<http://www.nytimes.com/2005/03/23/politics/23patriot.html?th=&emc=th&pagewanted=print&position=>

The New York Times

March 23, 2005

Coalition Forms to Oppose Parts of Antiterrorism Law
 By ERIC LICHTBLAU


ASHINGTON, March 22 - Battle lines were drawn Tuesday in the debate over
the government's counterterrorism powers, as an unlikely coalition of
liberal civil-rights advocates, conservative libertarians, gun-rights
supporters and medical privacy advocates voiced their objections to crucial
parts of the law that expanded those powers after the attacks of Sept. 11,
2001.

Keeping the law intact "will do great and irreparable harm" to the
Constitution by allowing the government to investigate people's reading
habits, search their homes without notice and pry into their personal
lives, said Bob Barr, a former Republican congressman who is leading the
coalition.

Mr. Barr voted for the law, known as the USA Patriot Act, in the House just
weeks after the Sept. 11 attacks but has become one of its leading critics,
a shift that reflects the growing unease among some conservative
libertarians over the expansion of the government's powers in fighting
terrorism.

 He joined with other conservatives as well as the American Civil Liberties
Union on Tuesday in announcing the creation of the coalition, which hopes
to curtail some of the law's more sweeping law-enforcement provisions.

 But Bush administration officials on Tuesday affirmed their strong support
for the law as an indispensable tool in tracking, following and arresting
terrorist suspects. As one of his top legislative priorities, President
Bush has prodded Congress repeatedly to extend critical parts of the law
that are set to expire at the year's end.

 The coalition of liberals and conservatives said it had no quarrel with
the majority of the expanded counterterrorism tools that the law provided,
some of which amounted to modest upgrades in the government's ability to
use modern technology in wiretapping phone calls and the like.

 But the group said it would focus its efforts on urging Congress to scale
back three provisions of the law that let federal agents conduct "sneak and
peek" searches of a home or business without immediately notifying the
subject of such searches; demand records from institutions like libraries
and medical offices; and use a broad definition of terrorism in pursuing
suspects.

The group, calling itself Patriots to Restore Checks and Balances, asked
Mr. Bush in a letter Tuesday to reconsider his "unqualified endorsement" of
the law.

 "We agree that much of the Patriot Act is necessary to provide law
enforcement with the resources they need to defeat terrorism," the letter
said, "but we remain very concerned that some of its provisions go beyond
its mission and infringe on the rights of law-abiding Americans, in ways
that raise serious constitutional and practical concerns."

Although Congressional action is still probably months away, both sides are
already girding for an intense debate. Previous efforts to curtail parts of
the law have won significant support in Congress, but the administration
and Republican leaders have ultimately beaten back the challenges. Mr. Barr
said he considered the debate "the single most important issue" facing
Congress.

 The Bush administration has offered a sharp rebuttal to growing attacks on
the law in the last two years, saying that federal agents have used their
new powers sparingly and judiciously.

 Administration officials note that the Justice Department's inspector
general and other groups that have examined the law have not documented any
abuses of power.

 Critics, however, counter that because most aspects of the law's use in
terrorism cases remain classified, it has been very difficult to assess how
it is being utilized.

 Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales has indicated that he is open to a
dialogue on the future of the law and possible changes, and his chief
spokeswoman, Tasia Scolinos, affirmed that pledge Tuesday. "The Department
of Justice has spearheaded the call for active discussion and meaningful
dialogue on the reauthorization of the Patriot Act," she said.

 Justice Department officials said they believed that the coalition's
apparent acceptance of all but three elements of the law signaled that the
two sides could find room for negotiation on the remaining areas of
disagreement.

 But coalition members said that the Bush administration's commitment to a
dialogue struck them as somewhat half-hearted. Paul Weyrich, who is
chairman of the Free Congress Foundation and a prominent conservative who
joined the coalition, said he thought the administration, and in particular
the former attorney general, John Ashcroft, had adopted an "absolutist"
defense of the law.

 Mr. Weyrich said he took offense at comments by Mr. Ashcroft suggesting
that if people raised concerns about the law, "you were aiding and abetting
terrorists. I don't think my colleagues here ought to be put in that
position."

Other conservatives who voiced concerns Tuesday included Grover Norquist,
president of Americans for Taxpayer Reform; David Keane, chairman of the
American Conservative Union, and leaders of the Second Amendment Foundation
and other gun-rights groups.

 Mr. Barr said that the group hoped "to compete with the bully pulpit of
the White House" in prompting a more complete airing of the issues.

 "Missing from the debate has been a substantial discussion and analysis
about restoring the checks and balances in the Constitution" while fighting
terrorism, he said.

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