Pity America's poor civil libertarians. In recent weeks,
the papers have been full of stories about the warehousing
of information on Americans by the National Security Agency,
the interception of financial information by the CIA, the
stripping of authority from a civilian intelligence oversight
board by the White House, and the compilation of suspicious
activity reports from banks by the Treasury Department. On
Thursday, Justice Department Inspector General Glenn Fine
released a report documenting continuing misuse of Patriot
Act powers by the FBI. And to judge from the reaction in the
country, nobody cares.
A quick tally of the record of civil liberties erosion in
the United States since 9/11 suggests that the majority of
Americans are ready to trade diminished privacy, and protection
from search and seizure, in exchange for the promise of increased
protection of their physical security. Polling consistently
supports that conclusion, and Congress has largely behaved
accordingly, granting increased leeway to law enforcement
and the intelligence community to spy and collect data on
Americans. Even when the White House, the FBI or the intelligence
agencies have acted outside of laws protecting those rights
— such as the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act
— the public has by and large shrugged and, through
their elected representatives, suggested changing the laws
to accommodate activities that may be in breach of them.
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Civil libertarians are in a state of despair. "People
don't realize how damaging it is to a democratic society to
allow the government to warehouse information about innocent
Americans," says Mike German, national security counsel
at the American Civil Liberties Union.
Or do they? In all the examples of diminished civil liberties,
there are few, if any, where the motivating factor was something
other than law and order or national security. There are no
scandalous examples of the White House using the Patriot Act
powers for political purposes or of individual agents using
them for personal gain. The Justice IG report released Thursday,
for example, examined some 50,000 National Security Letters
issued in 2006 to see whether the FBI misused that specialized
kind of warrantless subpoena. The IG found some continuing
abuse of the power, but blamed it for the most part on sloppiness
and bad management, not nefarious intent. In a press release
accompanying the report, Fine said, "The FBI and Department
of Justice have shown a commitment to addressing these problems."
There may, nonetheless, be reasons to feel wary of the civil
liberties vs. security trade-off into which Americans have
bought. If the misuse documented in the Justice IG report
stems from incompetence, Americans may not be getting the
security they bargain for in sacrificing their civil liberties.
It's also possible the Justice IG may yet find among the abused
Patriot Act powers examples of an FBI agent stalking his girlfriend
or doing a favor for a political operative friend. Fine is
still preparing a report on the illegal use of "exigent
letters" in unauthorized demands for records from business.
Full
article here.