The
USA PATRIOT Act was passed by the
United
States
Congress in
2001 as a response to the September 11, 2001
attacks. It has ten titles, each containing numerous
sections.
Title II: Enhanced Surveillance
Procedures granted increased powers of
surveillance to various government agencies and
bodies. This title has 25 sections, with one of the sections
(section 224) containing a
sunset
clause which sets an expiration date, 31 December 2005, for
most of the title's provisions. This was extended twice: on 22
December 2005 the sunset clause expiration date was extended to 3
February 2006 and on
2 February of the
same year it was again extended, this time to
March 10.
Title II contains many of the most contentious provisions of the
act. Supporters of the Patriot Act claim that these provisions are
necessary in fighting the
War on
Terrorism, while its detractors argue that many of the sections
of Title II infringe upon Constitutionally protected
individual and
civil rights.
The sections of Title II amend the
Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Act of
1978 and its provisions
in
18 U.S.C., dealing with
"
Crimes and
Criminal Procedure". It also amends the
Electronic
Communications Privacy Act of 1986. In general, the Title
expands federal agencies' powers in intercepting, sharing, and
using private
telecommunications,
especially electronic communications, along with a focus on
criminal investigations by updating the rules that govern computer
crime investigations. It also sets out procedures and limitations
for individuals who feel their rights have been violated to seek
redress, including against the United States government. However,
it also includes a section that deals with
trade sanctions against countries whose
government supports terrorism, which is not directly related to
surveillance issues.
Overview
Title II covers all aspects of the surveillance of suspected
terrorists, those suspected of engaging in
computer fraud or abuse, and agents of a foreign power who are
engaged in clandestine activities (in other words,
spying). In particular, the title allows government
agencies to gather "foreign intelligence information" from both
U.S. and non-U.S. citizens, which is defined in
section 203 of the title.
Section 218 changed FISA to make "[the]
significant
purpose of the surveillance is to obtain foreign intelligence
information" (change in italics). The change in definition was
meant to remove a legal "wall" between criminal investigations and
surveillance for the purposes of gathering foreign intelligence,
which hampered investigations when criminal and foreign
surveillance overlapped. However, that this wall even existed was
found by the
Federal Surveillance Court
of Review to have actually been a long-held misinterpretation
by government agencies. Section 203 also gave authorities the
ability to share information gathered before a federal
grand jury with other agencies.
Though not related to surveillance, the title also covers trade
sanctions against the
Taliban — a group
which was determined by the
Secretary of State to have
repeatedly provided support for acts of international terrorism —
and the export of agricultural commodities, medicine, or medical
devices is now pursuant to one-year licenses issued and reviewed by
the United States Government.
It also excluded export of agricultural
commodities, medicine, or medical devices to the Government of
Syria
and to the Government of North Korea
.
Scope of allowed surveillance
The title allows surveillance to intercept communications via
pen register or
trap and trace devices. It does not
allow these surveillance measures to be used in violation of the
First Amendment rights of
U.S. citizens. To assist in an investigation undertaken to protect
against international terrorism or clandestine intelligence
activities, the title allows for the seizure of communications
records (
section
215) and any records of session times, durations of electronic
communication as well as any identifying numbers or addresses of
the equipment that was being used (
section
210). Such orders may be granted
ex
parte, and once they are granted — in order to not
jeopardize the investigation — the order may not disclose the
reasons behind why the order was granted.
Section 209 made it easier for authorities to gain access to
voicemail as they no longer must apply for a wiretap order, and
instead just apply for a normal search warrant.
All orders granted under section 215 must be disclosed to the
Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence of the House of
Representatives and the Select Committee on Intelligence of the
Senate. Every six months, the Attorney General must also provide a
report to the Committees on the Judiciary of the House of
Representatives and the Senate which details the total number of
applications made for orders approving requests for the production
of tangible things and the total number of such orders either
granted, modified, or denied.
Under
section 211, the
United States
Code was amended to allow the government to have access to the
records of cable customers, with the notable exclusion of access to
records revealing cable subscriber selection of video programming
from a cable operator.
Disclosure
Section
212 stopped a communications provider from disclosing the
contents of communications with another party. However, if the
provider "reasonably" (not defined) believes that an emergency
involving immediate danger of
death or serious
physical injury to any person is
imminent, then the communications provider can now disclose this
information without fear of legal liability. The provider may also
disclose communications at the request of a government agency, if
the customer allows it to be disclosed, or in cases where they must
do so to protect their rights or property. Section 212 was later
repealed by the
Homeland
Security Act of 2002 and was replaced with a new and permanent
emergency disclosure provision.
Surveillance orders
In order for surveillance to be carried out, the
United States Attorney
General or his subordinates (so designated under
section 201) may authorize a
federal judge to grant a
surveillance order to the FBI or other Federal agency.
Each of the orders
granted must be reviewed by one of 11 district court judges, of which
at any one time three must live within 20 miles of the District of
Columbia
(see section
208).
Title II amended the U.S. Code to allow a magistrate judge to issue
a warrant outside of their district for any orders that relate to
terrorism (
section
219).
Section 220 of the title also gave a Federal court judge the
power to issue nationwide service of search warrants for electronic
surveillance.
Under FISA, any agency may require a
common carrier,
landlord, custodian, or other person provide them
with all information, facilities, or technical assistance necessary
to accomplish ongoing electronic surveillance. They must also
protect the secrecy of and cause as little disruption to the
ongoing surveillance effort as possible. This was further tightened
in
section 206.
Section 222 further limited the sort of assistance an agency
may require, and provided for compensation of any person who
rendered surveillance assistance to the government agency.
Section 225 allows for
legal
immunity to any provider of a wire or electronic communication
service, landlord, custodian, or other person that provides any
information, facilities, or technical assistance in accordance with
a court order or request for emergency assistance.
Liability due to unauthorized surveillance
Section
223 allows any party who has had their rights violated due to
the illegal interception of communications to take
civil action against any party who undertook
the illegal surveillance.
