Today and Tomorrow! 

THE MINNEAPOLIS BILL OF RIGHTS DEFENSE COMMITTEE
presents A Community Forum & Discussion 

The federal government is trading in YOUR rights to
privacy, free speech, and personal security, all in
the name of fighting terrorism. 30 cities have passed
Resolutions resisting these unconstitutional measures 

Let’s organize to take the Constitution back! 

Thursday, Feb. 6 
7:00 – 9:00 p.m. 

Featured Panelists MN State Rep. Keith Ellison,
Minneapolis Omar Jamal, Somali Justice & Advocacy
Center MN State Sen. Mee Moua, St. Paul Caroline
Palmer, National Lawyers Guild Jaye Rykunyk, Union of
Hotel Employees & Restaurant Employees (HERE) 

Henry High School Auditorium 4320 Newton Avenue North
Minneapolis 


Friday, Feb. 7 7:00 – 9:00 p.m. 

Featured Panelists MN State Reps. Keith Ellison and
Karen Clark, Minneapolis MN State Sen. Scott Dibble
Peter Erlinder, President, National Lawyers Guild Omar
Jamal, Somali Justice & Advocacy Center MN State Rep.
Neva Walker, Minneapolis Moderator: Leslie Reindl,
Minnesota Alliance of Peacemakers 

South High School Auditorium 3131 - 19th Avenue South
Minneapolis 

********************************* 

The Minneapolis Bill Of Rights Defense Committee was
formed in order to promote a city Resolution opposing
those parts of the USA PATRIOT and Homeland Security
Acts and associated orders and directives that
threaten our constitutionally guaranteed civil rights.
We are circulating a petition in support of this
initiative. We welcome the participation of people and
groups from across the political and social spectrums
to join our efforts. contact: web: 

http://minneapolis.bordc.org email: 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] phone: (612) 305-1232 

Following the attacks of September 11, 2001, the
United States government responded to the threat of
terrorism by passing the USA PATRIOT Act, the Homeland
Security Act, as well as a series of Federal Executive
Orders issued by President Bush, the Department of
Justice, and the Immigration and Naturalization
Service. 

Most Americans are not aware of the extent to which
these measures expand the government’s power to invade
their privacy, to imprison people without due process,
and to track and punish dissent. These acts empower
government and law enforcement agencies from the
federal level down to the local level. 

Are you worried yet? If not, read on… The USA PATRIOT
Act violates First Amendment guarantees of freedom of
speech and the press. Section 215 of the Act
authorizes federal agents to demand, from bookstores
and libraries, records of books that a person
suspected of terrorism has purchased or read, as well
as records of a suspect’s activities on a library
computer. The Act also prohibits the bookseller or
librarian from informing anyone of this search. The
USA PATRIOT Act violates the Fifth Amendment guarantee
of due process of law. Section 412 of the Act allows
that, upon the mere suspicion of engaging in terrorist
activities, a non-citizen may be detained for as long
as seven days without being charged with any
violation. Furthermore, the Attorney General is not
required to inform the detainee of the evidence on
which a certification of terrorism is made, nor to
provide him or her with an opportunity to contest the
evidence at a hearing with an Immigration Judge. The 

USA PATRIOT Act violates the Fourth Amendment right to
privacy and protection against unreasonable searches
and seizures. Section 213 of the Act allows law
enforcement officers to search a person’s home or
office without notifying the person of the search
warrant until after the search has been completed. 

What about those other Acts and Executive Orders? Can
it get any worse? The Homeland Security Act allows law
enforcement officers to trace internet activity
without a court order. A Department of Justice
regulation effective October 31, 2001, allows
eavesdropping on attorney/client conversations; prior
court authorization can drop the requirement of
written notice to the inmate and attorney. An interim
regulation issued by the Attorney General on April 22,
2002 forbids any state or county jail from releasing
information about INS detainees housed in their
facilities. 

Let’s organize… and make Minneapolis safe for
democracy. For further information on these and
related issues: 
Minneapolis Bill of Rights Defense Committee
http://minneapolis.bordc.org Bill of Rights Defense
Committee (national) www.bordc.org American Civil 

Liberties Union
www.aclu.org/SafeandFree/SafeandFreeMain.cfm 

Center for Constitutional Rights
www.ccr-ny.org/whatsnew/usa_patriot_act.asp 

National Lawyers Guild
www.nlg.org/post911/legislation/legislation-index.htm 

“They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a
little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor
safety.” - Benjamin Franklin 

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