Bush Signs Parts of Patriot Act II into Law - Stealthily
By David Martin, The San Antonio Current
http://educate-yourself.org/cn/patriot2stealthingin24dec03.shtml
Dec. 24, 2003
With a Whisper, Not a Bang
On December 13, when U.S. forces captured Saddam Hussein,
President George W. Bush not only celebrated with his national security
team, but also pulled out his pen and signed into law a bill that grants
the FBI sweeping new powers. A White House spokesperson explained the curious
timing of the signing - on a Saturday - as "the President signs bills
seven days a week." But the last time Bush signed a bill into law on
a Saturday happened more than a year ago - on a spending bill that the President
needed to sign, to prevent shuttng down the federal government the following
Monday.
By signing the bill on the day of Hussein's capture, Bush
effectively consigned a dramatic expansion of the USA Patriot Act to a mere
footnote. Consequently, while most Americans watched as Hussein was probed
for head lice, few were aware that the FBI had just obtained the power to
probe their financial records, even if the feds don't suspect their involvement
in crime or terrorism.
The Bush Administration and its Congressional allies tucked
away these new executive powers in the Intelligence Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2004, a legislative behemoth that funds all the intelligence
activities of the federal government. The Act included a simple, yet insidious,
redefinition of "financial institution," which previously referred
to banks, but now includes stockbrokers, car dealerships, casinos, credit
card companies, insurance agencies, jewelers, airlines, the U.S. Post Office,
and any other business "whose cash transactions have a high degree
of usefulness in criminal, tax, or regulatory
matters."
Congress passed the legislation around Thanksgiving. Except
for U.S. Representative Charlie Gonzalez, all San Antonio's House members
voted for the act. The Senate passed it with a voice vote to avoid individual
accountability. While broadening the definition of "financial institution,"
the Bush administration is ramping up provisions within the 2001 USA Patriot
Act, which granted the FBI the authority to obtain client records from banks
by merely requesting the records in a "National Security Letter."
To get the records, the FBI doesn't have to appear before a judge, nor demonstrate
"probable cause" - reason to believe that the targeted client
is involved in criminal or terrorist activity. Moreover, the National Security
Letters are attached with a gag order, preventing any financial institution
from informing its clients that their records have been surrendered to the
FBI. If a
financial institution breaches the gag order, it faces criminal penalties.
And finally, the FBI will no longer be required to report to Congress how
often they have used the National Security Letters.
Supporters of expanding the Patriot Act claim that the new
law is necessary to prevent future terrorist attacks on the U.S. The FBI
needs these new powers to be "expeditious and efficient" in its
response to these new threats. Robert Summers, professor of international
law and director of the new Center for Terrorism Law at St. Mary's University,
explains, "We don't go to war with the terrorists as we went to war
with the Germans or the North Vietnamese. If we apply old methods of following
the money, we will not be successful. We need to meet them on an even playing
field to avoid another disaster."
Opponents of the PATRIOT Act and its expansion claim that
safeguards like judicial oversight and the Fourth Amendment, which prohibits
unreasonable search and seizure, are essential to prevent abuses of power.
"There's a reason these protections were put into place," says
Chip Berlet, senior analyst at Political Research Associates, and a historian
of U.S. political repression. "It has been shown that if you give [these
agencies] this power they will abuse it. For any investigative agency, once
you tell them that they must make sure that they protect the country from
subversives, it inevitably gets translated into a program to silence dissent."
Opponents claim the FBI already has all the tools to stop
crime and terrorism. Moreover, explains Patrick Filyk, an attorney and vice
president of the local chapter of the ACLU, "The only thing the act
accomplishes is the removal of judicial oversight and the transfer of more
power to law enforcements agents."
This broadening of the Patriot Act represents a political
victory for the Bush Administration's stealth legislative strategy to increase
executive power. Last February, shortly before Bush launched the war on
Iraq, the Center for Public Integrity obtained a draft of a comprehensive
expansion of the Patriot Act, nicknamed Patriot Act II, written by Attorney
General John Ashcroft's staff. Again, the timing was suspicious; it appeared
that the Bush Administration was waiting for the start of the Iraq war to
introduce Patriot Act II, and then exploit the crisis to ram it through
Congress with little public debate.
The leak and ensuing public backlash frustrated the Bush administration's
strategy, so Ashcroft and Co. disassembled Patriot Act II, then reassembled
its parts into other legislation. By attaching the redefinition of "financial
institution" to an Intelligence Authorization Act, the Bush Administration
and its Congressional allies avoided public hearings and floor debates for
the expansion of the Patriot Act.
Even proponents of this expansion have expressed concern about
these legislative tactics. "It's a problem that some of these riders
that are added on may not receive the scrutiny that we would like to see,"
says St. Mary's Professor Robert Summers.
The Bush Administration has yet to answer pivotal questions
about its latest constitutional coup: If these new executive powers are
necessary to protect United States citizens, then why would the legislation
not withstand the test of public debate? If the new act's provisions are
in the public interest, why use stealth in ramming them through the legislative
process?
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