Sunset
Section 224 (
Sunset) is a
sunset
clause. Title II and the amendments made by the title
originally would have ceased to have effect on December 31, 2005,
with the exception of the below sections. However, on December 22,
2005, the sunset clause expiration date was extended to February 3,
2006, and then on
February 2, 2006 it was
further extended to
March 10:
Title II sections that did not expire on
March 10, 2006
| Section |
Section title |
| 203(a) |
Authority to share criminal investigation information :
Authority to share Grand Jury information |
| 203(c) |
Authority to share criminal investigation information :
Procedures |
| 205 |
Employment of translators by the Federal Bureau of
Investigation |
| 208 |
Designation of judges |
| 210 |
Scope of subpoenas for records of electronic
communications |
| 211 |
Clarification of scope |
| 213 |
Authority for delaying notice of the execution of a
warrant |
| 216 |
Modification of authorities relating to use of pen registers
and trap and trace devices |
| 219 |
Single-jurisdiction search warrants for terrorism |
| 221 |
Trade sanctions |
| 222 |
Assistance to law enforcement agencies |
|
Further, any particular foreign intelligence investigations that
are ongoing will continue to be run under the expired
sections.
Commentary
Various organisations have commented on Title II. Some of the most
significant commentary has come from the
Electronic Privacy
Information Center (EPIC), the
Electronic Frontier
Foundation (EFF), the
American Bar Association (ABA), the
American Civil Liberties
Union (ACLU) and from the
United States government.
American Bar Association
The ABA passed
resolution
that asked the U.S. government "to conduct a thorough review of the
implementation of the powers granted to the Executive Branch under
the [USA PATRIOT] Act before considering legislation that would
extend or further expand such powers ...." and "to conduct regular
and timely oversight including public hearings ... to ensure that
government investigations undertaken pursuant to the Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Act ... do not violate the First, Fourth,
and Fifth Amendments of the Constitution ...." They also set up a
website,
Patriot Debates to discuss issues in relation to the
USA PATRIOT Act. Various people
debated specific sections of Title II in
great depth on the site.
Section 203
Kate Martin, the director of
the Center for National Security Studies, argued that
section 203 and 905 should be modified as she maintains the Act
fails to discriminate between information gathered between
terrorist and non-terrorist investigations. She believes that the
Act should be modified to include some privacy safeguards: before
information is gathered she believes that the court should approve
the information transfer to make sure that it is necessary for
ongoing activities by the agencies involved; that information
shared should be limited to information relevant to investigations
into terrorism; that only those people who have access to such
information should actually need it to do their jobs (currently
those who are not directly related to the investigation can gain
access to the information); and information gathered should be
marked as confidential and measures put into place to stop the
inappropriate dissemination of such information.
Kate Martin,
"Why Sections
203 and 905 Should be Modified" (undated), accessed January 2,
2005. Her views were opposed by
Viet Dinh,
who believed that such alterations would hinder terrorism
investigations.
Section 206
James Dempsey argued that
Section 206, which allows for roving surveillance under FISA,
was reasonable considering that investigators already had the
ability to perform roving surveillance in criminal cases. However,
he says that "as with so many provisions of the PATRIOT Act, the
concern with Section 206 is not with the authority itself [but]
rather, the issue is the lack of adequate checks and balances".
Dempsey believes that the section lacks two important safeguards
that are present in the corresponding legislation for criminal
investigations: 1) that agents actually ascertain the location of
the suspect before turning on their recording devices, and 2) that
"some additional changes to FISA adopted outside of the normal
process in the Intelligence Authorization Act a few months after
the PATRIOT Act had the probably unintended effect of seeming to
authorize “John Doe” roving taps – that is, FISA orders that
identify
neither the target nor the location of the
interception.". Dempsey also believes that the law should be
changed so that those under surveillance via FISA should also be
notified after surveillance has ceased, so that those wrongly
targeted and placed under surveillance can challenge the
government's actions.
James X.
Dempsey,
"Why Section 206 Should be Modified" (undated),
accessed January 7, 2006. However,
Paul
Rosenzweig disagreed with Dempsey's premise that "relaxation of
the particularity requirement is constitutionally suspect" and
believed that it colored his argument that section 206 should be
modified. Rosenzweig believes that the addition of an ascertainment
requirement and the requirement that the identification of
individuals should be more specific "seem unnecessary and unwise" —
in Rosenzweig's view it would unnecessarily burden the ability of
law enforcement and intelligence agents to perform surveillance on
terrorist suspects.
Section 209, 212 and 220
James X. Dempsey argued that
section 209, which deals with the seizure of voicemails through
the use of a normal search warrant, unnecessarily overlooked the
importance of notice under the Fourth Amendment and under a Title
III wiretap. He believes that there is no way to seek redress under
the new provisions, as those who have an ordinary search warrant
against them may never find out that their voicemail has been
seized. On the now repealed
section
212 and the similar current provision in the
Homeland Security Act, which allows
for the emergency disclosure of electronic communications under
certain circumstances, he believes it leaves the law open for abuse
as an agency may "cut corners" by informing an ISP about a
potential emergency, leading to the ISP then making emergency
disclosures based on this information. Dempsey suggests several
modifications to implement checks and balances into the section:
make after-the-act judicial review mandatory, with the suppression
of evidence which is not deemed to be properly justified; the
mandatory disclosure to the person whose privacy has been invaded
that their information has been provided to the government; and to
"make it illegal for a government official to intentionally or
recklessly mislead a service provider as to the existence of an
emergency". Dempsey also believes that
section 220, which allows for the nationwide service of search
warrants for electronic evidence, made it "more difficult for a
distant service provider to appear before the issuing court and
object to legal or procedural defects". A solution suggested by
Dempsey to this problem would be to allow a warrant to be
challenged in the district it was served as well as in the district
it was issued.
James X. Dempsey,
"Why Sections 209, 212, and 220 Should be
Modified" (undated), accessed January 13, 2006.
Orin S. Kerr also agreed with James Dempsey that the
sections were uncontroversial, but argued they should be kept. Kerr
believes that "for the most part, Jim Dempsey’s proposals for
reform would impose greater privacy restrictions for online
investigations than equivalent offline investigations". He believes
that Dempsey's proposal to require after-the-act judicial review
for exigent circumstances has no parallel in the Fourth Amendment;
that allowing recipients of orders to challenge orders within the
recipients own district would not follow "the traditional rule that
any challenge (itself an extremely rare event) must be filed in the
issuing district"; and that disclosure to the person whose
electronic voicemail has been seized also has no such parallel in
the Fourth Amendment, as while notice must be given to a home owner
whose house is being searched this is not done to allow a challenge
to the order but rather shows them that due legal process is being
followed and that the search is not being conducted by a rogue
agent — Kerr believes that "current law appears to satisfy this
policy concern by providing notice to the ISP".
