Special Report
- Justice Dept. Drafts Sweeping Expansion
of Anti-Terrorism Act Center Publishes Secret Draft of Patriot
II Legislation
- By Charles Lewis and Adam Mayle
(WASHINGTON, Feb. 7, 2003) -- The Bush Administration is preparing
a bold, comprehensive sequel to the USA Patriot Act passed in
the wake of September 11, 2001, which will give the government
broad, sweeping new powers to increase domestic intelligence-gathering,
surveillance and law enforcement prerogatives, and simultaneously
decrease judicial review and public access to information.
The Center for Public Integrity has obtained a draft, dated
January 9, 2003, of this previously undisclosed legislation and
is making it available in full text (12 MB). The bill, drafted
by the staff of Attorney General John Ashcroft and entitled the
Domestic Security Enhancement Act of 2003, has not been officially
released by the Department of Justice, although rumors of its
development have circulated around the Capitol for the last few
months under the name of the Patriot Act II in legislative
parlance.
We havent heard anything from the Justice Department
on updating the Patriot Act, House Judiciary Committee
spokesman Jeff Lungren told the Center. They havent
shared their thoughts on that. Obviously, we'd be interested,
but we havent heard anything at this point.
Senior members of the Senate Judiciary Committee minority
staff have inquired about Patriot II for months and have been
told as recently as this week that there is no such legislation
being planned.
RELATED DOCUMENTS
The draft of the Domestic Security Enhancement Act of 2003 (12
MB)
Note: Due to high traffic volume, downloading the whole document
might take several minutes. To download it in parts, click the
links below:
Parts I (4.9 MB)
Part II (1.9 MB)
Part III (1.8 MB)
Part IV (1.8 MB)
Part V (1.9 MB)
Mirror Location of Document:
www.ire.org
The Office of Legislative Affairs control sheet
which shows that a copy of the bill was sent to Speaker Hastert
and Vice President Cheney (157 KB)
Read the Justice Department's response to this report. (230
KB)
Mark Corallo, deputy director of Justices Office of
Public Affairs, told the Center his office was unaware of the
draft. I have heard people talking about revising the Patriot
Act, we are looking to work on things the way we would do with
any law, he said. We may work to make modifications
to protect Americans, he added. When told that the Center
had a copy of the draft legislation, he said, This is all
news to me. I have never heard of this.
After the Center posted this story, Barbara Comstock, director
of public affairs for the Justice Dept., released a statement
saying that, "Department staff have not presented any final
proposals to either the Attorney General or the White House.
It would be premature to speculate on any future decisions, particularly
ideas or proposals that are still being discussed at staff levels."
An Office of Legislative Affairs control sheet
that was obtained by the PBS program "Now With Bill Moyers"
seems to indicate that a copy of the bill was sent to Speaker
of the House Dennis Hastert and Vice President Richard Cheney
on Jan. 10, 2003. Attached for your review and comment
is a draft legislative proposal entitled the Domestice
Security Enhancement Act of 2003, the memo, sent
from OLP or Office of Legal Policy, says.
RELATED LINKS
For additional information, visit the web site of PBS' "Now
With Bill Moyers". Read the transcript of Moyers' interview
with Charles Lewis.
Comstock later told the Center that the draft "is an early
discussion draft and it has not been sent to either the Vice
President or the Speaker of the House."
Dr. David Cole, Georgetown University Law professor and author
of Terrorism and the Constitution, reviewed the draft legislation
at the request of the Center, and said that the legislation raises
a lot of serious concerns. Its troubling that they have
gotten this far along and theyve been telling people there
is nothing in the works. This proposed law, he added, would
radically expand law enforcement and intelligence gathering authorities,
reduce or eliminate judicial oversight over surveillance, authorize
secret arrests, create a DNA database based on unchecked executive
suspicion, create new death penalties, and even seek
to take American citizenship away from persons who belong to
or support disfavored political groups.
Some of the key provision of the Domestic Security Enhancement
Act of 2003 include:
Section 201, Prohibition of Disclosure of Terrorism
Investigation Detainee Information: Safeguarding the dissemination
of information related to national security has been a hallmark
of Ashcrofts first two years in office, and the Domestic
Security Enhancement Act of 2003 follows in the footsteps of
his October 2001 directive to carefully consider such interest
when granting Freedom of Information Act requests. While the
October memo simply encouraged FOIA officers to take national
security, protecting sensitive business information and,
not least, preserving personal privacy into account while
deciding on requests, the proposed legislation would enhance
the departments ability to deny releasing material on suspected
terrorists in government custody through FOIA.
Section 202, Distribution of Worst Case Scenario
Information: This would introduce new FOIA restrictions
with regard to the Environmental Protection Agency. As provided
for in the Clean Air Act, the EPA requires private companies
that use potentially dangerous chemicals must produce a worst
case scenario report detailing the effect that the release
of these controlled substances would have on the surrounding
community. Section 202 of this Act would, however, restrict FOIA
requests to these reports, which the bills drafters refer
to as a roadmap for terrorists. By reducing public
access to read-only methods for only those persons
who live and work in the geographical area likely to be
affected by a worst-case scenario, this subtitle would
obfuscate an established level of transparency between private
industry and the public.
Section 301-306, Terrorist Identification Database:
These sections would authorize creation of a DNA database on
suspected terrorists, expansively defined to include
association with suspected terrorist groups, and noncitizens
suspected of certain crimes or of having supported any group
designated as terrorist.
