FC: Peter Swire op-ed on anti-terrorism bill: Power may be abused

From: Declan McCullagh (declanat_private)
Date: Tue Oct 23 2001 - 22:57:35 PDT

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    Date: Tue, 23 Oct 2001 17:05:39 -0500
    To: declanat_private
    From: Peter Swire <pswireat_private>
    Subject: Op Ed on Anti-terrorist law
    
    Declan:
    
             This op ed piece can be released to the public domain on Wednesday 
    morning.  It highlights some key concerns with the anti-terrorism law that 
    the President will likely sign shortly.
    
             Peter
    
             If surveillance expands, safeguard civil liberties Peter P. Swire 
    - For the Atlanta Journal-Constitution Sunday, October 21, 2001
             The Uniting and Strengthening America Act of 2001, expected to be 
    signed by President Bush this week, will give our government important new 
    surveillance powers to fight terrorism.
             Unfortunately, the USA Act does not make sure that these expanded 
    powers won't be abused. While it sharply expands how government can wiretap 
    e-mails and Web surfing, it provides no remedy if officials exceed that 
    authority. It also breaks down the wall that once separated foreign 
    intelligence-gathering from domestic law enforcement, without creating new 
    safeguards to replace those it removes.
    On the wiretap side, the act permits law enforcement to camp at a phone 
    company or Internet service provider and monitor a wide range of 
    communications as they flow through the network. The "computer trespasser" 
    provision, as it's called, is intended to let phone companies and Internet 
    providers bring police into their systems to look for unauthorized usage.
             The idea has a core of good sense. System owners should be able to 
    ask for help from the police when they expect a hacker attack. The question 
    is how well the new law has been written. The Bush administration proposed 
    the "computer trespasser" language just four days after the attack on the 
    World Trade Center. There was never a single hearing in Congress on the idea.
    
    Law enforcement abuses feared
    
             One worry with this new law is that a company might "invite" the 
    police to stay based on undue pressure from law enforcement. Another worry 
    is that the police might intentionally exceed their authority. Under the 
    long-standing rule covering telephone wiretaps, law enforcement is 
    forbidden from using wrongfully obtained evidence in court. But that rule 
    does not apply to information illegally obtained by police from wiretaps of 
    e-mail and Web surfing.
             Last year, the Clinton administration proposed that intercepted 
    e-mails be treated the same as intercepted phone calls. As the House 
    Judiciary Committee debated the wiretap proposal this month, it agreed that 
    illegal e-mail wiretaps should not be used in court. It made sure that law 
    enforcement would have to report on how often it was using the expanded 
    powers. The House also created a $10,000 fine against the government for 
    illegal Internet wiretaps. None of these desirable safeguards made it into 
    the final USA Act.
    In a second big change, the USA Act integrates foreign 
    intelligence-gathering and law enforcement in ways forbidden since the 
    1970s. Congress separated the two functions after discovering numerous 
    abuses of the power, from clandestine spying here in the United States by 
    the CIA to criminal prosecutions based on evidence obtained overseas by 
    means that would be illegal under the Constitution.
    
    Security forces work together
    
             To stop those abuses, Congress enacted strict rules preventing the 
    CIA and other intelligence agencies operating overseas from sharing 
    information with domestic law-enforcement agencies. Those rules are 
    outdated in the face of the current threat. In the recent words of one 
    senior FBI official, "The walls are all down now."
             In the wake of Sept. 11, new integrated command centers house 
    officials from the CIA, FBI, National Security Agency, Defense Intelligence 
    Agency, Customs Service, and so on.
    The USA Act furthers this trend. It specifically provides that secret grand 
    jury testimony, historically used only for law enforcement within the 
    United States, can now be shared with intelligence agencies without getting 
    permission from a judge, or even noting the fact that the information has 
    been shared.
    Similarly, the act allows information gathered from secret wiretaps on 
    foreign agents to go directly to law enforcement officials. Defendants no 
    longer have to be informed that the wiretap occurred, as previous law 
    required. From now on, it will be easier for the government to conduct 
    "foreign intelligence" wiretaps and use information from those wiretaps 
    without ever revealing their existence.
             Again, the logic for these changes is clear. Terrorists clearly 
    operate both in the United States and overseas. Communications on the 
    Internet constantly bounce between different countries. If we leave walls 
    in place between the CIA and the FBI, we prevent our agencies from seeing 
    dangerous patterns and taking needed action.
             In summary, there are strong reasons to support new surveillance 
    powers. But we should stay keenly aware that we are repealing safeguards 
    created because of previous abuse. The Framers adopted the Fourth Amendment 
    to make sure that all government searches were reasonable and approved by 
    an independent judge. When Congress revisits the wiretap rules soon, as it 
    inevitably will, it must create new safeguards to match the new 
    surveillance powers our government gained this week.
    
    Peter P. Swire is a visiting professor of law at George Washington 
    University. During the Clinton administration, he chaired a White House 
    Working Group on how to update wiretap laws for the Internet age.
    
    
    This article available at 
    http://www.accessatlanta.com/ajc/epaper/editions/sunday/issue_b32dd46d81b5509a1081.html
    
    Previous Swire Brookings article on the wiretap laws available 
    at  http://www.brookings.edu/views/articles/fellows/2001_swire.htm :: 
    "Administration Wiretap Proposal Hits the Right Issues But Goes Too Far", 
    October 3, 2001.
    
    
    
    
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