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Politics : The Donkey's Inn -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: TigerPaw who wrote (4457)9/9/2002 4:09:51 PM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15516
 
Jr. and his corporate cabinet have not expressed a serious interest in democracy!
JMOP



To: TigerPaw who wrote (4457)9/9/2002 4:11:07 PM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 15516
 
Congress, Courts: Step In Overreaching by the executive branch is tipping the balance away from protecting Americans' precious freedoms
September 9, 2002
latimes.com *

E-mail story

RIGHTS AND THE NEW REALITY


Michael D. Kirkpatrick knows Americans have little
patience for those who would get between law
officers and the terrorists they're after. Gesturing at
100,000 square feet of data-packed computers at an
FBI center in the West Virginia countryside, his
bureau ID bouncing on a "Go Navy" neck cord, the
assistant director in charge of the agency's Criminal
Justice Information Services Division offers his take
on how the people and their president want the
agency to proceed: "It's like the Nike
commercial--'Just do it.' "

If only it were that simple.


Last Sept. 12, in urging our leaders to fight terrorists
mercilessly, we warned that liberties would probably
erode. We called for a reevaluation of the balance
between rights and security each year on the
anniversary of the attacks. That seems particularly
important this first year.

We hope people like Kirkpatrick will pause this week to congratulate themselves.
So far there has been no new mayhem. But we also encourage President Bush,
Congress, the courts
and the people to assess the avalanche of changes the war
on terror has dislodged; to scrutinize the new powers government is claiming; and
to pay closer attention to the details of the 340-page Patriot Act that Congress
quickly passed in October and the proposed Homeland Security Department,
which seems headed for Bush's desk after much squabbling--but little scrutiny of
its effect on fundamental civil liberties.


Today, we spotlight where the government, in its herculean efforts to detect
terrorists and prevent attacks, has gone too far in abridging the rights that help
define this democracy.

Rights Endangered

The most urgent need for attention comes on the legal front, where the
cumulative effect of the Patriot Act has been to massively shift power from
federal judges to investigators, putting innocent people at far greater risk of
unwarranted government scrutiny, harassment or persecution.

Law enforcers, rightly intent on catching crooks, always clamor for fewer
restrictions on how they do their jobs. Sept. 11 gave the attorney general the
rationale to obligingly sweep aside plenty. Suddenly, the standard of "probable
cause" is history. Under the Patriot Act, prosecutors need only assert that
information they hope to find through electronic snooping--by, say, rifling through
a library's database of patron reading preferences--would be "relevant to an
ongoing investigation."


Some changes are simply common-sense nods to public safety: for example,
making it easier, in well-defined circumstances, for law enforcers to listen in on
technologically sophisticated bad guys as they move from cell phone to computer
terminal in plotting their crimes. But the Bush administration, in its zeal to thwart
terrorists, has overcome long-standing legal obstacles to snooping into the homes
and conversations of citizens by simply ignoring them or, in some cases, cheating
its way around them. If left unchallenged, these incursions could forever erase
fundamental privacy and free speech rights.

A Secret Court's Rebuke

In May, for instance, judges on the secret federal court that approves classified
wiretaps and searches in terrorism and espionage cases blasted Atty. Gen. John
Ashcroft for the FBI's use of false information in dozens of requests for
top-secret warrants.
Espionage laws allow a lower threshold of suspicion in
granting wiretaps. The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act created the court in
1978 to protect the public from maverick spying after the Nixon administration
abused its intelligence-gathering powers to probe political enemies.
The judges,
who preside in a windowless room in Washington behind a series of alarmed
doors, charged that the Justice Department shared information between criminal
and intelligence investigations, giving agencies access to data about "many
hundreds of citizens" that they were not legally entitled to have.

The public again needs its Congress to intervene.
It needs to remind the attorney
general that the powers to enter homes, tap phones and search computers that he
has so generously granted to law officers were never his to give. Then it must
compel the administration to return to the people each privacy, 1st Amendment
protection and due process right he's taken, unless he can prove that doing so
would hurt national security.

In opposing President Franklin Roosevelt's relocation of Japanese civilians in the
United States during World War II, Atty. Gen. Francis Biddle noted, "The
Constitution has not greatly bothered any wartime president."

Perhaps it's only human for a commander in chief whose citizens have been
mercilessly slaughtered to focus so intently on protecting them that he loses sight
of his responsibilities to simultaneously protect their rights and freedoms.

Congress and the courts, however, should be very bothered by the
Constitution--especially when the executive branch is ignoring it. Democracy,
with its built-in genius for self-preservation, insists that these parallel branches of
government defend Americans' freedoms--even from a president.


latimes.com *