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| House Enacts Limits as Patriot Act Set to Expire | | Print | |
| Written by Steven J. DuBord | ||
| Tuesday, 01 December 2009 17:30 | ||
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The Senate Judiciary Committee has already reauthorized the Patriot Act provisions with a bill that makes relatively minor modifications. The House Judiciary Committee made more extensive changes aimed at curtailing the potential abuse of power. 1. The Records provision. This allows federal investigators with a court order to compel anyone to hand over "any tangible thing" showing "relevance" to a terrorist investigation from all business, hospitals, and some libraries. According to the U.S. Attorney General's office, there have been 220 such orders issued, but no major case to date has transpired because of information procured from them. As can be seen, the House went further in scaling back the powers offered by these provisions of the Patriot Act. The House also addressed one Patriot Act provision that was not set to expire: national security letters (NSLs). The FBI uses these secret letters to legally compel third parties such as Internet service providers, banks, and travel companies to turn over client records as part of terrorism investigations. Therefore the House voted to place tough restrictions and an expiration date on the provision for NSLs, paying heed to a coalition of 20 civil libertarian groups, among them the ACLU. Trackback(0)
Comments (1)
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Bonnie Calcagno
said:
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... Senator Feingold who has given the Obama Administration all "incompletes" in the area of Domestic Surveillance and Privacy on his "Report Card: The Obama Administration's Effort to Restore the Rule of Law During its First 100 Days" has among other things called for the Obama Administration to "cooperate with a review of domestic intelligence activities and authorities." What we know from a federal inspectors general report issued in July, 2009 ("Bush Surveillance Program Was Massive" by Pamela Hess) was that President Bush created a massive classified surveillance program by executive order that was undergirded by legal memos written by John Yoo. Couple that with the fact the Attorney General Guidelines under Bush rescinded anti-COINTELPRO regulations and the Obama Administration has not issued new Attorney General Guidelines for the FBI and you have the recipe for all the spying, infiltration, harassment, and intimidation we saw in the past under COINTELPRO. But nobody seems to care. |





Three controversial provisions of the Patriot Act are set to expire this New Year’s Eve. They granted the federal government wide-ranging powers of surveillance and seizure with few limitations.

