Patriot Act Games
Barr, Bob
BY BOB BARR Winston Smythe approached the checkpoint, beads of sweat forming on the back of his neck. Had he removed everything from his briefcase that might reveal to roving hands and prying eyes...
...In Winston's case, the search should have been quashed even before it began—it wasn't even his house...
...And what they asked for definitely was not narrowly tailored, limited, or designedonly to correct those specific provisions of existing laws that needed to be tweaked...
...His careful planning—removing every scrap of metal from his pockets, down to the last penny—seemed to pay off...
...As a result, federal authorities no longer needed to provide a homeowner notice that they were executing a search warrant—for any criminal case, not just terrorism...
...What the bureaucrats sought—and largely got—were far-reaching powers that applied not just to antiterrorism needs but to virtually all federal criminal laws...
...That Patriot Act again...
...Not a chance...
...We need more money...
...As he was frisked, Winston's thoughts drifted to his ride to the airport—it had been a bad day all around...
...T wo years have passed since the spring of 2002, when Winston's missed flight led to a missed court appearance and a cascade of even worse legal problems...
...Perhaps then one could accept some of the encroachments on civil liberties as necessary and perhaps even worthwhile...
...Like its older and better-known cousin, the National Rifle Association, ISHAS supported not only the right to keep and bear arms, but also environmentally responsible hunting...
...Their pockets were stuffed with false identification...
...Oh well, Winston thought, such is life in the twenty-first-century America...
...1/k...
...Instead, we have an unprecedented expansion of federal law enforcement powers that significantly diminishes the civil liberties of American citizens, with only marginal increases in real security...
...But as he passed quietly through the metal detectors, a guard pulled him aside—regulations, he told Winston, required that at least one search be underway at every checkpoint at all times...
...Even that was just a prelude to the check-in counter, where his name popped up on some data-mining program deep within the bowels of the Transportation or Defense Department--no way of knowing which, because they all had their own profiling systems these days...
...Being rather naïve about such things—though he now knew that in this day and age, naïveté was a luxury that could get you in serious trouble—Winston had paid his ISHAS dues by regular check...
...We had the power to stop these terrorists...
...In essence, the attacks of September 11 provided an excuse for the executive branch to pull off the shelf, dust off, and push into law a whole series of proposals it had sought unsuccessfully for years...
...And all I've done is scratch the surface of what is shaping up as a dramatic alteration to the very foundation of our society...
...Indeed, probable cause for the search had not even been shown to a judge—as his lawyer explained, the evidence had been gathered for 'foreign intelligence' purposes...
...The fact was, he didn't want to travel today—he had a court date in Baltimore, thanks to the "sneak and peek" provisions of the USA Patriot Act, passed in franticweeks after the September 11 attacks on the Pentagon and World Trade Center...
...He had regularly received its e-mail notices on his Blackberry and spoke with fellow members about upcoming meetings...
...We simply made mistakes and errors in judgment, which will now be corrected...
...The real way to catch terrorists is with better intelligence gathering, better coordination and analysis, better utilization of existing law enforcement tools, and quicker and more appropriate dissemination of that intelligence...
...T hese two scenarios are neither wholly fictitious nor especially farfetched...
...government support...
...His little plastic-pistol keychain...
...Investigators had never obtained a warrant to listen in on his cell phone, or read his Blackberry messages, or for that matter shown his involvement in any way, shape, or form with the ISHAS activities abroad...
...And thus he was in deep kimchee...
...Of course, there was no way to know whether that was true, but Winston had been willing to give the government the benefit of the doubt...
...No doubt it caught the gun catalogs strewn on his passenger seat, including the one featuring several mean-looking hunting rifles similar to those Congress had recently outlawed...
...Much of the information that could have alerted law enforcement officials to their horrendous plot was already within the possession of law enforcement and intelligence agencies...
...One of the charitable organizations that Winston helped support from his comfortable but decidedly unpretentious salary was the International Shooting, Hunting, and Archery Society...
...But they're not...
...The protagonist may be borrowed from "Winston Smith:' in George Orwell's 1984, but the story is based on reality—the USA Patriot Act of 2001 and the proposed Son of Patriot Act, now being debated in the Congress at the request of the Bush administration...
...No matter—under what Washington wags had wryly dubbed the new Son of Patriot Act, they didn't have to...
