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Powering Down the Patriot Act

News: In the wake of another damaging report detailing the bureau's abuse of its data-gathering power, Congress is seeking to limit the use of national security letters.

April 29, 2008


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There's a move afoot on Capitol Hill to rein in some of the vast powers conferred upon government investigators by the Patriot Act, the infamous, hastily crafted law written in response to the 9/11 attacks. New legislation has been introduced in both houses of Congress intended to curb the FBI's ability to collect private data on virtually anybody using a tool called a national security letter (NSL). The bills come in the wake of yet another damaging FBI inspector general report on the bureau's abuse of its expanded authorities.

"The privacy of American citizens is a core value in our society," said Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.), a former federal prosecutor and member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, at an April 23 hearing on the FBI's use of NSLs. "I think this is our next really big civil liberties issue."

And addressing that issue may start with a bill, sponsored by Sen. Russ Feingold (D-Wisc.), which would both drastically limit the circumstances under which these secretive orders are issued and strictly regulate how the information obtained is handled by the FBI.

NSLs function, in some superficial ways, as traditional subpoenas. Like subpoenas, they require recipients to turn over information that might be relevant to criminal investigators. Unlike subpoenas, however, NSLs aren't subject to judicial oversight, making them ripe for abuse.

An NSL authorizes the acquisition of what's known as metadata, information like phone records and financial statements—that reveal a suspect's behavior only. An NSL can't, for instance, serve as a warrant for a wiretap, which gathers the contents of a conversation, but it can be used to obtain reams of data (such as phone numbers called) about an individual's calling patterns. It is often used to collect a person's business (or "transactional") information as well—with an NSL, the FBI can ask for a person's insurance information, but not his medical records.

NSLs aren't subject to the approval of any court or judge, they can be issued under extremely broad circumstances, and, by way of a sweeping gag order, they forbid the recipient from discussing the information request under almost any circumstances. Their use has exploded since the passage of the Patriot Act, which removed almost all legal restrictions on the FBI's authority to issue them.

Dubbed the National Security Letter Reform Act of 2007, Feingold's bill would check NSL authority in a number of ways. Among other things, it would limit the type of information the FBI can demand in an NSL to a defined category of less-sensitive data (such as names, addresses, account numbers, IP addresses, and other identifying materials), while requiring agents to seek more personal information (phone and financial records, for instance) through some sort of judicial process. It would limit the now-indefinite term of the gag order to no more than six months. And it would restrict the FBI's ability to share the obtained information—now accessible to thousands of people—with other agencies. A similar bill introduced in the House by Rep. Jerrold Nadler (D-N.Y.) would allow victims of illegally applied NSLs to sue for damages in civil court.

Both bills seek to prevent the FBI from repeating an incident that took place in North Carolina in July 2005. At the time, FBI agents in Raleigh were seeking the educational records of an Egyptian man named Magdy Mahmoud Mustafa el-Nashar, once a student at North Carolina State University, in conjunction with their investigation of the London subway bombings earlier that month. (As it turns out, he was innocent of any wrongdoing.) As part of an apparent attempt to avoid judicial oversight, and despite the fact that NSLs do not apply to school records, the FBI handed university officials an NSL. In doing so, the bureau broke the law.

Realizing, correctly, that NSLs did not apply to el-Nashar's private files, lawyers for the university refused to turn over his records to the FBI, telling the agents to come back with a grand jury subpoena instead.

In fact, according to a report released earlier this month by the Electronic Frontier Foundation, the FBI had already obtained the documents using a subpoena days before the university rebuffed its NSL request. But then, perhaps to keep its investigation of el-Nashar as covert as possible, FBI agents returned the documents to the school and re-requested them with the unlawful NSL. When the university refused to comply with the letter, FBI director Robert Mueller used the occasion to argue that his agency's NSL authority needed to be strengthened.

Not all letter recipients have been as cautious as North Carolina State. A 2007 FBI audit, which sampled 10 percent of all NSLs issued since 2002, discovered hundreds of instances in which the FBI collected information it didn't have the authority to obtain. In only four cases was that improperly obtained information purged from the FBI's databases, Feingold said at last week's hearing.

