Consensus by congressional Democrats and Republicans over extending the provisions, the
World Socialist Web Site reports,
"meets the demands of the Obama administration and the Justice
Department for a 'clean' extension, that is, one that does not make any
concessions to concerns over the infringement of civil liberties,
particularly in relation to the authorization to seize the records of
libraries and other institutions."
"The idea," the
Associated Press informs us, "is to pass the extension with as little debate as possible to avoid a protracted and familiar argument over the expanded power the law gives to the government." (emphasis added)
While most of the surveillance powers handed the security apparat
were permanent, three controversial provisions had expiration dates
attached to the law due to the potential for serious civil rights
abuses. Such suspicions were certainly warranted as dozens of reports by
Congress and the Justice Department, media investigations and Freedom
of Information Act and other lawsuits subsequently disclosed.
The provisions set for renewal include the following:
• The
"roving wiretap" provision grants the FBI authority to obtain wiretaps
from the secret Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC) under
color of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act and its bastard
stepchild, the FISA Amendments Act, which granted retroactive immunity
to the government's telecommunications' partners. This section of the
law allows the Bureau to spy on anyone of "interest" to the FBI during
the course of a "national security" investigation, without identifying a
specific target to be surveilled or which communication medium will be
tapped. Anyone caught in the FBI's surveillance dragnet can themselves come
under scrutiny, even if they were not named in the original warrant.
Insidiously, under the "roving wiretap" provision, even if a warrant is
executed by a judge in one jurisdiction, it can be made valid anywhere
in the United States, solely on the say-so of the FBI. Essentially, this
amounts to the issuance of a blank warrant that further marginalizes
the Fourth Amendment's explicit requirement that warrants are only
issued "particularly describing the place to be searched."
• Section 215, the so-called "business records" provision, allows
FISC warrants for virtually any type of record or "tangible thing:"
banking and financial statements, credit card purchases, travel
itineraries, cell phone bills, medical histories, you name it, without
government snoops having to declare that the information they seek has
any connection whatsoever to a terrorism, espionage or "national
security" investigation. The government does not have to demonstrate
"probable cause." Government officials need only certify to a judge,
without providing evidence or proof, that the search meets the statute's
overly-broad requirements and the court has been stripped of its
authority to reject the state's application. Surveillance orders under
Section 215 can even be based on a person's protected First Amendment
activities: the books they read, web sites searched or articles they
have published. In other words, exercising free speech under the
Constitution can become the basis for examining personal records. Third
parties served with such sweeping orders are prohibited from disclosing
the search to anyone. In fact, with built-in gag orders forbidding
disclosure subjects may never know they have be scrutinized by federal
authorities, thereby undercutting their ability to challenge
illegitimate searches.
• The "lone wolf" provision, a particularly onerous and intrusive
investigative device allows the federal government to spy on individuals
not connected to a terrorist organization but who may share ideological
affinities with groups deemed suspect by the secret state. The
definition of who may be a "lone wolf" is so vague that it greatly
expands the category of individuals who may be monitored by the security
apparat.
After Congress passed several earlier extensions, the three
provisions were set to "sunset" on February 28, 2011. But with the Obama
administration and the FBI insisting that no new civil liberties
protections be added that would undercut their domestic spying powers, a
90-day temporary extension was approved earlier this year and is now
set to expire on May 27.
This temporary extension followed an embarrassing loss in early
February by the House Republican leadership who had failed to win a
two-thirds majority passage of the proposal which barred amendments. In
fact, 26 newly-elected Republican members, including those
self-identified with the so-called "Tea Party" caucus, joined 122
Democrats in opposition and defeated the bill.
While Attorney General Eric Holder and Director of National
Intelligence James Clapper have urged Congress to extend the provisions,
permanently if possible or for an extended period if not, because they
allege short-term extensions have a deleterious effect on
"counterterrorism investigations" and "increase the uncertainties borne
by our intelligence and law enforcement agencies in carrying out their
missions." Such mendacious claims however, are not borne out by the
facts.
