Interested
Persons Memo: Section-by-Section Analysis of Justice Department draft
"Domestic Security Enhancement Act of 2003," also known as "PATRIOT Act
II" (2/14/2003)
To: Interested Persons From: Timothy H. Edgar, Legislative Counsel Date: February 14, 2003 Re: Section-by-Section
Analysis of Justice Department draft "Domestic Security Enhancement Act
of 2003," also known as "Patriot Act II" The
Department of Justice (DOJ) has been drafting comprehensive
anti-terrorism legislation for the past several months. The
draft legislation, dated January 9, 2003, grants sweeping powers to the
government, eliminating or weakening many of the checks and balances
that remained on government surveillance, wiretapping, detention and
criminal prosecution even after passage of the USA PATRIOT Act, Pub. L.
No. 107-56, in 2001. Among its most severe problems, the bill Diminishes personal privacy by removing checks on government power, specifically by - Making
it easier for the government to initiate surveillance and wiretapping
of U.S. citizens under the authority of the shadowy, top-secret Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Court. (Sections 101, 102 and 107)
- Permitting
the government, under certain circumstances, to bypass the Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Court altogether and conduct warrantless
wiretaps and searches. (Sections 103 and 104)
- Sheltering
federal agents engaged in illegal surveillance without a court order
from criminal prosecution if they are following orders of high
Executive Branch officials. (Section 106)
- Creating
a new category of "domestic security surveillance" that permits
electronic eavesdropping of entirely domestic activity under looser
standards than are provided for ordinary criminal surveillance under
Title III. (Section 122)
- Using
an overbroad definition of terrorism that could cover some protest
tactics such as those used by Operation Rescue or protesters at Vieques
Island, Puerto Rico as a new predicate for criminal wiretapping and
other electronic surveillance. (Sections 120 and 121)
- Providing
for general surveillance orders covering multiple functions of high
tech devices, and by further expanding pen register and trap and trace
authority for intelligence surveillance of United States citizens and
lawful permanent residents. (Sections 107 and 124)
- Creating
a new, separate crime of using encryption technology that could add
five years to any sentence for crimes committed with a computer.
(Section 404)
- Expanding
nationwide search warrants so they do not have to meet even the broad
definition of terrorism in the USA PATRIOT Act. (Section 125)
- Giving the government secret access to credit reports without consent and without judicial process. (Section 126)
- Enhancing
the government's ability to obtain sensitive information without prior
judicial approval by creating administrative subpoenas and providing
new penalties for failure to comply with written demands for
records. (Sections 128 and 129)
- Allowing
for the sampling and cataloguing of innocent Americans' genetic
information without court order and without
consent. (Sections 301-306)
- Permitting,
without any connection to anti-terrorism efforts, sensitive personal
information about U.S. citizens to be shared with local and state law
enforcement. (Section 311)
- Terminating
court-approved limits on police spying, which were initially put in
place to prevent McCarthy-style law enforcement persecution based on
political or religious affiliation. (Section 312)
- Permitting
searches, wiretaps and surveillance of United States citizens on behalf
of foreign governments - including dictatorships and human rights
abusers - in the absence of Senate-approved
treaties. (Sections 321-22)
Diminishes public accountability by increasing government secrecy; specifically, by - Authorizing
secret arrests in immigration and other cases, such as material witness
warrants, where the detained person is not criminally
charged. (Section 201)
- Threatening
public health by severely restricting access to crucial information
about environmental health risks posed by facilities that use dangerous
chemicals. (Section 202)
- Harming
fair trial rights for American citizens and other defendants by
limiting defense attorneys from challenging the use of secret evidence
in criminal cases. (Section 204)
- Gagging
grand jury witnesses in terrorism cases to bar them from discussing
their testimony with the media or the general public, thus preventing
them from defending themselves against rumor-mongering and denying the
public information it has a right to receive under the First
Amendment. (Section 206)
