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Published byAustin Richardson Modified over 9 years ago
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USA Patriot Act I Immediately post 9/11 Expanded search authority Roving wiretaps Monitor private internet and email traffic Acquisition of library and bookstore records (Section 215) Basis for information request is made solely on the assertion of the government that there is a connection to an ongoing investigation; target does not have to be a suspect
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First Amendment Implications of USA Patriot I Lowered standards for denying FOIA requests means less information in the marketplace Expanded assertions of executive privilege and the need for secrecy, even in areas unrelated to national security (ie. energy) Potential targeting of domestic dissent by agencies like the CIA Disciplining of students, teachers, and editors who question official administration policy Proxy groups involved in “spying”—report your professors for any “un-American” activities
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Patriot II—Domestic Security Enhancement Act of 2003 Eliminate distinctions between domestic and international terrorism in statute Takes restrictions off certain Fed agencies Changes focus from criminal prosecution to national security DNA database of suspected terrorists— defined as “person suspected of being a member of a terrorist organization” (OK, how do we know it’s a terrorist organization? Ahhhh! It’s got THOSE guys as members!)
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Patriot II continued Grants new powers to the Attorney General to authorize warrantless searches or surveillance (now possible only when a Declaration of War is issued) Amends rules for expatriation (stripping citizenship—allowed for anyone found to be providing material support for a terrorist organization (even if that person didn’t know or have the intent of supporting terrorism) Tightens restriction on FOIA requests
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Commentary on Patriot II “The Bush administration’s draft Domestic Security Enhancement Act of 2003 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.” Professor David Cole, Georgetown University, “What Patriot Act II Proposes to Do,”
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