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USA PATRIOT Act of 2001 Maryam Pourrabi, Amy Stewart, Kristin Evans, Michael Nocchiero. U niting and S trengthening A merica by P roviding A ppropriate T ools R equired to I ntercept and O bstruct T errorism. Prior to the Patriot Act Agenda Formation Pre-9/11.
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USA PATRIOT Act of 2001 Maryam Pourrabi, Amy Stewart, Kristin Evans, Michael Nocchiero Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism
Evolution of Anti-Terrorism Policy • 1950s • “Guilt by Association” law - associating with Communist or anarchist group can lead to exclusion and deportation • - Repealed by Congress in 1990 • 1980 - 1990s • Reagan Administration • initially proposed provisions that later became apart of the USAPA • Bush (I) Administration • made similar proposals >> use of secret evidence, guilt by association law, right of Sec. of State to label groups as terrorist without review, ban on supporting legal activities of terrorist-labeled groups • Broad based legislative opposition to such legislation; Congress refused to enact provisions on constitutional grounds and lack of necessity • Legislation was headed for defeat until….
1996 - Oklahoma City Bombing • Bombing of the Federal Building by Tim McVeigh killing 175 people • Led to passage of the Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 • Passed by a 91 to 8 margin in the U.S. Senate • Included key provisions to combat terrorism, which is included in USAPA • Illegal to provide expert advice to terrorist groups • Allow the use of secret evidence in terrorism cases • Sec. of State, Sec. of Treasury and the Attorney General can designate groups as terrorist • Resurrected the guilt by association law • Limit habeas corpus - federal courts hear terrorism cases • Many provisions were under review until…
September 11, 2001 • Gerston- crisis as trigger mechanism • Elevated problem of homeland security to public agenda • Widespread support - President had 90% approval rating • Framed as homeland security issue • Legislators could not say no to Act • History shows that a trigger is needed to pass homeland security reform • 9/11 gave Congress the impetus to pass it • USAPA is extension of 1996’s Anti-Terrorism Act and implementation of recommended reforms/provisions
A Charge from the Bush Administration • 9/21/01: Administration sent set of fifty proposals to Congress • Viet Dinh (Assistant Attorney General) • DOJ • Proposal went to Senate and House Committees • Deliberations, hearings
The Legislative Process House/Senate Anti-Terrorism Bills • S. 1510: Daschle + 25 • H.R. 2975: Sensenbrenner + 26 Merger of House and Senate Versions • Sensenbrenner introduced H.R. 3162 in the House 10/23/01 • Cosponsor: Oxley
Key Actors • Congressman Sensenbrenner (Chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, sponsor of both HR Bills) • Congressman Oxley (co-sponsor of HR 3162) • Senator Daschle (Senate Majority Leader, sponsor of Senate bill) • Senator Leahy (Chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee)
The Bill in a Nutshell • Bolters ability to conduct criminal and intelligence investigations • Bar and expel terrorists from the U.S. • Separate terrorists from their funding sources • Punish acts of terrorism • Address needs of 9/11 victims • Increases information sharing between law enforcement and intelligence agencies
Complementary Legislation • Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978 • Immigration and Nationality Act • Electronic Communications Privacy Act • Bank Secrecy Act of 1970
H.R. 3162 became Public Law 107-56 And the Yeas Have It House Vote Outcome Senate Vote Outcome 98 Yeas 1 Nay (Feingold, D-WI) 1 Non-vote (Landrieu, D-LA) • 357 Yeas (211-R, 145-D, 1-I) • 66 Nays (62-D, 3-R, 1-I) • 9 Non-votes (5-R, 4-D)
President George W. Bush signs the Patriot Act, Anti-Terrorism Legislation, in the East Room Oct. 26, 2001. White House photo by Eric Draper.