Diminishes corporate accountability under the pretext of fighting terrorism; specifically, by - Granting
immunity to businesses that provide information to the government in
terrorism investigations, even if their actions are taken with
disregard for their customers' privacy or other rights and show
reckless disregard for the truth. Such immunity could
provide an incentive for neighbor to spy on neighbor and pose problems
similar to those inherent in Attorney General Ashcroft's "Operation
TIPS." (Section 313)
Undermines
fundamental constitutional rights of Americans under overbroad
definitions of "terrorism" and "terrorist organization" or under a
terrorism pretext; specifically by - Stripping
even native-born Americans of all of the rights of United States
citizenship if they provide support to unpopular organizations labeled
as terrorist by our government, even if they support only the lawful
activities of such organizations, allowing them to be indefinitely
imprisoned in their own country as undocumented
aliens. (Section 501)
- Creating
15 new death penalties, including a new death penalty for "terrorism"
under a definition which could cover acts of protest such as those used
by Operation Rescue or protesters at Vieques Island, Puerto Rico, if
death results. (Section 411)
- Further
criminalizing association - without any intent to commit specific
terrorism crimes - by broadening the crime of providing material
support to terrorism, even if support is not given to any organization
listed as a terrorist organization by the
government. (Section 402)
- Permitting
arrests and extraditions of Americans to any foreign country -
including those whose governments do not respect the rule of law or
human rights - in the absence of a Senate-approved treaty and without
allowing an American judge to consider the extraditing country's legal
system or human rights record. (Section 322)
Unfairly targets immigrants under the pretext of fighting terrorism; specifically by - Undercutting
trust between police departments and immigrant communities by opening
sensitive visa files to local police for the enforcement of complex
immigration laws. (Section 311)
- Targeting undocumented workers with extended jail terms for common immigration offenses. (Section 502)
- Providing
for summary deportations without evidence of crime, criminal intent or
terrorism, even of lawful permanent residents, whom the Attorney
General says are a threat to national security. (Section 503)
- Completely
abolishing fair hearings for lawful permanent residents convicted of
even minor criminal offenses through a retroactive "expedited removal"
procedure, and preventing any court from questioning the government's
unlawful actions by explicitly exempting these cases from habeas corpus
review. Congress has not exempted any person from habeas
corpus -- a protection guaranteed by the Constitution -- since the
Civil War. (Section 504)
- Allowing
the Attorney General to deport an immigrant to any country in the
world, even if there is no effective government in such a
country. (Section 506)
Given
the bipartisan controversy that has arisen in the past from DOJ's
attempts to weaken basic checks and balances that protect personal
privacy and liberty, the DOJ's reluctance to share the draft
legislation is perhaps understandable. The DOJ's highly
one-sided section-by-section analysis reveals the Administration's
strategy is to minimize far-reaching changes in basic powers, as it did
in seeking passage of the USA PATRIOT Act, by characterizing them as
minor tinkering with statutory language designed to bring government
surveillance authorities, detention and deportation powers, and
criminal penalties "up to date." This
ACLU section-by-section analysis of the text of the legislation,
however, reveals that the DOJ's modest descriptions of the powers it is
seeking, and the actual scope of the authorities it seeks, are miles
apart. The USA PATRIOT Act undercut many of the traditional
checks and balances on government power. The new draft
legislation threatens to fundamentally alter the constitutional
protections that allow us as Americans to be both safe and
free. If adopted, the bill would diminish personal privacy
by removing important checks on government surveillance authority,
reduce the accountability of government to the public by increasing
government secrecy, further undermine fundamental constitutional rights
of Americans under an already overbroad definition of "terrorism," and
seriously erode the right of all persons to due process of law. Our detailed section-by-section analysis follows. Title I - Diminishing Personal Privacy by Removing Checks on Government Intelligence and Criminal Surveillance Powers Title