Orin S. Kerr,
Orin Kerr Replies (undated), accessed January 13,
2006.
Section 213
Heather Mac Donald argued that
section
213, which provides for the so-called "sneak and peak"
provisions of the Patriot Act, is necessary because the temporary
delay in notification of a search order stops terrorists from
tipping off their counterparts that they are being investigated.
She claims that the section allows the government to conduct secret
searches without notification from such organisations as the ACLU
and the
Century Foundation are
wrong, and listed several arguments that she believed are easily
discredited. She called them: "Conceal Legal Precedent", "Hide the
Judge", "Amend the Statute", and "Reject Secrecy". James X. Dempsey
countered that section 213 was a "perfect example of a good idea
gone too far" and argued that secrecy was already dealt when FISA
was amended in 1994 to allow the government to carry out secret
searches. Dempsey objects to the fact that section 213 as enacted
is not limited to terrorism cases. Dempsey believes that the
section confuses the law and was hastily cobbled together — his
primary example is the reference to the definition of “adverse
result”, which he argues was unrelated with regards to the Patriot
Act's purposes. He believes the definition is too broad and "offer
little guidance to judges and will bring about no national
uniformity in sneak and peek cases." He also believes that
"reasonable period" is too vague and that it leaves judges with no
uniform standard, and may leave courts outside the
Ninth and
Second
Circuit the ability to make up their own rules. He also wonders
why if sneak and peak orders are a “time-honored tool” used by
courts for decades, then why it was necessary for the Justice
Department to push to make section 213 applicable in all cases that
such a measure is used. The answer Dempsey posits is that they were
on shaky constitutional ground and that they were "trying to
bolster it with Congressional action – even action by a Congress
that thought it was voting on an anti-terrorism bill, not a general
crimes bill." Dempsey's reasons for believing that they were on
shaky ground was because although the 1986
United States v. Freitas, 800 F.2d 1451 (9th
Cir.), and 1990, United States v. Villegas, 899 F.2d 1324 (2d Cir.)
circuit opinions were premised on the assumption that notice was
not an element of the Fourth Amendment,
Wilson v. Arkansas, 514 U.S. 927 (1995)
Justice Thomas of the Supreme Court found that notice is part of
the Fourth Amendment. In order to fix what he believes to be
serious flaws in section 213, Dempsey proposes several changes be
made to the section: the requirement for
reasonable cause to be found by a judge be
change to be
probable cause; that the
section should not apply to every case of delayed notification and
that Congress should require that any delay in notification not
extend for more than seven days without additional judicial
authorization.
James X. Dempsey,
James X. Dempsey replies (undated), accessed January
13, 2006.
Section 214 and 215
Andrew C. McCarthy believed that sections
214 (deals with Pen Register and Trap and Trace Authority under
FISA) and
215 (expanded what records could be accessed under FISA) should
be retained. He argues that Federal Rule of Investigation 17(c)
authorised the compulsory production of “any books, papers,
documents, data, or other objects” to criminal investigators by
mere subpoena, and so section 215 merely brought FISA into line
with current criminal law. He also states that the records included
in section 215 are records held by third-parties, and therefore are
exempt from a citizen's reasonable expectations of privacy. In
light of this, McCarthy believes that there are three main reasons
why the access to library records is not a problem: firstly he
believes that the government has always had the authority to compel
the reading of records by subpoena and there has been "no empirical
indication of systematic prying into private choices – else we’d
surely have heard from the robustly organized librarians"; secondly
he believes that in the current information age that there is just
too much information for inappropriate access to such records; and
thirdly he believes that an
a priori ban on the
investigative access to the reading of records would be both
unprecedented and wrong. He points out that "literature evidence
was a staple of terrorism prosecutions throughout the 1990’s" and
that the reading of records has already led to convictions of
terrorists.
Though the government must only specify that the records concerned
are sought for an authorized investigation instead of providing
"specific and articulable facts" to perform surveillance on an
agent of a foreign power, he points out that it prohibits
investigations that violate first amendment rights of citizens,
which he says is not specified in the corresponding criminal
procedures. He says that the FISC is not meant to apply searching
judicial review of surveillance orders as the role of the judiciary
is to make sure the
executive
branch is not abusing its powers and "by requiring the FBI to
make solemn representations to the court, and mandating that the
Attorney General report semi-annually on this provision’s
implementation, Section 215 provides suitable metrics for oversight
and, if necessary, reform". However, McCarthy does believe that
section 215 "should be amended to clarify that order recipients may
move the FISA court to quash or narrow production", however he says
that the US DOJ has already decided that this is implicit in the
section so it is probably unnecessary. He believes that further
amendment is unnecessary and unwise.
On section 214, McCarthy believes that the pre-Patriot Act version
of FISA, which required government agencies to "certify that the
monitored communications would likely be those either of an
international terrorist or spy involved in a violation of U.S.
criminal law, or of an agent of a foreign power involved in
terrorism or espionage" was "an unnecessary and imprudently high
hurdle" as pen registers and wiretaps do not violate the Fourth
Amendment. Therefore, he argues, "there is no constitutional reason
to require investigators to seek court authorization for them at
all". Thus McCarthy says, the amendments to FISA made by section
214 are "both modest and eminently reasonable".
Andrew C. McCarthy,
"Why Sections 214 and 215 Should be Retained"
(undated), accessed January 16, 2006.
Peter P. Swire was much more skeptical about section 214
and 215 than McCarthy.
He explains that FISA originally did not
apply to business records and was only designed for surveillance,
and after the Oklahoma and
World Trade
Center bombing
it was amended to apply to travel documents
only. It was section 215 that made broad changes to allow
access to business records. He also explains that the legal
standing changed in such a way that a FISA order to access business
records to could apply to anyone, and if necessary the government
could ask for access to whole databases. He argues that "FISA
orders can now apply to anyone, not only the target of the
investigation" and that it is no longer necessary for FISA orders
to be targeted against a foreign power or agents of a foreign
power, but can now be used to gain records of those who have
nothing to do with a foreign power. He says that there are only
weak constraints to base the order on an authorised investigation
and that surveillance must not be based entirely on First Amendment
activities.
Swire pointed out that business records obtained under FISA are
different from those obtained under similar criminal legislation,
in that gag orders may not be applied to criminal investigations.
