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The
bill allows the federal government to maintain extensive files on
each and every American without limitations: Senator Feingold
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WASHINGTON,
November 24 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - The homeland security
measure passed by Congress has sparked a flood of criticism from
privacy and civil liberties advocates, who argue that the bill may
move the U.S. closer to a police state.
The
bill sought by President George W. Bush, advocates a massive
government reorganization to create a new Department of Homeland
Security, and gives the agency powerful new tools to thwart
“potential terrorist attacks”.
But
some critics fear the measure also may increase secret surveillance
and reduce privacy protections that Americans have taken for granted.
The
measure “potentially allows the federal government to maintain
extensive files on each and every American without limitations,”
said Senator Russ Feingold, who voted against the bill.
“It
also weakens important safeguards on government access to our e-mails
and information about what we do on the Internet without the need for
a court order.”
A
particular concern is the last-minute insertion of the controversial
CyberSecurity Enhancement Act, which had been a separate bill stalled
in Congress that expands the ability of authorities to obtain
information from telecom and Internet service providers.
“The
contents of e-mail messages or instant messages could be given to any
government official under a so-called emergency provision even when
such a disclosure in not reasonable and does not deal with an imminent
threat of injury,” says the free-speech Center for Democracy and
Technology in Washington.
Lee
Tien, an attorney with the San Francisco-based Electronic Frontier
Foundation, said that the law could be challenged in the courts but
that in practice, it is hard to know if the government is carrying out
secret surveillance.
“If
you’re an innocent person who was wrongly surveilled, you will never
know,” Tien said.
“There
is no notice ever to the person who is the victim of the surveillance
unless authorities use this in a criminal proceeding, so trying to
challenge or obtain redress becomes very hard.”
The
bill does not specifically authorize a controversial Pentagon project
aimed at creating huge electronic databases to monitor for signs of
terrorist activities, called Total Information Awareness (TIA).
But
critics say the use of that effort with expanded authority under the
new legislation could lead to an unprecedented assault on privacy.
“We
do not want the federal government to become the proverbial ‘Big
Brother,’” said Senator Patrick Leahy.
“The
public’s most sensitive e-mails, Web transactions, and instant
messages sent to loved ones, business associates, doctors and lawyers,
and friends deserve the highest level of privacy we can provide.
“The
provisions of (this bill) make a mockery of our privacy laws,” he
stressed.
Supporters
say the bill will help deploy new technology in the defense of
homeland security.
“This
is a major step towards a safer, more secure American public,” said
Harris Miller, president of the Information Technology Association of
America, a lobby group for big high-tech firms.
“This
legislation removes impediments to fielding the best IT solutions for
the public (in response to) a constantly changing terrorist threat.”
Others
say that giving the government the ability to secretly collect
information without court orders or other checks is a recipe for
abuse, noting the McCarthy era and secret files on civil rights leader
Martin Luther King.
“Whenever
we have these kind of investigative and knowledge databases in the
hands of government officials without accountability, they use it
against political enemies,” said Tien.
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The
provisions of (this bill) make a mockery of our privacy laws:
Senator Leahy
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Chris
Hoofnagle of the Electronic Privacy Information Center said the law
flies in the face of the presumption of most Americans that their
communications will be private and that law enforcement must have some
court supervision.
“We
could create a completely safe state but our country would become a
police state, and that is not a bargain that our constitution has
given,” he said.
The
Pentagon had announced earlier that the U.S. government is to monitor
every purchase made by every American citizen.
Edward
Aldridge, undersecretary of Acquisitions and Technology, told
reporters that the Pentagon is developing a prototype database to seek
“patterns indicative of terrorist activity,” reported Fox News
network Thursday, November 21.
Aldridge
said the database would collect and use software to analyze consumer
purchases in hopes of catching terrorists before it is too late.
“The
bottom line is this is an important research project to determine the
feasibility of using certain transactions and events to discover and
respond to terrorists before they act,” he said.
Aldridge
said the database, which he called another “tool” in what he
called the “war on terror”, would look for telltale signs of
suspicious consumer behavior.
He
cited examples as ‘sudden and large cash withdrawals, one-way air or
rail travel, rental car transactions and purchases of firearms,
chemicals or agents that could be used to produce biological or
chemical weapons’.
It
would also combine consumer information with visa records, passports,
arrest records or reports of suspicious activity given to law
enforcement or intelligence services.
On
Monday, November 18, a federal court gave the U.S. Justice Department
broad authority to use wiretaps and other surveillance methods in the
hunt for terrorists, outraging civil libertarians who said it violated
the constitution.
The
court ruling, which reversed a May decision by a lower court, allowed
for the 1978 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) to be
amended by the Patriot Act passed by Congress following the September
11 attacks.
The
Patriot Act expands Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)’s
authority to intercept wire, oral and electronic communications as
well as share criminal investigative information.
The
FBI can now obtain permits for such activities from the typically more
lenient and secretive Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court instead
of a regular criminal court.
The
decision also allows the bureau to apply for such surveillance on
cases not strictly terrorism-related.
Civil
Libertarian organizations across the country condemned Monday’s
ruling. “We are deeply disappointed with the decision, which
suggests that this special court exists only to rubberstamp government
applications for intrusive surveillance warrants,” said Ann Beeson,
litigation director of the Technology and Liberty Program of the
American Civil Liberties Union.
“As
of today,” she added, “the Attorney General can suspend the
ordinary requirements of the Fourth Amendment in order to listen in on
phone calls, read e-mails, and conduct secret searches of Americans’
homes and offices.”
The
Fourth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution protects the individual’s
right to privacy.
A
U.S. daily newspaper had reported earlier that the Pentagon is
constructing a global computer-surveillance system which will give the
United States access to personal information in government and
commercial databases around the world as part of the hunt for
“terrorists around the globe”.
“A
new Pentagon research office has started designing a global
computer-surveillance system to give U.S. counterterrorism officials
access to personal information in government and commercial databases
around the world," the Washington Post reported Tuesday, November
12.
The
system funded by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA)
at about $200 million a year, would be able to sweep up and analyze
data in a much more systematic way.
It
would provide a more detailed look at data than the super-secret
National Security Agency now has.
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