<http://www.nationalreview.com/script/printpage.asp?ref=/editorial/editors200504140926.asp>

The National Review

The Editors

 April 14, 2005, 9:26 a.m.
Renew Patriot

Several provisions of the Patriot Act - the antiterrorist law enacted in
the weeks after September 11 - are scheduled to expire this year unless
Congress renews them. Critics of the act, on both the left and the right,
want Congress to make several modifications to the law. But their suggested
changes would be harmful.

What they most want to change is Section 215 of the Patriot Act. That
section allows federal judges to order that records be provided to law
enforcement when those records are sought for the purpose of fighting
international terrorism. While the act does not specifically mention
library records, it does not exempt them, either, so critics have latched
on to the idea that the FBI is going to be poring over John Q. Public's
reading list. But criminal prosecutions can look into library records, too,
when they are relevant to an investigation. Grand juries can subpoena
records without the judicial and congressional oversight that Section 215
provides for. The law also specifically requires that no investigation can
proceed "solely upon the basis of activities protected by the First
Amendment to the Constitution." The Patriot Act forbids recipients of an
order from disclosing that they got it. The secrecy here is unavoidable:
Terrorism investigators cannot do their jobs while constantly tipping off
the suspects.

 The Department of Justice reported in September 2003 that Section 215 had
not been used up to that point. Reports on its use have been transmitted to
Congress twice a year since then, but remain classified. So this provision
does not appear to have been abused. The relative infrequency of its use
does not, however, establish that law enforcement does not need it. If the
law makes libraries a place where terrorists can conduct their operations
in relative safety, we can be sure that terrorists would take note.

The New York Times makes another complaint about Section 215: "It lets the
government seize an entire database - all the medical records of a
hospital, all of the files of an immigration group - when it is
investigating a single person." It's a strained argument. Orders for
records under the section can be judicially reviewed, and the standard for
review includes that the order be reasonable in scope.

The Patriot Act's provision concerning "delayed-notification" or
"sneak-and-peek" searches has also come under attack. Even though it is not
up for renewal this year, a bipartisan coalition of congressmen wants
modifications. The law allows terrorism investigators to get a warrant for
delayed-notification searches when they can persuade a judge that immediate
notification would endanger someone's life, cause a suspect to flee, result
in the destruction of evidence, cause the intimidation of witnesses, or
"otherwise seriously jeopardize" an investigation. (The judge decides how
long notification can be delayed, although investigators can apply for
extensions.)

The critics want to pare back that list of causes: They don't want to allow
delayed notification just because investigators and judges believe that
immediate notification might result in witness intimidation or jeopardize
an investigation. This is an unreasonable, and dangerous, position. The
critics complain that judges rarely turn down requests for
delayed-notification searches - but we can be sure that if they were turned
down regularly, the critics would regard the denials as proof that
investigators were overzealous in requesting them.

"It is the same coalition
 [lobbying against the Patriot Act]
 that fought antiterrorist bills
 during the 1990s."

The ACLU objects to the law's definition of "domestic terrorism." It has
complained that this definition "could subject political organizations to
surveillance, wiretapping, harassment, and criminal action for political
advocacy," and "might allow the actions of peaceful groups that dissent
from government policy, such as Greenpeace, to be treated as 'domestic
terrorism.'" But the definition clearly applies, as the Justice Department
notes, only to groups that "engage in criminal wrongdoing that could result
in death." If a political group is engaged in such conduct, then it ought
to be subject to surveillance.

The critics of the Patriot Act, when not simply distorting its provisions,
have not shown any appreciation of the preconditions for effective law
enforcement. The government has an obligation to protect the public from
terrorist attack - and if these provisions were not in place, and an attack
were to occur, Washington would be consumed by justifiable finger-pointing
over why such reasonable measures were not taken. The critics have offered
only hypothetical examples of abuses. Much of the criticism comes from
people who claim that we should approach the war on terrorism as a matter
for law enforcement rather than military action. All too often, they're
against law enforcement, too.

Press accounts of the political debate over the Patriot Act have routinely
referred to the critics as an "unusual" left-right coalition. It is not so
unusual as that. It is the same coalition that fought antiterrorist bills
during the 1990s, and that fought Patriot itself in 2001. Congress largely
brushed it off both times, and would be amply warranted in doing so again.
 

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The Internet Bearer Underwriting Corporation <http://www.ibuc.com/>
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"... however it may deserve respect for its usefulness and antiquity,
[predicting the end of the world] has not been found agreeable to
experience." -- Edward Gibbon, 'Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire'


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