A Justice Department
proposal would grant the government sweeping authority to deport and secretly
spy, wiretap, imprison, and punish U.S. citizens and legal immigrants suspected
of "terrorism." The bill called the Domestic Security Enhancement Act of
2003 grants law enforcement and intelligence powers - many not related
to terrorism - that are antithetical to our constitutionally guaranteed rights,
and checks and balances on the executive. It would diminish personal privacy by
giving government surveillance authority, reduce its public accountability by
increasing secrecy and expand the definition of "terrorism."
Timothy
Edgar, a legislative council for the ACLU says, "The new Ashcroft proposal
threatens to fundamentally alter the constitutional protections that allow us to
be both safe and free." And that, "If it becomes law, it will encourage police
spying on political and religious activities, allow the government to wiretap
without going to court and dramatically expand the death penalty under an
overbroad definition of terrorism."
The
most troubling aspect of this proposal is a provision that would strip American
citizenship from anyone who supports the lawful activities of a group that the
executive branch disapproves. It would actually turn any citizen into an alien
and then subject him or her to deportation, giving the Attorney General the
authority to designate anyone who he deems a threat to "our national defense,
foreign policy or economic interests." A federal court of appeals has already
ruled that this procedure is not susceptible to judicial review. So the Attorney
General would not need to prove that a legal immigrant has engaged in a criminal
or harmful activity.
Other
provisions would insulate the war on terrorism from public or judicial scrutiny.
And, authorize secret arrests, and even terminate court orders barring illegal
police spying from before 9/11, without regard to the need for judicial
supervision. It would also allow secret government wiretaps and searches from
the supersecret Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, without any
warrant.
This
proposal is much more far-reaching than its predecessor, the euphemistically
acronymed US PATRIOT Act that was hastily passed and enacted in the aftermath of
9/11. That law gave the government new surveillance powers, including wiretaps,
searches and other tools to combat terrorism.
At least 35 cities have adopted resolutions opposing that law, because it
seriously erodes civil liberties. The ACLU and Center for National Securities
Studies have sued the Bush administration over its secret detention of suspected
terrorists from 9/11.
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In
an online statement, the ACLU asks the public to take action by telling the
Congress that it must oppose any efforts by the Attorney General that threaten
our constitutional rights, in the name of security against terrorism. The ACLU
asks Congress to investigate and oversee how this administration has used or
misused the powers already given under the PATRIOT Act.
The
rights group says such legislation would allow the government to spy on First
Amendment- protected activities. Thus, by using an overly broad definition of
terrorism, organizations such as Operation Rescue that use protest tactics,
would become victims of criminal wiretapping and other electronic surveillance.
The act would also terminate court-approved limits on police spying that were
put in place to prevent McCarthy-style law enforcement persecution.
It
would radically diminish personal privacy by removing checks on government power
by permitting, without any connection to anti-terrorism efforts, sensitive
information of citizens for sharing with local and state law enforcement. In
addition, personal credit reports could be accessed secretly, without consent
and without judicial process.
It
would increase government secrecy while diminishing public accountability in
authorizing secret arrests in immigrant and other cases, where the person is not
criminally charged. It would allow sampling and cataloguing of innocent
AmericansŐ genetic information, without consent or court order. And, it would
shelter federal agents involved in illegal surveillance from criminal
prosecution, if they follow orders of high executive officials.
The
passage of the first PATRIOT Act took place in an atmosphere of fear, and the
critics suspect this bill may likewise be legislated during heightened
insecurity. We must protect ourselves, but it should come through means that are
sensible. In the process, we must take measures to ensure that the very values
for which our nation stands are not sacrificed.
Siraj
Mufti, Ph.D. is a researcher and free-lance journalist.