Freedom to Read H.R. 1157
Author | Topic: Freedom to Read H.R. 1157 |
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Agent
Member # 2210
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written Friday, March 25 2005 06:13
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"any tangible record" includes-- medical records, store receipts of purchased goods, etc. Let some provisions in USA Patriot Act expire A legislative and grassroots effort is underway to amend a portion of the Patriot Act that allows unchecked government access to citizens' private records, just as the Bush administration is calling for reauthorization of the entire act. Section 215 is one of about a dozen USA Patriot Act provisions set to expire this year under a sunset provision built in when the sweeping anti-terrorism act was hastily passed the month after 9/11/2001. Organizations such as the American Library Association have joined with cities, senators and citizens in seeking to eliminate from Section 215 the unwarranted access and searches of library and bookstore records that the section authorizes. This year's bill is called the Freedom to Read Protection Act, first introduced in Congress by an Independent from Vermont, Bernie Sanders. Although bookstores and libraries are not specifically mentioned in the Patriot Act, the broad-sweep wording allows the FBI nearly carte blanche permission to access "any tangible record," which would include book purchases and checkouts, simply by telling the secret Foreign Information Surveillance Court that it wants to see the material in connection with a terrorism-related investigation. No probable cause reason is required, and there is no possibility of appeal or independent court review of the FISC orders. Section 215 also prohibits owners of those records - i.e., librarians and bookstore owners who have to provide access - from disclosing the record release to anyone. Sanders reasoning for the bill is compelling. "Under Section 215 of the Patriot Act, the person whose records are being searched by the FBI can be anyone. The FBI doesn't even have to say that it believes the person is involved in criminal activity or that the person is connected to a foreign power. This is not acceptable. The legislation we are introducing today will go a long away in protecting the basic freedoms of every American." Law enforcement officials will still be able to subpoena bookstore and library records (or any other "tangible" record) under the normal process whereby the federal courts review these requests and determine if probably cause is there for the search and seizure. The powers granted under the act now are simply too broad and there is no backstop for potential abuse. Innocent Americans - anyone with a foreign sounding name, with reading interests on guns, who write critical letters to the editor or to government agencies - should not have to worry about repercussions from unwarranted searches of personal information. And the key word is "unwarranted." Although the Department of Justice is required by the law to report the number of times the act has been used each year for such searches - which could provide valuable assessment of its use or abuse - the DOJ also has won the right to keep those specifics secret under a national security exemption of the Freedom of Information Act. How ironic. Congress needs to carefully examine changes in the law, or this provision, along with several others, should be allowed to expire. -------------------- Wasting your time and mine looking for a good laugh. Star Bright, Star Light, Oh I Wish I May, I Wish Might, Wish For One Star Tonight. Posts: 1084 | Registered: Thursday, November 7 2002 08:00 |
Law Bringer
Member # 2984
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written Friday, March 25 2005 06:50
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Anyone heard of something called the "Bureau of Internal Investigation"? When I first played EV:N, it seemed like a gross exaggeration. Not now. -------------------- The Encyclopaedia Ermariana <-- Now a Wiki! "Polaris leers down from the black vault, winking hideously like an insane watching eye which strives to convey some strange message, yet recalls nothing save that it once had a message to convey." --- HP Lovecraft. "I single Aran out due to his nasty temperament, and his superior intellect." --- SupaNik Posts: 8752 | Registered: Wednesday, May 14 2003 07:00 |
Triad Mage
Member # 7
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written Friday, March 25 2005 07:57
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And yet there are laws that won't let doctors look at a patient's medical records without a lengthy appeals process. -------------------- "At times discretion should be thrown aside, and with the foolish we should play the fool." - Menander ==== Drakefyre's Demesne - Happy Happy Joy Joy desperance.net - We're Everywhere ==== You can take my Mac when you pry my cold, dead fingers off the mouse! Posts: 9436 | Registered: Wednesday, September 19 2001 07:00 |