April
11, 2005
Why The Patriot Act Must Be Renewed
By Jon
Kyl
Last year
I introduced legislation that would make permanent all of the
major sections of the USA Patriot Act that are scheduled to expire
at the end of this year. Last week, Attorney General Alberto Gonzales
and FBI Director Robert Mueller, testifying before the Senate
Judiciary Committee, urged Congress to renew the act and provided
a great deal of supportive evidence.
The most
critical function of the act, which was passed in response to
the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, has been to break down
the historical wall between traditional criminal and intelligence-related
investigations. But it has also provided new and better legal
tools to law enforcement agencies for wiretapping, executing search
warrants, and in many other areas where previous law was either
simply inadequate to begin with, or rendered obsolete by the nature
of modern terrorism and technological advances like cell phones,
voice mail and the Internet.
FBI Director
Robert Mueller has repeatedly testified that the act's provisions
have proven extraordinarily beneficial in the war on terrorism
and have been directly responsible for many counterterrorism successes.
Clinton Administration Attorney General Janet Reno agrees, stating
publicly that "everything that's been done in the Patriot Act
has been helpful." Still, there has been a considerable amount
of criticism of the act from people who wonder whether its provisions
might be abused. There is much misinformation about the act, particularly
sections 213 and 215.
Section 213
of the Patriot Act codifies judicial common law, allowing investigators
to delay giving notice to the target that a search warrant has
been executed against his property if a court finds reasonable
cause to believe that immediate notice may result in: endangering
an individual; flight from prosecution; destruction of evidence;
intimidation of potential witnesses; or if such notice would otherwise
seriously jeopardize an investigation or unduly delay a trial.
Notice must still be provided "within a reasonable period" of
the warrant's execution, though this period may be extended by
the court for good cause.
The need
for such authority is obvious: it allows investigators to uncover
specific information about a terror suspect's activities or associates
without tipping their hand. There would be no point in conducting
a wiretap, for example, if the target had to be immediately informed
that his conversations were being monitored. Likewise, if immediate
notice were required after every kind of search, many suspects
would flee the country, destroy computer files, alert associates,
injure or kill witnesses, or simply accelerate a planned attack.
Although
critics such as the American Civil Liberties Union have called
section 213 "sneak and peek" and decried it as a "sea change"
in U.S. law, the reality is that the US Supreme Court established
25 years ago that this procedure is constitutional, and has consistently
reaffirmed this view. In fact, in a 1979 case, the Court specifically
derided the argument that delayed-notice searches are unconstitutional
as "frivolous." Perhaps one reason was that, according to the
Justice Department, the most common period of delay of notice
authorized has been a mere seven days.
Section 215
relates to subpoena authority for business records, extending
to "terrorism" the types of crimes for which so-called business
records can be sought. The law has always recognized that book
store and library records are included. To obtain such records,
a subpoena must be pre-approved by a judge, which means that the
frequently-cited fear of "the FBI investigating someone simply
because of the books that he borrows from a library" is false.
As an added protection against abuse, the Patriot Act requires
that the FBI "fully inform" the House and Senate Intelligence
Committees on all use of such authority. Again, this authority
is not new -- federal investigators have long used the grand jury
subpoena to obtain bookstore records. As the Washington Post noted
in a September 11, 2003 editorial, investigative authority to
review library records "existed prior to the Patriot Act; the
law extends it to national security investigations, which isn't
unreasonable."
Finding out
whether a suspect checked out a book on bomb making is a reasonable
investigative technique. Moreover, it has been well established
that terrorists and spies - the September 11th hijackers, for
example - have used libraries to plan and carry out activities
that threaten US national security, among other ways by using
their Internet access to communicate by email. Given this reality,
it would be foolish to place libraries and bookstores off-limits
to investigations.
More broadly,
given the demonstrated success of the Patriot Act in making us
more secure, and the paucity of actual (as opposed to hypothetical)
complaints of abuse, it would surely be unwise to start rescinding
its major provisions.
Senator
Kyl serves on the Senate Finance and Judiciary committees and
chairs the Senate Republican Policy Committee.
Send
This Article to a Friend