He also argues that the US DOJ's assertion that they can gain
access to documents held by a third party because these documents
are not protected by the Fourth Amendment is flawed because "it
mistakenly asserts that something that is constitutional is also
desirable policy". He points out that "to see this mistake,
consider that a 90 percent income tax is almost certainly
constitutional, but few people think it therefore would be a wise
policy" . In this light he argues that a better policy for
sensitive library documents is to have significant oversight from
the courts.
Section 218
Andrew C. McCarthy argued that section 218, which changed FISA from
stating that the
purpose of foreign surveillance was to
gather intelligence information to be the
significant
purpose of intelligence information gathering, should be kept
even though it is already clear that this is what is meant under
FISA in any case. He explains that FISA was misinterpreted to have
"primary purpose" tests for surveillance for nearly a
quarter-century, and that in April 2002 the Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Court of Review found that,
- it is quite puzzling that the Justice Department, at some
point during the 1980s, began to read the statute as limiting the
Department’s ability to obtain FISA orders if it intended to
prosecute the targeted agents–even for foreign intelligence
crimes... the definition of foreign intelligence information
includes evidence of crimes such as espionage, sabotage or
terrorism. Indeed, it is virtually impossible to read the
1978 FISA to exclude from its purpose the prosecution of foreign
intelligence crimes, most importantly because, as we have noted,
the definition of an agent of a foreign power–if he or she is a
U.S. person–is grounded on criminal conduct.
Similarly, McCarthy argues that the separation of foreign
intelligence and criminal investigation is a false dichotomy, in
that "the existence of a crime or national security threat is an
objective reality, entirely independent of the investigators’
subjective mindsets about why they are investigating". He believes
that it is wrong "to suspect systematically dishonest resort to
FISA [, as] FISA applications require a specialized and rigorous
internal approval process before presentation to the court.
Assuming arguendo an agent willing to act corruptly, it would be
far easier and less detectable to fabricate the evidence necessary
to get an ordinary criminal wiretap than to fabricate a national
security reason to use FISA". McCarthy believes that over time, the
U.S. Justice Department misinterpreted FISA to believe that
criminal investigations could not be undertaken under FISA, but
"began construing the certification not as a mere
announcement
of purpose but as something more restrictive: a
substantive limitation on the use of FISA evidence in
criminal cases". McCarthy then explains that the Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Court of Review found that "“clearly did
not preclude or limit the government’s use ... of foreign
intelligence information, which included evidence of certain kinds
of criminal activity, in a criminal prosecution.” McCarthy then
notes the practical consequences of the U.S. DoJ's
misinterpretation of FISA:
- The best known pernicious consequence of all this occurred
in August 2001. Relying on the wall, FBI headquarters
declined to allow criminal investigators to assist an intelligence
investigation seeking to locate probable terrorists Khalid al-Midhar and Nawaf al-Hazmi. A few weeks later,
on 9/11, the pair helped hijack Flight 77
and pilot it into the
Pentagon
.
In light of these matters, McCarthy believes that although section
218 is not legally necessary it should remain anyway, to clarify
clearly what the Act says and remove any misunderstanding as to
what is meant in FISA, and he believes that the section should not
sunset.
David D. Cole argued that the changes to the law were
unnecessary, and accused the proponents of the USA PATRIOT Act of
"[being] equally guilty of propagating competing myths in this
debate, nowhere more so than with respect to Section 218 and the
"wall." He agrees that the wall was not required by FISA, and
maintains that section 218 was not sufficient to reduce barriers
between information sharing amongst agencies — this, he says, was
and remains a bureaucratic issue and not a statutory one. He blames
the CIA not trusting the FBI, and believes that pre-Patriot Act
FISA was not the cause of problems of communications between the
two agencies. Cole's argument is that the primary purpose test
applied to acquiring foreign intelligence information when
undertaking surveillance was "simply sought to reduce the risk that
FISA, which permits searches on less than criminal probable cause,
would become an end run around the constitutional requirement of
criminal probable cause for searches conducted for criminal law
purposes" and that although a secondary criminal purpose may later
arise, the agency firstly must primarily gain the order to gain
foreign intelligence information. He also dismissed the claims that
before section 218 was enacted possible terrorist prosecution was
not possible, citing the prosecution of
Sami Al-Arian by the U.S. DOJ, which used FISA
wiretaps undertaken before the Patriot Act was enacted, which fell
under the pre-Patriot FISA law. He also attacks suggestions that
when an investigation turned from foreign intelligence to a
primarily criminal investigation then a wiretap would need to be
taken down, instead positing that once it became criminal
"government agents would simply have to satisfy the standards
applicable to criminal investigations – namely, by showing that
they had probable cause that the tap would reveal evidence of
criminal conduct... [and t]he tap or the search would then
continue".
Cole believes that the FISA is based on an untested (by the U.S.
Supreme Court) assumption that FISA searches can be performed under
a lower showing of suspicion than would be mandated for criminal
searches. He believes that the term "foreign power" is broad enough
to "[encompass] any political organization comprised of a majority
of noncitizens", and though they must show reasonable evidence of a
crime when targeting a U.S. citizen, the agency must only show
evidence that a foreign person is an agent of a foreign power. He
states that FISA was based on an "administrative search" exception
to the Fourth Amendment, which relaxed the probable cause
requirement for searches "where the search serves some special need
beyond criminal law enforcement". However, Cole believes that the
administrative search exception does not apply to criminal law
enforcement, therefore when an investigation turns into a primarily
criminal investigation the traditional standards of criminal
probable cause would then apply. The crux of Cole's argument is
that,
- [b]y abandoning that distinction and allowing searches on
less than probable cause where the government is primarily seeking
criminal prosecution, Section 218 raises a serious constitutional
question. Thus, Section 218 was not only unnecessary to
bring down the wall, but may render FISA
unconstitutional.
Cole believes that section 218 makes it more likely "that
information obtained through FISA wiretaps and searches will be
used against defendants in criminal cases", and suggests that
criminal defendants or their cleared counsel should be able to
review "the initial application for the FISA wiretap or search when
contesting the admissibility of evidence obtained through a FISA
search" using "[a]n amendment requiring disclosure of FISA
applications where evidence is sought to be used in a criminal
trial would encourage adherence to the law by putting federal
officials on notice that at some point the legality of the FISA
warrant would be subjected to adversarial testing". Confidentiality
could be kept by limiting access to the information to cleared
council or by applying the restrictions of the
Classified Information
Procedures Act.
