SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: hdl who wrote (500508)11/29/2003 2:22:22 PM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769668
 
in the meantime....the US GOVERNMENT CONTINUES TO ABUSE THE PATRIOT ACT AGAINST IT'S OWN CITIZENS! NOW SEX IS CONSIDER TERRORISM....just ask the SHRUB....he's TERRIFIED ABOUT SEX
Show Me the Money
By Michael Isikoff
NEWSWEEK

Monday 01 December 2003

Patriot Act helps the Feds in cases with no tie to terror

For FBI agents in Las Vegas, cases don’t get any juicier. Earlier this year the Feds were closing in
on Michael Galardi, the city’s biggest strip-club baron, who was suspected of bribing local officials.
Facing prosecution, Galardi cut a deal and confessed to funneling hundreds of thousands of dollars to
Clark County commissioners. Galardi told agents that he gave one official $20,000 to help buy a new
SUV; another received $400 worth of lap dances at one of his clubs.

In exchange, the commissioners had allegedly done Galardi favors, such as spiking a proposed
lap-dance ordinance that would have put stricter limits on how much the customers could touch. To
make their case, the agents working “Operation G-String” needed to see the financial records of local
officials. To do that, the FBI turned to a new weapon in its arsenal: the USA Patriot Act.

Whisked through Congress in the weeks after 9/11, the Patriot Act—which gives federal law
enforcement wide-ranging powers to track and eavesdrop on suspected terrorists—was promoted as
an urgently needed law to thwart future attacks. When civil libertarians complained the law could lead
to abuses, Attorney General John Ashcroft derided them as “hysterics.” He insisted that any
weakening of the act would “risk American lives.” Some early fears that the Patriot Act would be
abused have been overblown. One much-criticized provision that allows the FBI to monitor the books
people check out of libraries hasn’t actually been used at all. Yet Operation G-String shows how the
Feds are using their new powers in cases that have nothing to do with terrorism—something most
members of Congress never anticipated.

In Las Vegas, the Feds used a little-known provision in the Patriot Act that allows them to quickly
obtain financial records of suspected terrorists or money launderers. Law-enforcement agencies can
submit the name of any suspect to the Treasury Department, which then orders financial institutions
across the country to search their records for any matches. If they get a “hit”—evidence that the
person has an account—the financial institution is slapped with a subpoena for the person’s records.

The Feds might have gotten the same records even without the new law—but only if they had hard
evidence that a suspect was doing business at a particular bank. In effect, the Patriot Act allows the
Feds to search every financial institution in the country for the records of anybody they have
suspicions about—the very definition, critics say, of a fishing expedition. “It’s the functional equivalent
of a national subpoena,” says Peter Djinis, a banking lawyer. Even the law’s architects acknowledge
just how far-reaching the provision is. “It’s an extraordinary power,” says David Aufhauser, a former
general counsel at Treasury, who insists it’s being used responsibly.

It’s the Patriot Act’s money-laundering language that has allowed the Feds to stretch the way the
law can be used. Essentially, money laundering is an effort to disguise illicit profits. But it’s such a
broad statute that prosecutors can use it in the pursuit of more than 200 different federal crimes.
Treasury Department figures reviewed by NEWSWEEK show that this year the Feds have used the
Patriot Act to conduct searches on 962 suspects, yielding “hits” on 6,397 financial records. Of those,
two thirds (4,261) were in money-laundering cases with no apparent terror connection. Among the
agencies making requests, NEWSWEEK has learned, were the IRS (which investigates tax fraud), the
Postal Service (postal fraud) and the Secret Service (counterfeiting). One request came from the
Agriculture Department—a case that apparently involved food-stamp fraud.

Operation G-String went a step further. It was the first time the FBI used the Patriot Act’s powers
against local pols. To the Feds, it was a great success. Three local commissioners and a lobbyist
were indicted this month. (The FBI also pulled records on one Vegas council member—and several
officials’ ex-spouses—who were never charged). An FBI official defended the searches as “entirely
lawful.” Even so, Rep. Shelley Berkley, a Nevada Democrat, complained to the local FBI chief. She
says she was told the agents were only “using the tools that Congress gave them.” The conversation
left Berkley unsettled. In the urgent push to pass the Patriot Act, she says, “never... did the FBI say
we needed additional tools to keep this nation safe from strip-club operators.”
CC