must end, he adds, "once the suspect hangs up."
But that is not exactly what the new law says. It states that phones can be
wiretapped so long as the suspect is "reasonably proximate" to those
phones.
If the Department of Justice were serious about not intercepting innocent
conversations, it would support a roving wiretap amendment mandating
that wiretapping not start until the suspect was observed actually using any
phone he or she is "proximate" to. The amendment should also require that
the rule specifically state that the FBI must hang up as soon as the target
does -- instead of recording everything.
Significantly, the Justice Department has been asking the FCC to require
phone companies to adjust their systems so that the FBI can continue to
listen in on conference calls involving the suspect -- even after he or she
has hung up on that conference call. So much for Mr. Holder's insistence
that innocent conversations not be recorded.
Mr. Holder says that I have left "the misapprehension that roving wiretaps
are used frequently." He notes that, "of all the federal electronic
surveillance requests reviewed in the Department of Justice last year, less
than one percent involved roving wiretaps."
But the new law allowing expansion of roving wiretaps was not signed until
Oct. 20 of last year and could not be implemented until guidelines were
promulgated. It may be instructive to see the 1999 figures, since the new
law is intended to increase electronic surveillance by the Justice
Department.
In any case, Mr. Holder emphasizes, wiretaps "enabled the FBI to prevent
terrorists from blowing up the bridges and tunnels leading into New York
City in 1994."
But according to the Administrative Office of the United States Courts,
from 1987 to 1997, only 0.13 percent of authorized wiretaps were used to
"investigate crimes involving arson, bombing and firearms violations." The
FBI understandably likes to use the specter of terrorism as a reason to
expand its wiretapping powers.
Mr. Holder says that he is opposed to the government's unreasonable
intrusion on an individual's privacy. Yet the Clinton administration, in which
he serves, put in place more federal wiretaps in 1995 and 1996 than all
those put in place by the individual states in those years.
>From the new increase in roving wiretaps to those placed for "intelligence"
purposes -- without probable cause of crime -- by the secret Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Court, housed at the Justice Department, this is an
administration, as Marc Rotenberg of the Electronic Privacy Information
Center says, that "has less regard for the privacy of American citizens" than
any since Richard Nixon.
© Copyright 1999 The Washington Post Company

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