McCarthy totally disagreed with everything Cole said, stating that
"It is apt that Professor David Cole begins the title of his
response 'Imaginary Walls[.]' His submission is largely imaginary,
creating rather than relating 'myths' about the structural
impediments to good intelligence that plagued the pre-9/11 world."
He believes that Cole's whole argument is pinned to the belief that
FISA in unconstitutional, something McCarthy totally disagreed
with. In McCarthy's mind, Cole's objection to FISA is that he
believes, incorrectly, that under the Fourth Amendment searches are
"inappropriate absent probable cause of a crime". He argues that
Cole is wrong when he states that FISA requires a lower standard of
suspicion to authorise searches, but rather it requires a different
standard than is required of criminal searches. McCarthy says
Cole's "suggestion that a "foreign power" under FISA could be any
"political organization" comprised predominantly of non-citizens is
overwrought", and that only those organisations proven to be
engaged in clandestine operations will be targeted. He also says
that Cole is wrong in that under FISA government searches and
surveillance were never restricted to searches whose primary
purpose was intelligence gathering, and therefore section 218 is
not constitutionally suspect. McCarthy says that though the
enforcing of a wall between criminal and foreign investigations
under FISA was a misunderstanding by the U.S. DOJ, the reality was
that the misunderstanding of the Act did not mean that structural
restrictions were not established. He ends by stating that "[n]o
one claims the wall tainted the propriety of intelligence
gathering. It blocked sharing of the intelligence gathered. That is
the bureaucratic monstrosity dismantled by Section 218... Without
that clarification of law, the disastrous primary purpose doctrine
would be undisturbed, the unnecessary wall would still be in place,
dots would remain unconnected, prosecutions like al-Arian would not
have occurred, and the United States would be at considerably
greater risk."
In his final response, Cole defended himself, stating that his
argument about the constitutionality of section 218 was because it
"deprives FISA of its constitutional justification" — previously,
he says, FISA searches were justified without reasonable cause
justifications because they fell under an "administrative search"
exception in the constitution. However, Cole says that the Supreme
Court has held that this "does not apply where the government's
purpose is criminal law enforcement". Now that the Patriot Act
makes foreign intelligence gathering the significant and not sole
reason for FISA searches, allowing for criminal searches under
FISA, Cole believes that such searches would then by on
constitutionally shaky ground. Cole argues that McCarthy's argument
is based on a false premise: that section 218 is constitutional
because, in McCarthy's words, "[it] mandat[es] that intelligence
gathering be "a primary purpose," [and] constrains the government
in a way that neither the Fourth Amendment nor FISA does". Cole
disputes this, and says that "the very purpose of Section 218 was
to eliminate the 'primary purpose' requirement". Cole also believes
that McCarthy is wrong when he asserts that FISA targets only those
"foreign powers" engaged in intelligence gathering, sabotage or
international terrorism (McCarthy cited ). Cole cites , where FISA
defines a "foreign power" as "a foreign-based political
organization, not substantially composed of United States persons."
and defines an "agent" of a foreign power to be those who are "an
officer or employee of a foreign power." This, he says, is too
broad, giving the example where a "British citizen working here as
an employee of
Amnesty
International is an 'agent of a foreign power.'". Cole finally
points out that McCarthy does not address his suggestion that
"[FISA] should be amended to permit defendants in those
prosecutions access to the FISA applications to challenge the
warrant's validity".
Electronic Privacy Information Center
EPIC has criticised numerous sections of the title. The main thrust
of their argument is that the Act does not provide a system of
checks and balances to safeguard
civil liberties in the face of significantly increase powers of
surveillance and investigative powers for law enforcement agencies
in the United States. They criticise:
- Section 206, a section that allows for "roving surveillance" of
a target whose actions may have the effect of thwarting the
identification of a particular person, is criticised for being too
broad in scope and that the privacy of citizens is eroded. They are
in particular concerned about those who use the Internet through
public facilities such as libraries, university computer labs and
cybercafes, as the FBI may monitor any
facility that the target may be using, and do not have to specify
which facility they are monitoring. They believe that this violates
the Fourth Amendment, which specifies that search warrants must
specify the place being searched.
- Section 214, which deals with pen register and trap and trace
authorities, as they believe that the section takes away the
"statutory requirement that the government prove the surveillance
target is "an agent of a 'foreign power'" and as such "the
amendment significantly eviscerates the constitutional rationale
for the relatively lax requirements that apply to foreign
intelligence surveillance... The removal of the 'foreign power'
predicate for pen register/trap and trace surveillance upsets that
delicate balance.".
- Section 216, which deals with the authority to issue pen
registers and trace devices and contend that "the statutory
definitions are vague with respect to the types of information that
can be captured and are subject to broad interpretations". They are
not impressed with the section's specific exclusion of the contents
of such communications, because this is defined in as "[including]
any information concerning the substance, purport, or meaning of
that communication". They say that it "does not adequately take
into account the unique nature of information captured
electronically, which contains data far more revealing than phone
numbers, such as URL
generated while using the Web (which
often contain a great deal of information that cannot in any way be
analogized to a telephone number)". They also say that
"availability of nationwide orders for the interception and
collection of electronic evidence would remove an important legal
safeguard by making it more difficult for a distant service
provider to appear before the issuing court and object to legal or
procedural defects". Analysis of Specific USA PATRIOT Act Provisions: Pen
Registers, the Internet and Carnivore, Electronic Privacy
Information Center. Accessed December 4, 2005. Section
220, which deals with nationwide service of search warrants for
electronic evidence, is similarly criticised.
- Section 217, which deals with the interception of computer
trespasser communications, has "little, if anything, to do with
legitimate investigations of terrorism".
- Section 218, where it is now the "significant purpose" of
national security and defense based surveillance to gather foreign
intelligence information, they criticised the wording of
"Significant" as undefined and vague, and believe that this "could
lead to inconsistent determinations and potential overuse of the
FISA standards."
EPIC also singled out Section 205, which allows the director of the
FBI to employ translators, and
section 208, which
increases the number of Federal judges that can review surveillance
orders from seven to eleven as "commendable in their efforts to aid
the government in preventing terrorist acts while maintaining a
system checking intrusion onto citizens' civil liberties".
