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http://writ.news.findlaw.com/ramasastry/20050531.html

The Proposal to Reauthorize and Expand Parts of the USA PATRIOT Act: Why
It's Unnecessary and, In Some Respects, Dangerous
By ANITA RAMASASTRY

Tuesday, May. 31, 2005

Currently, the U.S. Senate Intelligence Committee is currently considering
a draft bill that would reauthorize some of the most controversial
provisions of the USA PATRIOT Act. (I will refer to the bill as the
PATRIOT Reauthorization Act (PAREA)).

The reasons why these provisions are controversial - they trample on
Fourth Amendment and privacy rights, as I discussed in a prior column -
are reasons not to renew them. At a minimum, if they must be renewed, they
should be renewed with a "sunset" provision, allowing Congress to once
again consider whether they are necessary.

In addition to reauthorizing these controversial provisions, the bill, if
enacted into law, would also expand the government's power to secretly -
and without getting a court's approval - demand people's private records,
even though they aren't suspected of terrorist acts.

Overall, the result of PAREA's becoming law would be to further enlarge
the government's surveillance powers -- without any requirement that it
link individuals to particular suspected crimes before using these powers.
Yet the government has not made a compelling case that such
extraordinarily broad powers are necessary - as it ought to, when precious
civil liberties are involved.

The proposal - which is likely to be considered in a closed-door meeting
of the Senate Intelligence Committee - should be rejected or, at the very
least, dramatically modified to require independent judicial review prior
to subpoena issuance.


The Bid to Reauthorize Section 215: The Librarian's Nightmare With Tiny
Changes

One of the controversial PATRIOT Act provisions PAREA would make permanent
is Section 215. As I discussed in a previous column, this Section
currently allows intelligence investigators to demand all kinds of records
about citizens, even though they are not suspected of spying or terrorism.

It allows the FBI to gain records or other "tangible items" from any
person or organization, if the FBI claims a link to an ongoing terrorist
or foreign intelligence investigation. Secrecy is the key here: Section
215 gags those who receive an order to produce such records

Prior to the PATRIOT Act, the FBI had access to only a few types of
records that were of particular use in investigating terrorists and spies:
those belonging to hotels, motels, car and truck rental agencies, and
storage rental facilities. But Section 215 now allows the FBI to seek any
tangible item -- "including books, records, papers, documents, and other
items" -- regardless of who holds it. This could include sensitive medical
records or membership lists from clubs or religious organizations.

Also, prior to the PATRIOT Act, in order to get even the limited
categories of records that were eligible, the FBI had to present to the
Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) court "specific and
particularly facts giving reason to believe that the person to whom the
records pertain[ed]" was an agent of a foreign power (i.e. some sort of
spy). But now the FBI need not show a link between the people whose
records it is accessing, and any crime -- let alone a crime of terrorism.

Granted, Section 211 of PAREA would now require that the items that the
government seeks are "relevant" to that investigation. But with reasonable
minds disagreeing about what is "relevant," the addition of this word
means little.

Surely, lists of people who worship at a particular mosque may be relevant
to an investigation of possible terrorist connections of one among the
worshippers. But is each member's identity relevant? The whole point of
the law is that totally innocent non-suspects can be subjected to
searches; that the search must, at least, be "relevant" to the
investigation, provides little, if any, comfort.

A much more palatable amendment than Section 211, is the one provided in
the bipartisan Security and Freedom Enhancement Act (SAFE Act). The SAFE
Act is meant to curtail some of the more intrusive portions of the PATRIOT
Act while recognizing the importance of the government's need for strong
investigative tools. It would modify Section 215 to require the FBI to
establish "specific and particularly facts giving reason to believe that
the person to whom the records pertain is a foreign power or an agent of a
foreign power."

In layman's terms, the SAFE Act would require that the government would
have to establish that individual suspects were in fact connected to
spying or terrorism. It is fairer for the government to have to show that
someone is individually connected with terrorist acts, before gaining
access to all sorts of records about him.

And granted, PAREA would also require semi-annual reporting for orders
that relate to booksellers, firearm purchases, medical records and tax
information - presumably because such records are especially sensitive or
personal.

That's a good idea - but what about the sensitive, personal information
relating to membership in religious, political or social organizations?
Why is this information left out of the reporting requirement? Certainly,
what gun one buys is less private than where one chooses to worship!


Section 218 and the Continued Erosion of the Fourth Amendment

PAREA would also make permanent another controversial PATRIOT Act
provision: Section 218. Section 218 allows the government to obtain search
warrants using the FISA court, without having to respect Fourth Amendment
standards -- even when the evidence may be later used in a criminal
prosecution that has nothing to do with foreign intelligence.

As I have noted previously, prior to the PATRIOT Act, the U.S. government
kept our justice system in a state of equilibrium by creating a wall. This
sacred division separated, on the one hand, criminal law enforcement
(where individual suspicion of criminal activity was required to
investigate) and, on the other, foreign intelligence (where data was
sought broadly, to help prevent terrorism that might occur in the
future.).

But under the USA PATRIOT Act, the wall has been broken down.

>From 1978 until the PATRIOT Act was passed, the FISA Court's power to
issue secret warrants was limited solely intelligence-gathering, with a
view toward preventing espionage and terrorism. Thus, to procure such a
warrant, the government had to convince the FISA court there was "probable
cause" that the surveillance target was a foreign power or an agent of a
foreign power. Meanwhile, in other federal courts, and in and state
courts, under the Fourth Amendment, a warrant to intercept a
communication, or a search warrant, had to be based on "probable cause" to
believe that a crime has been or is being committed.