A widely reported inspector general review in 2007 documented hundreds of other examples of NSL abuse, and a follow-up report released this March concluded that the FBI had failed to implement safeguards to mitigate those abuses.

Aside from the Judiciary committee's ranking member, Sen. Arlen Specter (R-Penn.), only two Republicans—Sen. John Kyl (R-Ariz.) and Sen. Jeff Sessions (R-Ala.)—attended last Wednesday's hearing. As a harbinger of the legislative skirmish ahead, both men voiced strong reservations about the bill. Sessions, who once served as Alabama's attorney general, said he disagreed with a previous tightening of the national security letter provision in the Patriot Reauthorization Act of 2005, and objected to further restrictions on the FBI's use of NSLs. The limits in the proposed legislation, Sessions said, were "all to make sure that the spies and terrorists have their full rights—in fact, have more rights than drug dealers."

A distinctly different view was voiced by Specter, who complained that, when it comes to the FBI's use of NSLs, Congress currently does not have "the semblance of effective oversight."

Photo by flickr user crazbabe21 used under a Creative Commons license.

Brian Beutler is the Washington correspondent for the Media Consortium, a network of progressive media organizations, including Mother Jones.



 

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I wonder whether the climate in the executive branch will change after Bush is replaced by someone with a brain. I have fantasies of Hillary or Barack calling FBI officials to account for the crap that's gone on for the last eight years, while a heavily democratic senate overrides attempted filibusters by the republican leftovers, as congress goes about the business of cleaning up the various messes left by the Bush administration. I know it's only a dream, but it keeps me going.
Posted by:lawyerfanApril 30, 2008 11:58:09 AMRespond ^
previous to 9-11, we had enough laws to go to war and arrest anyone involved in any due attack to american soil. we did not need to create new ones. We did not need to keep identities of arrested suspects secret or any of that related.
point blank the authorities can display names of those arrested, and not have so much of a doubt.
Posted by:Dr.QApril 30, 2008 12:59:42 PMRespond ^
I find it fascinating that these schools and businesses who eagerly take in foreign student and cheap foreign slave laborers in; but are all fired up to hand over records without a qualm or a court order, and scream bloody murder if they are required to obey our laws, constitution and the worker's human and civil rights....
Posted by:NancyApril 30, 2008 2:28:56 PMRespond ^
The statement "the infamous, hastily crafted law written in response to the 9/11 attacks" is misleading, as there is compelling evidence to support the idea that this was worked on prior to the Semptember incident.
Posted by:TorinApril 30, 2008 3:58:49 PMRespond ^
OUTSTANDING ARTICLE! I am sending it to my Congressman-soon-to-be-Senator Tom Udall, who, as you may know, has led a fight against the Patriot Act literally since Day 1, after a changed version was rushed to the House floor for a vote, and no one had had a chance to read the updated version, essentially voted on something that none of them had ever read!
Posted by:STEPHEN FOX of Santa FeApril 30, 2008 6:26:22 PMRespond ^
Has the FBI ever failed to abuse any special powers given to it going back to illegally wiretapping Martin Luther King Jr.? That's their legacy.
Posted by:EliducApril 30, 2008 8:45:09 PMRespond ^
Hey, Brian. The Patriot Act wasn't hastily written. It was sitting on the shelf waiting for a "Pearl Harbor" to activate it. And so conveniently, one came along just in the nick of time to help out the PNAC nut cases.
Posted by:chuckApril 30, 2008 10:23:53 PMRespond ^
Speaking of illegal wiretaps justlook at the MJN banner ad ,it's the infamous ATT! Now that's mind-boggeling.
Posted by:jay garthMay 1, 2008 6:14:45 PMRespond ^
yes, all it needed was a reason, it was written only god knows when!!!
Posted by:jack WilliamsMay 6, 2008 11:35:01 PMRespond ^

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