American Civil Liberties Union
The
ACLU, an advocate of both free speech and
also personal privacy has objected strongly to the Patriot Act,
claiming it is flawed and violates a number of personal freedoms.
"There are significant flaws in the Patriot Act, flaws that
threaten your fundamental freedoms by giving the government the
power to access to your medical records, tax records, information
about the books you buy or borrow without probable cause, and the
power to break into your home and conduct secret searches without
telling you for weeks, months, or indefinitely."
Though the ACLU does not largely name specific sections, generally
speaking they:
- Oppose the increased ability of the government to gather
records held by a third party about a U.S. citizen's activities
(they refer to Section 215). They say that the government has been
given too much unchecked power. They believe that the government no
longer has to show evidence that the subjects of search orders are
an agent of a foreign power, that the FBI does not have to show
probable cause to gain access to private information, that judicial oversight of the new powers
given to agencies by the Patriot Act is almost non-existent, that
surveillance orders can be based in part on a person's First
Amendment activities and that when orders are given they are done
ex parte and in camera.
- Believe the Act unconstitutionally amends the Federal Rules of Criminal
Procedure to allow the government to conduct searches without
notifying the subjects, at least until long after the search has
been executed (cf. section
213)
- Believe that under the Patriot Act, the FBI can secretly
conduct a physical search or wiretap on U.S. citizens to obtain
evidence of crime without proving probable cause, as the Fourth
Amendment explicitly requires. (cf.
section 216)
- Oppose the expansion of pen register laws (cf.
section 216). They believe that the Wiretap Act specifically
details the use of pen registers with regards to telephone
wiretaps, and was never meant for more modern communication, such
as surveillance of websurfing. They oppose roving surveillance (cf
section
206) and the nationwide authorisation of surveillance (cf.
section 220) "because a judge cannot meaningfully monitor the
extent to which his or her order is being used".
Electronic Frontier Foundation
The EFF has been scathing in its criticism of the Patriot Act. They
have stated that "while containing some sections that seem
appropriate—providing for victims of the September 11 attacks,
increasing translation facilities and increasing forensic
cybercrime capabilities—it seems clear that the vast majority of
the sections included were not carefully studied by Congress, nor
was sufficient time taken to debate it or to hear testimony from
experts outside of law enforcement in the fields where it makes
major changes" and that "[many provisions] are aimed at nonviolent,
domestic crime... [and] although many of the provisions facially
appear aimed at terrorism, the Government made no showing that the
reasons they failed to detect the planning of the recent attacks or
any other terrorist attacks were the civil liberties compromised
with the passage of PATRIOT." They have also criticised the
addition of computer crimes to the list of acts deemed to be
terrorist related.
The EFF have criticised:
- Section
201, in combination with section 805 which deals with the
material support of terrorism. The EFF believes that U.S. citizens
should be allowed to support an organisation deemed as terrorist,
if only to support them in non-terrorist activities. One example
they cite of potential problems with section 805 is that citizens
would not have been able to support the African National Congress (ANC)
during apartheid, as they believe they would be classed as a
terrorist organisation. Further examples are of a humanitarian
social worker being unable to train Hamas
members how to care for civilian children orphaned in the conflict
between Israelis and Palestinians or a lawyer could not teach
IRA members about
international law, or peace
workers offering training in effective peace negotiations or how to
petition the United Nations regarding
human rights abuses. The EFF, however, does not oppose section 201
on its own and believes that the section that should be repealed is
section 805.EFF, "Let
the Sun Set on PATRIOT - Section 201: 'Authority to Intercept Wire,
Oral, and Electronic Communications Relating to Terrorism,' and
Section 805, 'Material Support for Terrorism'", access December
20, 2005.
- Section
202 and section
217, which both deal with the approval of intercept orders for
the investigation of computer crimes. The EFF believes that this
section should sunset because the Congress passed the section
without having to "cite even a single instance in which a
computer-crime investigation—much less a terrorism
investigation—had been hindered due to lack of surveillance
authority."EFF, "Let
the Sun Set on PATRIOT - Section 202: Section 202, “Authority To
Intercept Wire, Oral, And Electronic Communications Relating To
Computer Fraud And Abuse Offenses,” and Section 217, “Interception
Of Computer Trespasser Communications.", accessed December 22,
2005.
- Section
204, which amended FISA to allow the acquisition of foreign
intelligence information from non-U.S. source via a variety of
measures, has been criticised as removing safeguards against
unchecked surveillance. The EFF has stated that "Congress forgot to
clarify that the US could also ignore pen-trap laws when the
information is gathered outside the country". They hold that it
shows that "204 really clarified was just how bad the rest of the
law was even before the USA PATRIOT Act passed, and how government
surveillance of international communications is dangerously
unregulated", and cite ECHELON as an example
of a system out of control. Section 204 modified to include chapter
206 of the US Code (which deals with the regulation of pen
registers and trap and trace devices) and includes electronic
devices in the list of devices that agencies can intercept
communications. The section in contention states that:
- :Nothing contained in this chapter or chapter 121
[regulations that determines when and where stored communications
and transactions can be accessed] or 206 of this title, or
section 705 of the Communications Act of 1934
[disallows anyone who receives, assists with receiving, transmits,
or assists in transmitting any interstate or foreign communication
by wire or radio from
divulging or publishing the contents of such communications,
"except through authorized channels of transmission or reception"]
shall be deemed to affect the acquisition by the United States
Government of foreign intelligence information from international
or foreign communications, or foreign intelligence activities
conducted in accordance with otherwise applicable Federal law
involving a foreign electronic communications system, utilizing a
means other than electronic surveillance as defined in section 101
of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978, and
procedures in this chapter or chapter 121 and the Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978 shall be the exclusive means
by which electronic surveillance, as defined in section 101 of such
Act, and the interception of domestic wire, oral, and electronic
communications may be conducted.