Now, as a result of Section 218 of the PATRIOT Act, intelligence gathering
need only be "a significant purpose" of FISA-authorized surveillance. And,
as I pointed out in an earlier column, the result is to open the door to
an end run around Americans' Fourth Amendment rights - for another purpose
of the surveillance, could well be domestic law enforcement.

And it has been: Not just CIA agents, but FBI agents as well -- or even
state law enforcement, cooperating with the CIA and FBI - now have, and
have used, the ability to utilize FISA's secrecy and its lower legal
standards for warrants and wiretaps.

This "significant purpose" standard should be removed, or clearly limited
by the requirement of a nexus to terrorism on the domestic side. But that
is not what PAREA does.

Indeed, Section 203 of PAREA not only will make Section 218 permanent, it
will also broaden the section. It states that that "foreign intelligence
information" includes a need to gather information for criminal law
enforcement related to terrorism

What counts as "law enforcement related to terrorism"? "International
terrorism" need not be involved, according to PAREA's sponsors' memorandum
summarizing the bill. It is enough if the law enforcement involves
"sabotage, clandestine actives and other " 'grave hostile acts.'"

The drafters of PAREA suggest this revision merely makes the law
consistent with the first-ever opinion of the FISA Review Court -- which
ratified the Justice Department's approach in 2003, as I discussed in a
column about this historic decision. But the FISA Review Court was careful
to limit the application of its decision, and PAREA flouts those limits.

In particular, the FISA Court stated that the government could only break
down barriers between the FBI and local criminal authorities with respect
to crimes that are related to foreign intelligence -- not ordinary crimes.
As the Court of Review noted, "the FISA process cannot be used as a device
to investigate wholly unrelated ordinary crimes." (Emphasis added)

And PAREA, as noted above, does not reflect this limitation. Rather, it
makes explicit that the FBI can use the FISA process to investigate
terrorist-related crimes. PAREA does not, however, state that the FISA
process may only be used for terrorist related crimes.


The New Proposal That Would Expand Secret Subpoena Powers

In addition to making these provisions permanent, PAREA Section 213 would
also introduce a new type of "administrative" - read: not court-approved -
subpoena in national security cases. The government could use such
subpoenas to secretly demand all sorts of records from businesses and
other institutions, without first receiving a court's permission.

All that would be required would be for the investigators themselves to
declare that the material they seek is needed as part of a national
security investigation. But that leaves room for exactly the kind of
excessive prosecutorial zeal that inspires the typical Fourth Amendment
requirement of a "neutral magistrate." Judges provide important checks and
balances in the criminal justice system - especially in the federal
system, where life tenure guarantees their independence.

Administrative subpoenas are fine when it comes to civil administrative
proceedings, in which law enforcement may fear that records may be
destroyed, or may seek the convenience of such a process when they have
lots of administrative records to gather. For instance, the Occupational
Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) has administrative subpoena
authority. But it uses the data it gathers to issue civil fines or
citations - not to prosecute alleged violators.

According to James Dempsey, the Deputy Director of the Center for
Democracy and Technology, current law authorizes administrative subpoenas
in 335 contexts. But a whopping 330 of these involve the use of such
subpoenas by administrative agencies in the context of regulatory
programs.

In contrast, a meager five of these contexts involves the authorization of
administrative subpoenas for use primarily in criminal investigations -
and even there, the subpoenas are not secret, as in PAREA: The target
often learns of the subpoena after a 90 day period expires, or when he is
indicted.

As Dempsey notes: "The [administrative subpoena programs] are subject to
various checks and balances. They often issue directly to the subjects of
investigations. In other words, the target of the investigation gets
notice of the subpoena because they receive the subpoena. They are
generally not subject to secrecy rules."

Also, unlike in PAREA, the basis for the subpoena must be a clear,
specific allegation that evidence shows, for instance, a doctor engaged in
health care fraud, or a person believed to be trafficking in child
pornography.

With the new PAREA subpoenas, however, the target may be investigated and
never know that he was a government target. Without his knowledge, the
results of the search may go into his dossier.

In the context of anti-terrorism efforts, these no-probable-cause searches
may well target searchees based on race, national origin, or religion. Yet
because they are secret, they may never be challenged in court. And the
possibility these searches may occur will doubtless chill free speech -
when any public remark may lead to a secret search on one's private
documents, for which there is no recourse or remedy.


Third Parties' Option to Challenge Subpoenas Is Not Much of a Safeguard

As a safeguard, PAREA proposes to allow the third party from who the
records are sought - say, your Internet Service Provider (ISP) to
challenge the administrative subpoena in court. But there's no guarantee
the ISP would bother to do so.

Going to court is costly, and if the third-parties don't bother, the
customer will never know. (Indeed, the business is prohibited from
notifying its customer of the existence of the subpoena.) So, as Dempsey
asked in his testimony before Congress, why would the third parties -
"airlines, hotels chains," and others -- "go to the expense of challenging
a 215 order or administrative subpoena?"

In sum, PAREA should be rejected, or substantially modified to allow
review by a neutral judge (a federal judge, not an administrative judge).

The government has obtained a broad range of powers in intelligence
investigations -- especially against foreigners, but also against U.S.
citizens. Given the secrecy with which these investigations are conducted,
their wide scope, and the lack of checks and balances, independent
judicial review - requiring a factual premise and particularized suspicion
for a subpoena to be authorized -- are the very minimum required to
safeguard our liberty.

----------

Anita Ramasastry is an Associate Professor of Law at the University of
Washington School of Law in Seattle and a Director of the Shidler Center
for Law, Commerce & Technology

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