Indeed, the Department of Justice's own Office of the Inspector General's (
OIG)
2008 report found that "[t]he evidence showed no instance where the
information obtained from a Section 215 order described in the body of
the report resulted in a major investigative development."
True enough as far as it goes, but such snooping provided an
unprecedented view of the comings and goings of citizens now subjects of
scattershot data-mining, dossier building and ginned-up federal
prosecutions.
In fact, the
OIG demonstrated
conclusively that widespread abuses by the FBI in their issuance of
constitution-shredding National Security Letters, handed out without
probable cause and attached with built-in secret gag orders, have been
used by the Bureau to target innocent Americans.
While Barack Obama promised to curtail the worst abuses of the
previous administration when he assumed office in January 2009, the
Justice Department
reported there has been a huge increase in domestic spying during the first two years of his administration.
As
Antifascist Calling reported
earlier this month, according to figures supplied by the Justice
Department "in 2010, the FBI made 24,287 NSL requests (excluding
requests for subscriber information only) for information concerning
United States persons. These sought information pertaining to 14,212
different United States persons." Additionally, the FBI made 96
applications to the rubber-stamp FISC court in 2010 on 215 orders, a
four-fold increase over 2009.
None of this should come as a shock to readers. As I have pointed
out many times, the Obama administration has not simply extended the
previous regime's assault on civil liberties and political rights but
has greatly accelerated the downward spiral towards a presidential dictatorship lorded-over by the Pentagon and the national security apparat.
Justice Department Stonewall Continues
Moves
to renew the Patriot Act's spy provisions follow closely on the heels
of administration demands to expand the scope of National Security
Letters. As
The Washington Post reported
last summer, the White House "is seeking to make it easier for the FBI
to compel companies to turn over records of an individual's Internet
activity without a court order if agents deem the information relevant
to a terrorism or intelligence investigation."
"The administration," the Post disclosed,
"wants to add just four words--'electronic communication transactional
records'-- to a list of items that the law says the FBI may demand
without a judge's approval."
"Government lawyers," the Post averred,
"say this category of information includes the addresses to which an
Internet user sends e-mail; the times and dates e-mail was sent and
received; and possibly a user's browser history."
Additionally, the White House is demanding that the manufacturers of electronic devices such as iPhones and Blackberries, as
The New York Times revealed
last fall, make their products "technically capable of complying if
served with a wiretap order. The mandate would include being able to
intercept and unscramble encrypted messages." In other words, the state
is demanding that government-mandated backdoors be built into the
existing architecture of the internet in order to further facilitate
driftnet spying.
Meanwhile, Obama's Justice Department continues to stonewall
Congress and privacy advocates "demanding the release of a secret legal
memo used to justify FBI access to Americans' telephone records without
any legal process or oversight."
The Electronic Frontier Foundation (
EFF) disclosed that the secret state satrapy that brought us
COINTELPRO and employed Al-Qaeda triple agent
Ali Mohamed as
a "confidential informant," refuses to tell us what that authority is
or how their abusive power-grab squares with rights guaranteed by the
Constitution.
"A report released last year by the DOJ's Office of the Inspector
General," EFF attorneys write, "revealed how the FBI, in defending its
past violations of the Electronic Privacy Communications Act (ECPA), had
come up with a new legal argument to justify secret, unchecked access
to private telephone records." The heavily-redacted report revealed that
the "Office of the Legal Counsel (OLC) had issued a legal opinion
agreeing with the FBI's theory."
"The decision not to release the memo,"
McClatchy Newspapers reported
last week, "is noteworthy because the Obama administration--in
particular the Office of Legal Counsel--has sought to portray itself as
more open than the Bush administration was."
"By turning down the foundation's request for a copy," journalist
Marisa Taylor writes, "the department is ensuring that its legal
arguments in support of the FBI's controversial and discredited efforts
to obtain telephone records will be kept secret."
