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New Patriot Act Creates Uproar, Brings Together Uncommon
Allies
By Michelle Mittelstadt
Dallas Morning News
Tuesday 15 April 2003
WASHINGTON -- Fearful that the Bush administration is poised to
ask Congress for greater anti-terrorism powers, including the right to
strip Americans of their citizenship, liberals and conservatives are
joining forces to block what they view as dangerous encroachments on civil
liberties.
The loose-knit coalition was on display last week when
conservative activists who otherwise are close administration allies
joined the American Civil Liberties Union to decry the Justice
Department's impending push for powers that could reach well beyond the
USA Patriot Act, which Congress raced to adopt in the dark, chaotic weeks
after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.
Possible outlines of what the Justice Department is seeking in a
bill dubbed "Son of Patriot" or "Patriot 2" have had privacy and
civil-libertarian groups across the political spectrum in an uproar since
a draft was leaked in February.
Although Justice Department officials insist the 86-page bill is
a preliminary draft that bears little resemblance to what ultimately will
be requested, some fear it's a sign of things to come.
"Based on past history of various administrations, when draft
legislation such as the 'Son of Patriot' that we've been now seeing are
first denied and then they surface -- where there's smoke there's fire,"
said former Rep. Bob Barr of Georgia, a conservative Republican who is now
an ACLU consultant. "We are very worried that it will surface in some way
relatively quickly."
Senate Judiciary Committee Democrats have argued that the Justice
Department should work with Congress to draft new anti-terrorism
legislation rather than write it in secret.
The draft bill would grant federal law enforcement sweeping new
power to wiretap, detain and punish suspected terrorists while limiting
court review and cloaking certain information from the public. Among the
most criticized proposals: the right to strip the citizenship of Americans
who provide "material support" to organizations designated terrorist
groups.
"Everyone is concerned with protecting our people and our society
and our homeland," said David Keene, chairman of the American Conservative
Union. "But everyone should be equally concerned at the potential costs to
our society and its very nature if we adopt measures that in retrospect
would be viewed as unwise."
Justice Department spokesman Mark Corallo declined to discuss
which parts of the leaked draft have been discarded and which remain
viable.
"We're not going to discuss things that are being deliberated
right now," he said.
He dismissed criticism that lawmakers are being cut out of the
loop, saying Congress ultimately will decide whether to accept, reject or
amend the package that will be sent to Capitol Hill later this year.
The Patriot Act has been "an invaluable tool" for terrorism
prevention, Corallo said, adding that he thinks critics have misunderstood
the law, which expanded wiretapping and spying authority, lowered
prohibitions on the sharing of intelligence with criminal investigators,
and imposed restraints on the public release of information.
"The Patriot Act actually strengthened constitutional
protections," he said.
That view is far from universally shared.
Librarians in some cities are hastening their routine shredding
of patrons' records because of Patriot Act provisions that allow the FBI
to review records at libraries, bookstores and other businesses.
A California dive shop owner objected when the FBI sought lists
of clients at his and other dive shops around the country, citing the
possibility that a terrorist diver could launch an attack by slipping
unseen into a U.S. port.
And now, groups such as the Eagle Forum and American Conservative
Union are setting aside historic policy differences with liberal-leaning
organizations such as the ACLU and the Electronic Frontier Foundation to
tackle a range of post-Sept. 11 actions they view as threats to freedoms.
Conservative groups historically have left the defense of civil
liberties to the ACLU, conservative activist Grover Norquist said. But, he
added, "I'm not sure given the Republican control of the House and the
Senate and the government that we can count on our left-of-center friends
to look out for some of these issues."
The Patriot Act and its possible successor aren't the liberal and
conservative groups' only concerns. They fret about a data-mining program
known as Total Information Awareness being developed within the Pentagon;
an airline passenger profiling system that could roll out later this year;
and other proposals.
Waters and others are voicing particular dismay at reports that
Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, with
administration backing, wants to make permanent Patriot Act provisions
that expire in 2005.
"I am very concerned at the idea of getting rid of the (sunset
provisions)," Norquist said.
Barr, the former congressman, said: "This is particularly
troubling because we have not yet had nearly the full opportunity that we
ought to have to see how the Patriot Act is working. This is a very, very
complex piece of legislation."
(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material
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© Copyright 2003 by TruthOut.org
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