- The EFF believe that the Patriot Act should be repealed to fix
what they say are abuses in the system. They believe that "strong
public opposition to Section 204's expansion of international
surveillance authority could send a message to Congress that the
rest of the law needs fixing."EFF, "Section 204: 'Clarification of Intelligence Exceptions
From Limitations on Interception and Disclosure of Wire, Oral, and
Electronic Communications.'", accessed December 28, 2005
- Section
206, which allows for the roving surveillance of targets, and
allows a government agency to require full assistance to perform
such surveillance. The EFF objects to the law because they believe
it "gives the FBI a 'blank check' to violate the communications
privacy of countless innocent Americans". They believe that because
there is a lower legal standard for FISA wiretaps it will lead to
abuses of the fourth amendment rights of U.S. citizens. The EFF
states that the "the FBI can wiretap every single phone line,
mobile communications device or Internet connection that a suspect
might be using, without ever having to identify the suspect by
name... for up to a year." The section in question, 205, amended by
inserting 'or in circumstances where the Court finds that the
actions of the target of the application may have the effect of
thwarting the identification of a specified person, such other
persons,' after 'specified person'. It now reads:
- :[An order approving an electronic surveillance under this
section shall direct] that, upon the request of the applicant, a
specified communication or other common carrier, landlord,
custodian, or other specified person, or in circumstances where the
Court finds that the actions of the target of the application may
have the effect of thwarting the identification of a specified
person, such other persons, furnish the applicant forthwith all
information, facilities, or technical assistance necessary to
accomplish the electronic surveillance in such a manner as will
protect its secrecy and produce a minimum of interference with the
services that such carrier, landlord, custodian, or other person is
providing that target of electronic surveillance
-
Section 207 is the section that allows for extensions of up to
a year for surveillance of agents of a foreign power (and not U.S.
citizens).
-
Section 207 extended the duration of surveillance orders
against agents of a foreign power from 45 days to 90 days, and
physical search orders to up to 120 days, with court extensions for
up to a period of one year. The EFF believe that criminal wiretaps
were generous enough already, and there was no need to increase the
duration of surveillance. They also believe that there is a lower
legal standard for probable cause for FISA based surveillance
orders and that the section dangerously removes safeguards against
the abuse of such orders. However, the extensions to the duration
of FISA surveillance orders detailed in section 207 only applies to
orders taken out against foreign agents, and not to U.S. citizens.
The EFF believes that:
- :PATRIOT 207's extension of the FISA time limits is an
unnecessary expansion of power with only one clear "benefit": it
reduces the amount of paperwork the FBI has to do in order to
maintain continuous surveillance. However, that paperwork
is far from busy work—it's a procedural check on government
surveillance required by the Constitution. Needlessly
reducing such checks on secret police power doesn't make us safer
from terrorism. Instead, it makes us less safe from
government abuse of that power.
-
Section 209, which removed the need for the government to apply
for a Title III wiretap order to open voicemail. The EFF points out
that to gain access to voicemail an order will now be based on the
Electronic
Communications Privacy Act (ECPA), which they say gives much
less "protection from government spying". They state the
following:
- :* Before PATRIOT, the FBI could gain access to your voice
mail only by showing facts to a judge that demonstrate "probable
cause" to believe that you are committing a crime. Now it
need only demonstrate "reasonable grounds" for the search to get a
court order—or, if it uses a subpoena, mere "relevance" to an
investigation.
- :* Before PATRIOT, the FBI eventually had to notify you if
it listened to your voice mail messages. Now if they use a
search warrant, the only way you'll find out is if the FBI uses
your voice mail against you in court.
- :* Before PATRIOT, the FBI could listen to your voice mail
only if you were suspected of one of a limited number of serious
crimes. Now it can gain access to your voice mail messages
for any kind of criminal investigation whatsoever.
- :* Before PATRIOT, if the FBI listened to your voice mail
illegally, it couldn't use the messages as evidence against
you—this is the so-called exclusionary rule. But the ECPA
has no such rule, so even if the FBI gains access to your voice
mail in violation of the statute, it can freely use it as evidence
against you.
- :In stripping these key privacy protections from your voice
mail, PATRIOT is in possible violation of the Fourth Amendment to
the U.S. Constitution.
- Section
212, which allows the emergency disclosure of electronic
communications to protect life and limb, because they believe that
the an ISP or phone company should not be able hand over an
individual's private records and messages, without their consent or
knowledge, to any law enforcement agent on the belief that there
would be immediate danger of death or serious physical injury
required it to do so. They further protest section 225 of the
Homeland Security Act of
2002 (otherwise known as the Cyber Security
Enhancement Act of 2002, which repealed and replaced section
212 of the Patriot Act), as they believe that this expands the
Patriot Act's section 212.
- Section
214, which amended the parts of FISA that deal with pen
registers and trap and trace devices, because they believe that
originally under FISA, court orders brought before the court were
limited to the investigation of foreign threats to national
security. They believe that the amendment broadens this to include
U.S. citizens and "there's no way for citizens to know how often
FISA pen-traps are authorized, whether and to what extent they're
being used to spy on Internet communications, or how the court
interprets the distinction between communications content and
non-content when it comes to Internet communications." They also
criticise the amendment for being too vague in specifying what can
and can't be trapped (trap and trace and pen registers are only
meant to determine data about the nature of communications, not the
contents of the communications themselves).
- Section
215, possibly one of the most controversial sections of the
Patriot Act because it expands the ability of a government agency
to gain access to records and other items under FISA—though
investigations must not be performed on U.S. citizens who are
carrying out activities protected by the First Amendment to the
Constitution of the United States. The EFF believe that it allows
the U.S. government to violate the 4th amendment rights of U.S.
citizens to privacy, without even having to show probable cause
that the records are needed in the investigation. They have stated
that:
- :...under Section 215 the FBI can investigate United States
persons (citizens and legal residents) based at least in part on
their exercise of First Amendment rights, and can investigate
non-U.S. persons based solely on their free speech activities or
religious practices. You could be investigated based on
the political or religious meetings you attend, the websites you
visit or even the books that you read. As a result,
Americans may be chilled from exercising these Constitutional
rights. Already, attendance at and donations to mosques
have dropped significantly, as many Muslims reasonably fear that
they will be targeted for investigation based solely on their
religious beliefs.EFF, "Let
the Sun Set on PATRIOT - Section 215: 'Access to Records and Other
Items Under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act'",
accessed December 30, 2005
- The EFF also objects to the fact that a FISA surveillance order
leaves a U.S. citizen with no means to go to court and challenge
its legality.
-
Section 220, which gives the power to Federal courts to issue
nationwide service of search warrants for electronic surveillance.