"Even officials within the Justice Department itself are concerned
that the FBI's secret legal theory jeopardizes privacy and government
accountability, especially considering the FBI's demonstrated history of
abusing surveillance law," averred EFF senior staff attorney Kevin
Bankston.
"The Justice Department has said it can't release the document for national security reasons," McClatchy noted,
"but it hasn't elaborated on that assertion. At the same time, the
department and the FBI have refused to comment on the legal position
itself."
According to published reports, "the bureau devised an informal
system of requesting the records from three telecommunications firms to
create what one agent called a 'phone database on steroids' that
included names, addresses, length of service and billing information."
The OIG later concluded, Taylor writes, "that the FBI and employees
of the telecom companies treated Americans' telephone records in such an
informal and cavalier way that in some cases the bureau abused its
authority."
Last year the Inspector General's report asserted that "the OLC
agreed with the FBI that under certain circumstances (word or words
redacted) allows the FBI to ask for and obtain these records on a
voluntary basis from the providers, without legal process or a
qualifying emergency."
That
report "A
Review of the Federal Bureau of Investigation's Use of Exigent Letters
and Other Informal Requests for Telephone Records," revealed widespread
abuses by the Bureau and their telecom partners.
So-called "exigent" or emergency letters were used by the FBI to
illegally obtain the phone records of thousands of Americans. According
to an earlier report by
EFF,
"while we had known since 2007 that the FBI improperly sought phone
records by falsely asserting emergency circumstances, the report shows
the situation inside the FBI's Communications Analysis Unit (CAU)
degenerated even further, sometimes replacing legal process with sticky
notes."
Senior staff attorney Kurt Opsahl wrote at the time that "employees
of three telecoms," since identified as AT&T, Verizon and MCI,
"worked directly out of the CAU office, right next to their FBI
colleagues."
According to the Inspector General's report, Opsahl averred, "even
exigent letters became too much work: an FBI analyst explained that
'it's not practical to give the [exigent letter] for every number that
comes in.' Instead, the telecoms would provide phone records pursuant to
verbal requests and even post-it notes with a phone number stuck on the
carrier reps' workstations."
As
Salon columnist
Glenn Greenwald writes, "the way a republic is supposed to function is
that there is transparency for those who wield public power and privacy
for private citizens."
However, "the National Security State has reversed that dynamic
completely, so that the Government (comprised of the consortium of
public agencies and their private-sector 'partners') knows virtually
everything about what citizens do, but citizens know virtually nothing
about what they do (which is why WikiLeaks specifically and
whistleblowers generally, as one of the very few remaining instruments
for subverting that wall of secrecy, are so threatening to them)."
"Fortified by always-growing secrecy weapons," Greenwald avers,
"everything they do is secret--including even the 'laws' they secretly
invent to authorize their actions--while everything you do is open to
inspection, surveillance and monitoring."
"This is what the Surveillance State, at its core, is designed to
achieve," Greenwald cautions, "the destruction of privacy for individual
citizens and an impenetrable wall of secrecy for those with unlimited
surveillance power."
As this filthy system continues to implode amidst an orgy of
financial and political corruption that would make a Roman emperor
blush, the capitalist oligarchy is hell-bent on shielding themselves
from any meaningful oversight or accountability, thus ensuring that the
secret state's war on democracy itself continues.
Tom Burghardt is a researcher and activist based in the San Francisco Bay Area. In addition to publishing in
Covert Action Quarterly and
Global Research,
an independent research and media group of writers, scholars,
journalists and activists based in Montreal, he is a Contributing Editor
with
Cyrano's Journal Today. His articles can be read on
Dissident Voice,
The Intelligence Daily,
Pacific Free Press,
Uncommon Thought Journal, and the whistleblowing website
WikiLeaks. He is the editor of
Police State America: U.S. Military "Civil Disturbance" Planning, distributed by
AK Press and has contributed to the new book from
Global Research,
The Global Economic Crisis: The Great Depression of the XXI Century.