now, ashcroft gives us some shit to REALLY worry about ...
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Lawmakers pushed aside other work Monday to take up the administration's request for new wiretapping and other counterterrorism laws, prompted by Attorney General John Ashcroft's warning that terrorists could still be active in the United States. ``We've cleared our calendar,'' Senate Judiciary Committee spokeswoman Mimi Devlin said. House Judiciary Committee spokesman Jeff Lungren added, ``We know what a priority this legislation is for the administration, the Congress and the country, and we will act accordingly.'' One day after privately briefing congressional leaders, Ashcroft publicly urged Congress to quickly expand the FBI's wiretapping authority, to impose stronger penalties on those who harbor or finance terrorists and to increase punishments on terrorists themselves. Ashcroft, a former senator, told lawmakers the FBI needs his package passed this week, even though Congress is observing the Jewish holiday of Rosh Hashanah. ``I'm optimistic that we will be able to act quickly to provide law enforcement with the additional tools that are necessary to fight terrorism,'' Ashcroft said. House and Senate leaders had yet to see the specifications of Ashcroft's proposal Monday afternoon. The attorney general said it would be ready in a ``day or two,'' which led to uncertainty over whether committees will hold hearings or just send the package directly to the House and Senate floors for votes. ... omitted ... Part of Ashcroft's terrorism package includes a request to allow the FBI to seek wiretapping orders for a suspect instead of a telephone. That would mean law enforcement agents would be able to tap any phone a suspect uses, instead of having to ask for a new wiretapping order whenever the suspect changes telephones. With the introduction of cellular phones, it has become harder for law officers to track conversations of suspects because of the ease of getting new telephone numbers or new telephones, officials said. ``That's a key piece of legislation that would be helpful to us,'' FBI Director Robert Mueller said Monday. Ashcroft also wants wiretapping orders to extend over state lines. That would allow investigators around the country to tap all of a suspect's calls without getting a separate wiretapping warrant in each jurisdiction. ``This is a reasonable upgrade,'' he said. The attorney general also said he wants Congress to give him expanded electronic surveillance and search authority as well as the ability to identify, seize and forfeit terrorists' assets. The package would make contributing to terrorism groups a crime under money-laundering statutes, lift the statute of limitations on prosecuting terrorists and increase penalties for harboring terrorists. After their private briefing by Ashcroft and Mueller on Sunday, senators were positive about moving legislation forward quickly. ``I don't know how soon, but the sooner the better,'' said Sen. Richard Shelby, R-Ala., the top Republican on the Senate Intelligence Committee. ``All of us want to see the details of any legislative plan if there's going to be a legislative response, but Congress, I believe, is in the mood to do whatever it takes to win this war against terrorism.'' But some groups warned against moving too fast. The American Civil Liberties Union, for one, says Congress should slow down and hold hearings and deliberative debates on Ashcroft's proposed legislation to ensure it doesn't infringe on civil liberties. ``If we allow our freedoms to be undermined, the terrorists will have won,'' said Anthony Romero, the ACLU's executive director.
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"Citizen Q" posted a news clip, which included:
Part of Ashcroft's terrorism package includes a request to allow the FBI to seek wiretapping orders for a suspect instead of a telephone. That would mean law enforcement agents would be able to tap any phone a suspect uses, instead of having to ask for a new wiretapping order whenever the suspect changes telephones. With the introduction of cellular phones, it has become harder for law officers to track conversations of suspects because of the ease of getting new telephone numbers or new telephones, officials said. ``That's a key piece of legislation that would be helpful to us,'' FBI Director Robert Mueller said Monday.
A requirement under Title I of the ECPA is that the site of the targeted phone be identified. This is the statutory embodiment of the forth amendment particularization requirement. In the case of an "oral conversation," [within the meaning of the ECPA] Section 2518(11) eliminates the requirement when there is a finding by a judge reviewing the application that the site identification requirement is "impracticable." In contrast, for a "wire or electronic communication," there must be a finding that the purpose of the person who is the subject of surveillance is "to thwart interception by changing facilities." -------- [1] Although somewhat dated, see Michael Goldsmith, Eavesdropping Reform: The Legality of Roving Surveillance, 1987 U.Ill. L. Rev. 401 (1987). [2] The MINIMIZATION REQUIREMENT is found in 2518(5) of the ECPA ("Title III") requires interception be "conducted in such a way as to minimize the interception of communications not otherwise subject to interception," in order to prevent a fourth amendment prohibited "general search." For the search of a conversation to be reasonable, minimization must take place so that the government does not seize conversations unrelated to criminal activity. But see, SCOTT V. UNITED STATES, 436 U.S. 128 (1978) (court rejected the view that 2518(5) required officers to engage in good faith efforts to minimize the surveillance of non-pertinent conversations). "Scott factors" as delineated in later decisions, have been the subject of considerable criticism. Some states have rejected it entirely, requiring good faith at the outset under state statutes. (Biometric and technological minimization might provide a partial answer to Scott's latitude. If plausible, the Scott doctrine should be tightened in the statute to require sincere "good faith" minimization in light of any new technological aids to minimization.) [3] TESTIMONY OF JAMES P. FLEISSNER ON THE COMPREHENSIVE ANTITERRORISM ACT OF 1995... @ http://www.fas.org/irp/congress/1995_hr/h950612-3f.htm (discussing roving surveillance and supporting the harmonization of the two roving surveillance provisions, and discussing the crimes already in the statute with ties to terrorism). [4] NOTICE. The notice and inventory provisions of the ECPA need to be amended to provide notice to non-targets. 2518(8)(d) entitles only those persons who were named in the court order (suspected of criminal activity) to receive notice and inventory. The statutory provisions, which were supposed to provide oversight, have been rendered meaningless by the courts. There is a discretionary provision allowing a judge to notify a non-target individual if, in his/her opinion, circumstances call for it. [5] THE NATURE OF JUDICIAL OVERSIGHT. In regard to the Pen Register and Trap and Trace Device provisions, the complaint is the lack of judicial oversight. ["Upon an application made under section 3122(a)(1) of this title, the court *shall* enter an ex parte order authorizing the installation and use of a pen register or trap and trace device if the court finds that the attorney for the Government has certified to the court that the information likely to be obtained by such installation and use is relevant to an ongoing criminal investigation."] Communication data, or communication attributes, have already been the subject of considerable controversy. Some argue that in contrast to judicial and legislative interpretation, communication attributes are deserving of GREATER constitutional protection -- not less, pointing to the fact that communication data is more precise and revealing. [6] See also, _Terrorism & The Constitution-Sacrificing Civil Liberties in the Name of National Security_ by James X. Dempsey & David Cole -- available on Amazon. ~Aimee "But when, under conditions of modern warfare, our shores are threatened by hostile forces, the power to protect must be commensurate with the threatened danger." Korematsu v. United States, 323 U.S. 214, 220 (1944) (this rationale was used to uphold internment camps for American citizens). A reminder, I think.
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Aimee Farr
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