October 7, 2005
Patriot Act Appeal Fails at Supreme Court
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/national/AP-Scotus-Patriot-Act.html?pagewant
ed=print

Filed at 7:49 p.m. ET

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Connecticut libraries lost an emergency Supreme Court
appeal on Friday in their effort to be freed from a gag order and
participate in a congressional debate over the Patriot Act.

Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg denied the appeal and offered an unusually
detailed explanation of her decision.

Ginsburg said the American Civil Liberties Union had made reasonable
arguments on behalf of its client, identified in a filing as the Library
Connection, an association of libraries in Connecticut.

However, Ginsburg said that the New York-based 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals should be given time to consider whether the Patriot Act, and its
requirement of secrecy in records demands, is unconstitutional as applied to
the libraries.

''A decision of that moment warrants cautious review,'' she said.

The ACLU, with backing from the American Library Association, argued that a
gag order prevents its client from taking part in debate on Capitol Hill
about the Patriot Act, which was passed shortly after the 2001 terror
attacks. Some key provisions expire at the end of the year.

A federal judge said that the gag order on the libraries had silenced people
''whose voices are particularly important in an ongoing national debate
about the intrusion of governmental authority into individual lives.''

The 2nd circuit put the decision on hold, and Ginsburg was asked to
intervene. In turning down that request, Ginsburg said she expected the
appeals court to hear arguments in the government's appeal and rule ''with
appropriate care and dispatch.'' Arguments are Nov. 2.

The case could still return to the Supreme Court.

The Patriot Act authorized expanded surveillance of terror suspects,
increased use of material witness warrants to hold suspects incommunicado
and secret proceedings in immigration cases.

Much of the Supreme Court appeal, filed earlier this week, was classified
and blacked out. The Bush administration's published response consisted of
blank pages. A filing by the American Library Association and other groups
included some details, as did Ginsburg's seven-page opinion.

She said that the library association member received an FBI demand for
records but was told that it would be illegal to tell anyone about it. The
group sued on free-speech grounds so that it could take part ''in the
current debate -- both in Congress and among the public -- regarding
proposed revisions to the Patriot Act,'' according to Ginsburg.

Federal prosecutors have maintained that secrecy about records demands is
necessary to keep from alerting suspects and jeopardizing terrorism
investigations.

Ann Beeson, the ACLU lawyer handling the case, said Friday that they would
continue their legal fight.

''Ultimately, we believe that this broad power, which allows the government
to seize library and Internet records without judicial authorization, is
unconstitutional and offensive to American democracy,'' she said.

The emergency appeal was filed with Ginsburg because she handles cases from
the 2nd Circuit.

The case is Doe v. Gonzales, 05-A295.



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