Section 312, Appropriate Remedies with Respect to Law
Enforcement Surveillance Activities: This section would
terminate all state law enforcement consent decrees before Sept.
11, 2001, not related to racial profiling or other civil rights
violations, that limit such agencies from gathering information
about individuals and organizations. The authors of this statute
claim that these consent orders, which were passed as a result
of police spying abuses, could impede current terrorism investigations.
It would also place substantial restrictions on future court
injunctions.
Section 405, Presumption for Pretrial Detention in Cases
Involving Terrorism: While many people charged with drug
offenses punishable by prison terms of 10 years or more are held
before their trial without bail, this provision would create
a comparable statute for those suspected of terrorist activity.
The reasons for presumptively holding suspected terrorists before
trial, the Justice Department summary memo states, are clear.
This presumption is warranted because of the unparalleled
magnitude of the danger to the United States and its people posed
by acts of terrorism, and because terrorism is typically engaged
in by groups many with international connections
that are often in a position to help their members flee or go
into hiding.
Section 501, Expatriation of Terrorists: This
provision, the drafters say, would establish that an American
citizen could be expatriated if, with the intent to relinquish
his nationality, he becomes a member of, or provides material
support to, a group that the United Stated has designated as
a terrorist organization. But whereas a citizen
formerly had to state his intent to relinquish his citizenship,
the new law affirms that his intent can be inferred from
conduct. Thus, engaging in the lawful activities of a group
designated as a terrorist organization by the Attorney
General could be presumptive grounds for expatriation.
The Domestic Security Enhancement Act is the latest development
in an 18-month trend in which the Bush Administration has sought
expanded powers and responsibilities for law enforcement bodies
to help counter the threat of terrorism.
The USA Patriot Act, signed into law by President Bush on
Oct. 26, 2001, gave law enforcement officials broader authority
to conduct electronic surveillance and wiretaps, and gives the
president the authority, when the nation is under attack, to
confiscate any property within U.S. jurisdiction of anyone believed
to be engaging in such attacks. The measure also tightened oversight
of financial activities to prevent money laundering and diminish
bank secrecy in an effort to disrupt terrorist finances.
It also changed provisions of Foreign Intelligence Surveillance
Act, which was passed in 1978 during the Cold War. FISA established
a different standard of government oversight and judicial review
for foreign intelligence surveillance than that applied
to traditional domestic law enforcement surveillance.
The USA Patriot Act allowed the Federal Bureau of Investigation
to share information gathered in terrorism investigations under
the foreign intelligence standard with local law
enforcement agencies, in essence nullifying the higher standard
of oversight that applied to domestic investigations. The USA
Patriot Act also amended FISA to permit surveillance under the
less rigorous standard whenever foreign intelligence
was a significant purpose rather than the primary
purpose of an investigation.
The draft legislation goes further in that direction. In
the [USA Patriot Act] we have to break down the wall of foreign
intelligence and law enforcement, Cole said. Now
they want to break down the wall between international terrorism
and domestic terrorism.
In an Oct. 9, 2002, hearing of the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee
on Technology, Terrorism, and Government Information, Deputy
Assistant Attorney General Alice Fisher testified that Justice
had been, looking at potential proposals on following up
on the PATRIOT Act for new tools and we have also been working
with different agencies within the government and they are still
studying that and hopefully we will continue to work with this
committee in the future on new tools that we believe are necessary
in the war on terrorism.
Asked by Sen. Russ Feingold (D-Wis.) whether she could inform
the committee of what specific areas Justice was looking at,
Fisher replied, At this point I cant, Im sorry.
They're studying a lot of different ideas and a lot of different
tools that follow up on information sharing and other aspects.
Assistant Attorney General for Legal Policy Viet Dinh, who
was the principal author of the first Patriot Act, told Legal
Times last October that there was an ongoing process to
continue evaluating and re-evaluating authorities we have with
respect to counterterrorism, but declined to say whether
a new bill was forthcoming.
Former FBI Director William Sessions, who urged caution while
Congress considered the USA Patriot Act, did not want to enter
the fray concerning a possible successor bill.
"I hate to jump into it, because it's a very delicate
thing," Sessions told the Center, without acknowledging
whether he knew of any proposed additions or revisions to the
additional Patriot bill.
When the first bill was nearing passage in the Congress in
late 2001, however, Sessions told Internet site NewsMax.Com that
the balance between civil liberties and sufficient intelligence
gathering was a difficult one. First of all, the Attorney
General has to justify fully what hes asking for,
Sessions, who served presidents Reagan and George H.W. Bush as
FBI Director from 1987 until 1993, said at the time. We
need to be sure that we provide an effective means to deal with
criminality. At the same time, he said, we need to
be sure that we are mindful of the Constitution, mindful of privacy
considerations, but also meet the technological needs we have
to gather intelligence.
Cole found it disturbing that there have been no consultations
with Congress on the draft legislation. It raises a lot
of serious concerns and is troubling as a generic matter that
they have gotten this far along and tell people that there is
nothing in the works. What that suggests is that theyre
waiting for a propitious time to introduce it, which might well
be when a war is begun. At that time there would be less opportunity
for discussion and theyll have a much stronger hand in
saying that they need these right away.
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Source: The Center for Public Integrity
http://www.public-i.org/dtaweb/report.asp?ReportID=502&L1=10&L2=10&L3=0&L4=0&L5=0 |