I amends critical statutes that govern intelligence surveillance and
criminal surveillance. Both forms of surveillance are
subject to Fourth Amendment limitations. See Katz v. United States, 389 U.S. 347 (1967) (criminal surveillance); United States v. United States District Court ("Keith"),
407 U.S. 297 (1972) (intelligence surveillance). Yet while
traditional searches are governed by warrant procedures largely drawn
from the common law, wiretapping and other forms of electronic
surveillance are governed by standards and procedures embodied in two
federal statutes that respond to Katz and Keith -
Title III of the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968, 28
U.S.C. §§ 2510-22, which governs surveillance of criminal suspects, and
the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978 (FISA), 50 U.S.C. §§
1801-63 which governs surveillance of foreign powers and agents of a
foreign power for intelligence purposes. Making
it easier for the government to initiate surveillance and wiretapping,
including of United States citizens and lawful permanent residents,
through the secret Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (Sections
101-111). The draft bill's proposed amendments to FISA
attack key statutory concepts that are critical to providing
appropriate limits and meaningful judicial supervision over wiretapping
and other intrusive electronic surveillance for intelligence
purposes. These limits were approved by Congress in 1978
because of a history of abuse by government agents who placed wiretaps
and other listening devices on political activists, journalists, rival
political parties and candidates, and other innocent
targets. These so-called "national security wiretaps" and
other covert surveillance were undertaken without any court supervision
and without even the slightest suspicion that the targets of such
surveillance were involved in criminal activities or were acting on
behalf of any foreign government or political
organization. This pattern of abuse culminated in the crimes
of Watergate, which led to substantial reforms and limits on spying for
intelligence purposes. FISA
represented a compromise between civil libertarians, who wanted to ban
"national security wiretaps" altogether, and apologists for
Presidential authority, who claimed such unchecked intelligence
surveillance authority was inherent in the President's Article II power
over foreign relations. The Congress chose to authorize
intelligence wiretaps without evidence of crime, subject to a number of
key restraints. One of these restraints, separating
intelligence gathering from criminal investigations, has been
significantly weakened by the USA PATRIOT Act. The USA
PATRIOT Act abolished the "primary purpose" test - the requirement that
FISA surveillance could only be used if the primary purpose of
surveillance was gathering of foreign intelligence, and not criminal
prosecution or some other purpose. The
draft bill eliminates or substantially weakens a number of the
remaining constraints on intelligence surveillance approved by
Congress. Taken as a whole, these changes go a long way to
undermine limits on intelligence surveillance essential to preserving
civil liberties and to preventing a repeat of the wiretapping abuses of
the J. Edgar Hoover and Watergate eras. Authorizing
the government to initiate wiretaps and other electronic surveillance
on Americans who have no ties to foreign governments or powers (sec.
101). This section would permit the government to obtain a
wiretap, search warrant or electronic surveillance orders targeting
American citizens and lawful permanent residents even if they have no
ties to a foreign government or other foreign power. Under
FISA, the government need not show, in many circumstances, probable
cause that the target of a wiretap is involved in any criminal
activity. FISA requires an alternate showing - probable
cause that the target is acting on behalf of a foreign government or
organization, i.e., a "foreign power." Section 101 of the
draft bill eliminates this requirement for individuals, including
United States citizens, suspected of engaging in "international
terrorism." It does so by redefining individuals, including
United States citizens or lawful residents, as "foreign powers" even if
they are not acting on behalf of any foreign government or organization. The "foreign power" requirement was a key reason FISA was upheld in a recent constitutional challenge. See In re Sealed Case No. 02-001,
slip op. at 42 (Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Ct. of Rev. Nov. 18,
2002) (while FISA requires no showing of probable cause of crime, it is
constitutional in part because it provides "another safeguard . . .
