http://www.wired.com/news/privacy/0,1848,63702,00.html?tw=wn_tophead_1


http://tinyurl.com/36grn


Forget drug-free and nuclear-free zones. A growing grassroots movement
seeks to make the United States a Patriot Act-free zone, one city at a
time.

Or, at the very least, the people behind the movement hope to make
their cities constitutional safe zones.

In the past two years, more than 300 cities and four states have
passed resolutions calling on Congress to repeal or change parts of
the USA Patriot Act that, activists say, violate constitutional rights
such as free speech and freedom from unreasonable search and seizure.

Barring that, the resolutions declare that their communities will
uphold the constitutional rights of their residents should federal law
enforcement agents come knocking on the door of local authorities for
assistance in tracking residents. This means local authorities will
insist on complying with federal orders only in ways that do not
violate constitutional rights. The resolutions are not binding,
however, and do not affect the federal government's actions.

The national movement was launched in 2001 by the Bill of Rights
Defense Committee, an organization led by activist Nancy Talanian.
Talanian first lobbied her community -- Northhampton, Massachusetts, a
town of 30,000 people -- to stand against the act in November 2001,
when few people had heard about the legislation.

Talanian and fellow activists urged newspaper editors to write about
the legislation and hosted a public forum attended by 400 people,
including Northampton's mayor and chief of police. Word spread quickly
to other communities, four of which passed their own resolutions
before Northampton passed its declaration the following May.

Two years later, 322 municipalities and four states -- Alaska, Hawaii,
Maine and Vermont -- have Patriot Act resolutions.

Congress passed the USA Patriot Act swiftly in October 2001, 45 days
after the Sept. 11 attacks, easing restrictions on the government's
ability to dig up personal information about citizens and
non-citizens, and obtain wiretaps and search warrants. Only one
senator, Russ Feingold (D-Wisconsin), and 61 House of Representative
members voted against the legislation.

Under the act, federal investigators can obtain individuals' library,
financial, health and education records from cities while barring
municipal workers from letting anyone know authorities have seized the
documents. Officials can also monitor the activities of people who
have not been identified as suspects and search a home or office
without prior notice.

The municipal resolutions, crafted individually by each community,
vary in language. They affirm, for the most part, that city employees
aiding federal authorities in national security investigations will
not violate the rights of people under investigation, such as
monitoring political and religious gatherings where people are
engaging in activities protected by the First Amendment.

Hawaii was the first to pass a statewide resolution, citing the
internment of Japanese-Americans during World War II as a motivating
factor.

Talanian said fewer than five municipalities rejected resolutions
brought before them. These included Boston and Petaluma, California, a
small town north of San Francisco.

Fred Hemmings, a Republican state senator in Hawaii who voted against
a resolution passed in his state, called the resolution a political
play by leftists bent on criticizing the government.

"There are constitutional zealots that somehow believe, especially in
times of war, that some of our adversaries should be protected by
rights given to us by the Constitution," he said. "But the people on
the left are forgetting that we're fighting a war against a nationless
enemy. It has to be fought on completely new terms."

He said although he has not read the Patriot Act in detail, he
believes "it does provide for adequate judicial oversight of any
intrusion into a person's personal life."

But Councilwoman Kathy Lantry from St. Paul, Minnesota, where a
resolution passed 6-to-1, took issue with the interpretation that only
liberals are behind the movement.

"There are many conservative councilors around the country who have
stated emphatically that there are many portions of the Patriot Act
that are in direct violation to the way that many of us thought we do
things in America," she said. "It's an easy out to say it's just a
liberal issue."

Talanian said the community movements, which act independently of her
national group and draft their own resolutions, consist of coalitions
of disparate groups, from conservative libertarians to liberal civil
rights activists.

"It's been very nonpartisan," she said. "There have been mixtures of
political parties, as well as peace and veterans groups and student
and faculty groups, working together."

Although the resolutions don't carry official weight, the communities
say they hope to send a message to Congress to change or repeal parts
of the act.

"Resolutions are powerful in that a city council can tell employees in
their jurisdiction how they will behave," said Talanian. "They can say
we don't want law enforcement to engage in certain activities even if
authorized by certain legislation."

Although the resolutions don't prevent federal agents from monitoring
or arresting citizens on their own, Talanian said federal authorities
would be less likely to pursue surveillance without probable cause,
since they don't have the resources to pursue every person who
interests them without the cooperation of local law enforcement.

"It might create some checks and balance by reason of logistics or
budget priorities for the FBI," she said.

Councilwoman Lantry said no one should underestimate the power local
communities can have over how the federal government does its work.

"Maybe one tiny little city council in St. Paul, Minnesota, isn't
going to change the way this country does business, but as others join
in that cause, it will give pause to those passing policy that perhaps
they didn't think about, and need to think about, the negative impact
(of the legislation)," she said. "That idea -- that because we can't
have a direct impact we shouldn't say anything -- is not the way our
country works."

Talanian said the community groups don't oppose all of the Patriot
Act's provisions. "We're not saying the entire Patriot Act should be
repealed but that certain sections need to be debated to make sure
people's rights are being protected."

She pointed to the recent case involving Oregon lawyer Brandon
Mayfield, who was arrested by the FBI after it mistakenly matched
Mayfield's fingerprint to one found on a bag related to the train
bombing in Madrid.

"Brandon Mayfield illustrates what can happen if there are laws that
are so elastic that they allow people to be picked up and detained and
have their houses searched and their careers harmed using ways that
are not effective for catching terrorists," Talanian said.

Some provisions of the Patriot Act will expire in December 2005. But
the Bush administration and congressional allies have been pushing
aggressively to get Congress to null the expiration clause. In
January, President Bush called on Congress to renew the Patriot Act in
his State of the Union address. He has been urging the same in stump
speeches on his campaign trail.

Attorney General John Ashcroft has said repealing or changing the
Patriot Act would hamper the government's ability to catch terrorists
and protect the public.

But the government may be getting the message that citizens are
unhappy with the legislation. In March, Chuck Rosenberg, chief of
staff to James Comey, the second-highest official in the Justice
Department, told a reporter in St. Louis, Missouri, "We're losing this
fight."

Talanian said it's important for people to understand that they, not
just Congress, can and should participate in debates about national
security and legislation that will likely be around a long time.

"Hopefully, the more communities pass resolutions, (the more it) will
help change the laws and make people more aware of what their rights
are and the importance of protecting them in the future, so that a
Patriot Act in a few years couldn't be passed quietly without being
read," she said.



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