...The key word is better...
...His latest copy of Guns and Ammo...
...The terrorists who gained access to those four jetliners in the early morning of September 11, 2001, carried weapons that were already illegal on commercial aircraft...
...The original Winston Smith was scared to death of the power of government—so we should be too...
...As the CIA itself noted in a unclassified study reportedly conducted in 2001, terrorists typically take great pains to avoid being profiled: they don't want to get caught, and in fact it is essentially impossible to profile terrorists...
...But, it could just as well have been...
...Yet what was the response to this tragedy...
...Possibly the measures contained in the Patriot Act, its proposed new offspring, and numerous other official surveillance measures now in effect or being planned were, as we're told, essential responses to the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001...
...The government had sufficient lawful power to identify and stop the plotters...
...Nervous was not the state of mind you wanted to be in as you approached the Transportation Security Police...
...As he mulled over this strange turn of events from his deportation cell in Miami, his thoughts turned, as they often did now, to how things were and how things used to be...
...the public needed to be reminded that the TSP were serious about their work...
...Now, though, not even knowing what the FBI investigators had taken—they were no longer required to leave an inventory of seized items either—he was a full-fledged defendant, though after weeks in detention without access to a lawyer and then long months on bail, he still had no idea why or for what...
...Possibly they are specifically tailored to meet such threats in the future, and the best and most efficient way to minimize the likelihood of such attacks...
...With a few notable exceptions, the USA Patriot Act is a legislative grab bag that does little to encourage better law enforcement and intelligence work...
...Instead, what we saw—and I saw personally, as a member of both the House Judiciary Committee and the Government Reform Committee—was agency after agency, bureaucrat after bureaucrat come before us and say, "You [the Congress] didn't give us enough legal power or money to stop these attacks...
...They were already in this country illegally, or had overstayed their lawful presence...
...Left unchecked, they threaten the constitutional basis on which our society is premised: that citizens possess rights over their persons and property and that they retain those rights unless there is a sound, articulated, and specific reason for the government to take them away (i.e., probable cause of criminal activity...
...Of course no one would tell him what the problem was—possibly there was a suspected terrorist somewhere named Win To Smen or something...
...It failed to do so...
...At least we're told we're safer...
...The Fourth Amendment's guarantee againstunreasonable search and seizure will have been gutted...
...These are frightening laws...
...Had he removed everything from his briefcase that might reveal to roving hands and prying eyes that he was a member of the Opposition or of the National Shooting Sports Association...
...But bygones should be bygones—after all, the attorney general himself had repeatedly told the American people that, thanks to vigilance and laws like the Patriot Act, the country was safer...
...We had sufficient money to have done so...
...It was just one of those days...
...Not particularly bright, they had absolute power to deny Winston the right to board an airplane...
...Did a single federal agency or official come before the American people and say: "We're sorry...
...He knew nothing of the organization's overseas activities, much less that it was peripherally involved in a nationalistic political movement on the Indian subcontinent—a movement at odds with a government that, while hardly democratic, currently enjoyed strong official U.S...
...These fears are not, as some are saying, unfounded...
...While he was caught in traffic, one of the dozens of surveillance cameras that routinely photographed cars and their contents had found his...
...Moreover, the direction Washington is now turning—making it easier to gather evidence on everyone within our borders, in an effort to develop profiles of terrorists and identify them amid the masses of data—is not likely to be particularly successful at thwarting terrorist attacks...
...Their knowledge of the aircraft's performance and handling had been gathered in violation of federal law...
...What he did not know was that all this constituted "assisting a terrorist organization...
...We need more power?' But not wishing to appear soft on terrorism, the Congress—not surprisingly—gave them very nearly whatever they asked for...
...Willing, that is, until the previous month, when he had been convicted of assisting a terrorist organization in a secret proceeding and had his American citizenship revoked...
...They had not even publicly identified ISHAS as a terrorist organization...
...Then again, for Winston—who had always considered himself an "average" citizen, though perhaps more conservative than many—you didn't even need to buy an air ticket to have a bad day...
...Changes to wiretapping laws, to search and seizures, easier access to tangible evidence—the list is long and complex...
...It was Benjamin Franklin, not George Orwell, who said, "They that give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety...
Vol. 36 • August 2003 • No. 4