that is, the requirement that there be probable cause to believe the
target is acting 'for or on behalf of a foreign power.'")[1] Permitting
surveillance of the lawful activities of United States citizens and
lawful permanent residents if they are suspected of gathering
information for a foreign power (sec. 102). United
States citizens and lawful permanent residents who are not violating
any law should not be subject to wiretapping or other intrusive
electronic surveillance. The FISA contains dual standards
for non-U.S. persons and for U.S. persons with respect to surveillance
of "intelligence gathering activities," i.e., the gathering of
information for a foreign government or
organization. These standards reflect the judgment of
Congress that U.S. persons should not face electronic surveillance
unless their activities "involve or may involve" some violation of law
(as, for example, would certainly be the case with respect to any
activity in furtherance of terrorism or other crime). For
non-U.S. persons, this showing does not have to be
made, i.e., the gathering of information by foreign persons
for foreign powers is enough to trigger FISA. The draft bill
(at section 102) applies the lower standard to U.S. persons. Lawful
gathering of information for a foreign organization does not
necessarily pose any threat to national security. This
amendment would permit electronic surveillance of a local activist who
was preparing a report on human rights for London-based Amnesty
International, a "foreign political organization," even if the activist
was not engaged in any violation of law. By eliminating this
need to show some violation of law may be involved before authorizing
surveillance of U.S. persons, Congress could well succeed in rendering
FISA unconstitutional, by eliminating another key reason FISA was
upheld in a recent court challenge. See In re Sealed Case No. 02-001,
slip op. at 42 (Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Ct. of Rev. Nov. 18,
2002) (holding that FISA surveillance of U.S. persons meets Fourth
Amendment standards in part because a surveillance order may not be
granted unless there is probable cause to believe the target is
involved in activity that may involve a violation of law). Permitting the government, under some circumstances, to bypass the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court altogether (Sections
103, 104). Section 103 gives the Attorney General the power
to authorize intelligence wiretaps and other electronic surveillance
without permission from any court, including the Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Court, for fifteen days, after an attack on the United
States or force authorization resolution from the
Congress. Under existing federal statutes, a formal
declaration of war by the Congress triggers a host of civil liberties
consequences, including authorization by the Attorney General to engage
in intrusive electronic surveillance for up to fifteen days without any
court order at all. The draft bill expands this power
dramatically by eliminating judicial review for any surveillance under
FISA for a period up to fifteen days pursuant to (1) an authorization
of force resolution by the Congress or (2) a "national emergency"
created by an attack on the United States. For surveillance
under the latter circumstance, no action by Congress would be
required. Once the President has unilaterally decided such
an attack has occurred, the Attorney General could unilaterally decide
what constitutes an "attack" on the United States, creating an
emergency that justifies what would otherwise be plainly illegal
wiretaps. DOJ's
rationale for this change is that declarations of war are rare and the
statute should be updated to reflect this. This argument
fundamentally misconstrues the purpose of this provision. The normal
FISA process, including review by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance
Court, was Congress's attempt to impose meaningful limits over national
security surveillance conducted without a formal declaration of war and
for continuing threats that cannot easily by defined by reference to
traditional war powers. To use Congress' grant of
surveillance authority following a declaration of war as an argument to
permit surveillance even in the absence of such action by Congress is a
fundamental intrusion on Congress's war powers. The
draft bill (at section 104) also expands special surveillance
authority, available for up to a year with no court order at all, for
property "under the open and exclusive control of a foreign power" by
permitting eavesdropping on "spoken
communications." This expansion of authority leaves
intact the current requirement that such surveillance can go forward
only if the Attorney General certifies under oath that "there is no
substantial likelihood that the surveillance will acquire the contents
of any communication to which a United States person is a
party." Still, the new authority would plainly involve
eavesdropping on communications protected by the Fourth Amendment, as
it would inevitably result in listening - without any court order - to
the conversations in the United States of anyone who might be using
telephones, computers, or other devices owned by a foreign government,
political organization, or company owned by a foreign government. There
are serious questions about whether the secret review of surveillance
orders by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, which by its
nature can only hear the government's side of the case, is effective in
protecting Americans' civil liberties. These amendments
would bypass judicial review under FISA altogether. Sheltering
federal agents engaged in illegal surveillance without a court order
from criminal prosecution if they are following orders of high
Executive Branch officials (Section
106). This section would encourage unlawful intelligence