The EFF believe that it should not have been included into the
Patriot Act as it deals with criminal cases as well as dealing with
terrorism, something they believe that should not have been
specified in the Act, "despite the fact that PATRIOT was sold to
the American public as a necessary anti-terrorism measure." They
believe that agencies will be able to "'shop' for judges that have
demonstrated a strong bias toward law enforcement with regard to
search warrants, using only those judges least likely to say
no—even if the warrant doesn't satisfy the strict requirements of
the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution", and that it reduces the
likelihood that smaller ISPs or phone companies will try to protect
the privacy of their clients by challenging the warrant in court —
their reasoning is that "a small San Francisco ISP served with such
a warrant is unlikely to have the resources to appear before the
New York court that issued it." They believe that this is bad
because only the communications provider will be able to challenge
the warrant as only they will know about it—many warrants are
issued ex parte, which means that the party it is made out
against will not need to be present when the order is issued.
-
Section 223, which allows for civil liability against those who
make unauthorised disclosures of communication. According to the
EFF they originally praised this section, however they now believe
that it is a "a legislative trojan horse [and] the few checks and
balances that 223 obviously added to the law blinded us to the ones
it subtly removed." The EFF's reasoning is as follows:
- :* You can no longer sue the government for "intentional"
violations of the law, like you can sue everyone else.
Instead, the violation has to be "willful," a much higher
standard.
- :*Before, you could get a trial in front of a jury if you
sued the government. Now, suits against the government are
heard only by a judge.
- :*Unlike with any other defendant, if you want to sue the
federal government for illegal wiretapping you have to first go
through an administrative procedure with the agency that did the
wiretapping. That means, essentially, that you have to
politely complain to the illegal wiretappers and tip them off to
your legal strategy, and then wait for a while as they decide
whether to do anything about it before you can sue them in
court.
- :*Before PATRIOT, in addition to being able to sue for
money damages, you could sue for declaratory relief from a
judge. For example, an Internet service provider could ask
the court to declare that a particular type of wiretapping that the
government wants to do on its network is illegal. One
could also sue for an injunction from the court, ordering that any
illegal wiretapping stop. PATRIOT section 223
significantly reduced a judge's ability to remedy unlawful
surveillance, making it so you can only sue the government for
money damages. This means, for example, that no one could
sue the government to stop an ongoing illegal wiretap. At
best, one could sue for the government to pay damages while the
illegal tap continued!
- Section
225, which gives legal immunity to those who assist the
government in undertaking surveillance that is in accordance with a
court order or request for emergency assistance. The EFF believe
that with "the lack of any procedure to challenge a FISA order, the
never-ending gag order that forever bans you from telling anyone,
the secret court that won't listen to your arguments—it's just
another incentive for ISPs and phone companies to bend to the
demands of the Justice Department or the FISA Court, even when the
demand is legally questionable."
American Library Association
The
American Library
Association strongly objects to section 215. In a resolution
passed on June 29, 2005 they stated that "Section 215 of the USA
PATRIOT Act allows the government to secretly request and obtain
library records for large numbers of individuals without any reason
to believe they are involved in illegal activity". They
resolved:
- to urge the Senate, in the FY 2006 Senate
Commerce-Justice-State appropriations bill, to bar the use of
appropriated funds by the Justice Department to search library and
bookstore records under Section 215 of the USA PATRIOT Act;
- to urge the United States Congress to pass legislation that
restores the privacy rights of library users;
- to oppose any initiatives on the part of the United States
government to constrain the free expression of ideas or to inhibit
the use of libraries as represented in the USA PATRIOT Act
expansion bill, which they believe to be marked-up in secret by the
Senate Select
Intelligence Committee;
- to urge librarians and other library
workers, trustees and advocates throughout the country to continue
their efforts to educate their users on the impact of Sections 215
and 505 of the USA PATRIOT Act on libraries.
Their stance did not go without criticism.
One prominent critic
of the ALA's stance was the Manhattan Institute
's Heather Mac
Donald, who stated in an article for the City Journal
that "[t]he furor over section 215 is a case study in Patriot Act
fear-mongering."
United States Government
In response to its many critics, and in response to the many
criticisms of the Patriot Act, the U.S. Government setup the
website http://www.lifeandliberty.gov. On the website, they devote
a page to what they believe to be
myths perpetuated by the ACLU and state that "Congress
simply took existing legal principles and retrofitted them to
preserve the lives and liberty of the American people from the
challenges posed by a global terrorist network." They defend:
-
Section 203, which allowed Federal authorities to share
information brought before a grand jury. They believe that the
ability to share such information allows investigators to "connect
the dots". They give the example of how a federal grand jury
indicted Sami al-Arian for allegedly
being the U.S. leader of the Palestinian Islamic Jihad, which
they state to be "one of the world's most violent terrorist
outfits"
- Section
206, the roving surveillance authority, stating that it was
enacted because "international terrorists are sophisticated and
trained to thwart surveillance by rapidly changing locations and
communication devices such as cell phones, the Act authorized
agents to seek court permission to use the same techniques in
national security investigations to track terrorists"
- Section
213, the ability to delay search warrant notifications.
Specifically, they state that "in some cases if criminals are
tipped off too early to an investigation, they might flee, destroy
evidence, intimidate or kill witnesses, cut off contact with
associates, or take other action to evade arrest", and say that
they have been "been used for decades, have proven crucial in drug
and organized crime cases, and have been upheld by courts as fully
constitutional."
- Section
215, which gave the government increased powers to gain access
to records to assist in terrorist investigations. They justify the
increased powers because they say that examining business records
is a crucial part of investigating terrorist cases and that "law
enforcement authorities have always been able to obtain business
records in criminal cases through grand jury subpoenas, and
continue to do so in national security cases where appropriate."
They use the specific example of the 1990 Zodiac gunman Heriberto Seda, where they state that
authorities used library records to a Scottish occult poet, and
wanted to learn who had checked the poet's books out of the
library.
- Section
219, which gives single-jurisdiction of search warrants for
terrorism. According to the government "modern terrorism
investigations often span a number of districts, and officers
therefore had to obtain multiple warrants in multiple
jurisdictions, creating unnecessary delays", and they believe that
investigations have been streamlined by this section.
Notes and references
Further reading
- :Deals with the history of national security surveillance up
until passage of FISA in 1978; new legal procedures created by the
1978 law; the evolution of the law from 1978 until passage of the
USA-PATRIOT Act; legal changes triggered by the attacks of
September 11, 2001; and suggested proposals for reforms.
External links