The USA PATRIOT Act has generated a great deal of controversy since its enactment.
Opponents of the Act have been quite vocal in asserting that it was passed opportunistically after the
September 11 attacks, believing that there would have been little debate. They view the Act as one that was hurried through the
Senate with little change before it was passed. (Senators
Patrick Leahy and
Russell Feingold proposed amendments to modify the final revision.)
The sheer magnitude of the Act itself was noted by
Michael Moore in his controversial film
Fahrenheit 9/11. In one of the scenes of the movie, he records Congressman
Jim McDermott alleging that no
Senator read the bill and
John Conyers, Jr. as saying, "We don't read most of the bills. Do you really know what that would entail if we read every bill that we passed?" Congressman
Conyers then answers his own rhetorical question, asserting that if they did it would "slow down the legislative process".[206] As a dramatic device,
Moore then hired an ice-cream van and drove around
Washington, D.C. with a loud speaker, reading out the Act to puzzled passers-by, which included a few Senators.
However, Moore was not the only commentator to notice that not many people had read the
Act. When
Dahlia Lithwick and
Julia Turne for
Slate asked, "How bad is
PATRIOT, anyway?", they decided that it was "hard to tell" and stated:
The
ACLU, in a new fact sheet challenging the
DOJ Web site, wants you to believe that the act threatens our most basic civil liberties. Ashcroft and his roadies call the changes in law "modest and incremental." Since almost nobody has read the legislation, much of what we think we know about it comes third-hand and spun. Both advocates and opponents are guilty of fear-mongering and distortion in some instances.
One prime example of a controversy of the
Patriot Act is shown in the case of
Susan Lindauer.
Another is the recent court case
United States v.
Antoine Jones. A nightclub owner was linked to a drug trafficking stash house via a law enforcement
GPS tracking device attached to his car. It was placed there without a warrant, which caused a serious conviction obstacle for federal prosecutors in court. Through the years the case rose all the way to the
United States Supreme Court where the conviction was overturned in favor of the defendant. The court found that increased monitoring of suspects caused by such legislation like the Patriot Act directly put the suspects'
Constitutional rights in jeopardy.
The
Electronic Privacy Information Center (
EPIC) has criticized the law as unconstitutional, especially when "the private communications of law-abiding
American citizens might be intercepted incidentally",[209] while the
Electronic Frontier Foundation held that the lower standard applied to wiretaps "gives the
FBI a 'blank check' to violate the communications privacy of countless innocent
Americans".[48]
Others do not find the roving wiretap legislation to be as concerning.
Professor David D. Cole of the
Georgetown University Law Center, a critic of many of the provisions of the Act, found that though they come at a cost to privacy are a sensible measure[210] while
Paul Rosenzweig, a
Senior Legal Research Fellow in the
Center for
Legal and Judicial Studies at the
Heritage Foundation, argues that roving wiretaps are just a response to rapidly changing communication technology that is not necessarily fixed to a specific location or device.[211]
The Act also allows access to voicemail through a search warrant rather than through a title
III wiretap order.[
212]
James Dempsey, of the
CDT, believes that it unnecessarily overlooks the importance of notice under the
Fourth Amendment and under a
Title III wiretap,[
213] and the
EFF criticizes the provision's lack of notice. However, the EFF's criticism is more extensive—they believe that the amendment "is in possible violation of the Fourth Amendment to the
U.S. Constitution" because previously if the FBI listened to voicemail illegally, it could not use the messages in evidence against the defendant.[
214] Others disagree with these assessments. Professor
Orin Kerr, of the
George Washington University school of law, believes that the
ECPA "adopted a rather strange rule to regulate voicemail stored with service providers" because "under ECPA, if the government knew that there was one copy of an unopened private message in a person's bedroom and another copy on their remotely stored voicemail, it was illegal for the FBI to simply obtain the voicemail; the law actually compelled the police to invade the home and rifle through peoples' bedrooms so as not to disturb the more private voicemail." In Professor
Kerr's opinion, this made little sense and the amendment that was made by the
USA PATRIOT Act was reasonable and sensible.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patriot_Act
- published: 20 Apr 2015
- views: 1063