wiretaps and secret searches by immunizing agents from criminal
sanctions if they conduct such surveillance, even if a reasonable
official would know it is illegal, by claiming they were acting in
"good faith" based on the orders of the President or the Attorney
General. In order to ensure that FISA was successful in
bringing national security surveillance under the rule of law, Congress
not only provided a process for legal intelligence surveillance, but
also imposed criminal penalties on any government agent who engages in
electronic surveillance outside that process. Congress also
provided a "safe harbor" for agents who engaged in surveillance that
was approved by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, even if
such surveillance was not in fact authorized by FISA. The
draft bill (at section 106) substantially undercuts the deterrent
effect of criminal sanctions for illegal wiretaps or electronic
surveillance by expanding the "safe harbor" to include surveillance not
approved by any court, but simply on the authorization of the Attorney
General or the President. Of
course, the very spying abuses FISA was designed to prevent were
undertaken with the authorization of high-ranking government officials,
including the President. For example, President Nixon
authorized just such a covert search of the Brookings Institution, whom
he and his staff suspected of possessing classified information that
had been leaked to the press. As described by Nixon
biographer Richard Reeves: Nixon sat up. "Now if you remember Huston's plan [to engage in covert surveillance] . . ." "Yeah, why?" Haldeman said. Kissinger
said: "But couldn't we go over? Now, Brookings has no right
to classified-" The
President cut him off, saying, "I want it implemented. . . . Goddamit
get in there and get those files. Blow the safe and get
them."[2] Any
government official acting within the scope of his employment already
enjoys "qualified immunity" from charges of violating Fourth Amendment
or other constitutional rights - i.e., an official cannot be punished
or held civilly liable if a reasonable government official would not
have known his or her conduct was illegal. See Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
457 U.S. 800, 818 (1982). Providing additional protection to
government officials who engage in wiretaps or searches
without a court order, where a reasonable official would know those
wiretaps or searches were clearly illegal, would take away any
incentive for such officials to question an illegal authorization by
the President, Attorney General or other high official. Further
expanding pen register and trap and trace authority for intelligence
surveillance of United States citizens and lawful permanent residents
beyond terrorism investigations (Section 107). This
section allows the government to use intelligence pen registers and
trap and trace surveillance devices to obtain detailed information on
American citizens and lawful permanent residents, including telephone
numbers dialed, Internet addresses to which e-mail is sent or received,
and the web addresses a person enters into a web browser, even in an
investigation that is entirely unrelated to terrorism or
counterintelligence. In so doing, it erodes a limitation on
this authority that was part of the USA PATRIOT Act. The
standard for obtaining a pen register or trap and trace order is very
low, requiring merely that a government official certify that the
information it would reveal is "relevant" to an
investigation. Under section 216 the USA PATRIOT Act, the
government was given new power to obtain this sensitive information for
Internet communications merely by making this
certification. This expansion was a serious erosion of
meaningful judicial oversight of government surveillance because it
expanded the authority to get court orders for pen registers and trap
and trace devices in a way that permitted the government to access far
more detailed content than was available before such authority was
extended to the Internet. For
United States citizens and lawful permanent residents, Congress limited
the new authority to terrorism and counterintelligence
investigations. This section would remove that limitation,
opening the door to expanded government surveillance of United States
citizens and lawful permanent residents under controversial government
law enforcement technologies like CARNIVORE and the Total Information
Awareness Pentagon "super-snoop" program whose development Congress
just voted to limit. Providing cleared, appointed counsel for the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court of Review (Section
108). While we welcome the provision providing for an
appointed, cleared counsel to argue in favor of a ruling of the Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Court when the government appeals its
decisions, it should not substitute for participation, in appropriate
cases, by interested civil liberties organizations. The
Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court approves government orders for
electronic surveillance and physical searches under FISA. It
meets in secret and never hears from anyone other than the government
officials seeking its approval. If an order is denied, the
government has the right to seek review of that denial in a special
three-judge court of appeals, called the Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Court of Review. No one can appeal the approval
of a surveillance order, as the target of the surveillance is not
notified. Instead, the only challenge to an approved order
would occur later, if the information obtained is to be used in a
criminal prosecution, in a suppression motion before the district
court. If the information is used only for intelligence
purposes, there is never an opportunity t
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