USA PATRIOT Act in Practice • Target of investigation does not have to be an agent of a foreign power; investigation cannot be based solely upon activities protected by First Amendment • Intelligence collected has to be relevant to terrorism investigation; targets must only be linked to terrorism • Increase in intelligence collection: • pen register, trap and trace, permits roving wiretaps • “sneak and peek” allowed • courts authorize warrants for investigations outside jurisdiction • Federal National Security Letter (NSL) statutes • No mention of Fourth Amendment rights
Civil Liberty Issues Emerge • May 2002: Jose Padilla, US citizen, detained as “enemy combatant” • August 2002: DoJ Inspector General Report cited 762 illegal aliens detained; 0 charged with terrorism related crimes • November 2002: FBI requires Middle Eastern refugee center release information on all Iraqi-born clients
Are American Publics Concerned with Civil Liberties or Terrorism? Source: Adapted from poll conducted for the Associated Press by International Communications Research in September 2003
Impact on Government • Drastically increases information collection and resources required for synthesis • Significant strain on bureaucracy: • Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) • FBI: “hold until clear” policy • Lack of internal consensus on boundaries of PATRIOT Act
Impact on Federal Intelligence Agencies • “Lowered… the wall traditionally separating criminal investigation from foreign intelligence gathering.” • Shift from criminal investigation to intelligence gathering • Broader use of NSL statutes “The FBI is becoming the new CIA.” –FBI Intelligence Analyst
PATRIOT Act Implementation at FBI Source: March 2008 Department of Justice Office of the Inspector General Report, A Review of the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s Use of National Security Letters
Judicial Involvement • “Unless made in bad faith” • Bars suits against information providers • National Security vs. Drugs
The Media “Investigates” • New York Times reports warrantless monitoring of international communications in 2005 • President Bush admits to authorizing Terrorist Surveillance Program • “As long as nothing big happens, the media is uninvolved.” • “The media isn’t probing enough.”
The Legislative Debate • There hasn’t been another 9/11 vs. proof of effectiveness • Hearings in favor of both views through 2003 • Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004 • USA PATRIOT Improvement and Reauthorization Act of 2005 • 4 Republicans join Democrats in Senate filibuster • April-June 2005: 16 different hearings on civil liberty violations to Committees on Judiciary • Reauthorized in 2006 • Congress has protected civil liberties by rejecting certain legislation
Civil Liberty Interest Group Victories “[NSL] effectiveness is disproportionately small compared with the extent of… the invasion of privacy they represent.” Deputy Director of the Center for National Security Studies • Muslim Community Association of Ann Arbor v. Ashcroft • John Doe, Inc et al. v. Mukasey et al.
Sunset of the Bush Administration • Terrorist Surveillance Program (TSP) expired in 2007 • Supreme Court and warrantless surveillance program • Protect America Act and FISA Amendments Act of 2008 protect TSP • Attorney General Mukasey certifies that defendants’ actions were lawful
“The real question is, ‘Does the PATRIOT Act work?’There doesn’t seem to be a public case explaining the benefits of the tools the PATRIOT Act provides.”-Michelle Richardson, ACLU Lobbyist
References Anonymous. FBI Interview. 8 Apr. 2010. “A report to Congress in accordance with [sect] 357 of the Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism Act of 2001.” U.S. Department of Treasury, 26 Apr. 2002. Web. 7 March 2010. “Chart comparing S.1692 and H.R. 3845.” Center for Democracy & Technology, 11 Nov. 2009. Web. 7 March 2010. Doyle, Charles. “Terrorism Legislation: Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism (USA PATRIOT) Act of 2001.” CRS Report for Congress., 26 Oct. 2001. Web. 7 March 2010. Henning, Anna, Elizabeth Bazan, Charles Doyle, Edward Liu. “Government Collection of Private Information: Background and Issues Related to the USA PATRIOT Act Reauthorization.” Congressional Research Service, 23 Dec. 2009. Web. 7 March 2010.
Jost, Kenneth. “Civil Liberties Debates.” The CQ Researcher 13.37 (2003): 893-916. Web. 7 March 2010. “Legislative History of P.L. 109-177: USA PATRIOT Improvement and Reauthorization Act of 2005.” LexisNexis Academic & Library Solutions. Web. 7 March 2010. Robinson, Michelle. ACLU Interview. 1 Apr. 2010. Uniting and Strengthening American by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism (USA PATRIOT Act). Public Law 107-56. 26 Oct. 2001. Web. 1 March 2010. VandeHei, Jim. “Bush Assails Democrats Over Patriot Act.” Washington Post. 4 Jan. 2006. Web. 7 March 2010.
References • http://www.duncanentertainment.com/interview_vietdinh.php