mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-10-01 01:15:38 -04:00
196 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
196 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
NO PROTECTION FOR U.S. CITIZENS
|
||
|
||
This article is reprinted from Full Disclosure. Copyright (c) 1986
|
||
Capitol Information Association. All rights reserved. Permission is hereby
|
||
granted to reprint this article providing this message is included in its
|
||
entirety. Full Disclosure, Box 8275-CI3, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48107. $15/yr.
|
||
|
||
The Minimization Procedure required by the Foreign Intelligence
|
||
Surveillance Act (50 U.S.C. 1801) offers no protection to United States
|
||
Citizens.
|
||
|
||
The U.S. government's secret spy court authorized under the Foreign
|
||
Intelligence Surveillance Act is used by intelligence agencies (CIA, FBI,
|
||
NSA, etc) to obtain authorization to electronically spy on foreign powers and
|
||
their agents within the United States.
|
||
|
||
The Act requires a minimization procedure to be followed with respect to
|
||
information obtained on U.S. persons in the course of the surveillance. When
|
||
a law enforcement agency seeks to electronically surveil a suspected criminal
|
||
they are required to demonstrate probable cause that a crime has been or will
|
||
be committed in order to obtain a search warrant. However, for an
|
||
intelligence agency to obtain a warrant from the United States Foreign
|
||
Intelligence Court (USFISC), they only need to demonstrate probable cause
|
||
that the target is a foreign power or an agent of a foreign power. That is
|
||
to obtain a warrant in a normal Federal or State Court, there must be
|
||
evidence of a crime, but to obtain a warrant in the USFISC there merely needs
|
||
to be an indication that the target might be associated with a certain class
|
||
of people.
|
||
|
||
To "protect" U.S. persons a minimization procedure is employed with
|
||
respect to the disclosure of information obtained during the surveillance of
|
||
foreign powers and their agents. Full Disclosure has obtained a copy of a
|
||
FBI warrant application filed with the USFISC which details the actual
|
||
minimization procedure. According to the application's Exhibit A which
|
||
details the procedure:
|
||
|
||
These procedures apply to the acquisition,
|
||
retention, and dissemination of nonpublicly
|
||
available communications and other information
|
||
concerning unconsenting United States persons
|
||
that is collected in the course of electronic
|
||
surveillance directed at the telephone
|
||
communications of this agent of a foreign power
|
||
and oral communications of this agent of a
|
||
foreign power...
|
||
|
||
When the FBI begins the surveillance, they will verify that the telephone
|
||
communications lines being intercepted at the residence and business are in
|
||
fact the telephone lines of the agent of the foreign power.
|
||
|
||
The FBI agents who monitor the communications are responsible for
|
||
determining if the information "intercepted must be minimized". Further, the
|
||
communications of United States persons (this includes discussions of U.S.
|
||
persons by foreign powers) will be subject to "continuing analysis to
|
||
establish categories of communications that are not pertinent to the
|
||
authorized purpose of the surveillance". The categories are to be
|
||
established after a reasonable period of monitoring the communications of the
|
||
foreign power. No information was provided which would indicate that
|
||
information categorized as not pertinent would be stored, processed or
|
||
disseminated any differently than pertinent information.
|
||
|
||
Access to information obtained regarding United States persons is to be
|
||
under strict controls. Use of the information is restricted to FBI
|
||
supervisory, investigative, and clerical personnel who have a need to know
|
||
the information for "foreign intelligence or law enforcement" purposes. Any
|
||
information which contains evidence of a criminal offense is retained until a
|
||
decision is rendered by prosecutive officials, and if the United States
|
||
person is prosecuted the information will be retained until the end of the
|
||
prosecution.
|
||
|
||
To further "protect" United States persons information regarding them
|
||
won't be disseminated without their consent, unless the information is
|
||
"evidence of a crime which has been, is being, or is about to be committed".
|
||
Such information can be disseminated to "Federal, state, local, or foreign
|
||
officials or agencies with law enforcement responsibility for the crime".
|
||
Information regarding U.S. persons which is not evidence of a crime, but
|
||
which reasonably appears to be foreign intelligence information can be
|
||
disseminated in a "manner which identifies United States persons only for
|
||
authorized foreign intelligence, foreign counterintelligence,
|
||
countersabotage, and international terrorism, or law enforcement purposes".
|
||
|
||
So far, there is little minimization (or protection) of information
|
||
regarding United States persons which was obtained in a manner inconsistant
|
||
with the Fourth Amendment warrant requirements. The last sentence of the
|
||
Exhibit appears to set forth the only protection afforded the United States
|
||
person:
|
||
|
||
|
||
Any information acquired from electronic
|
||
surveillance of the target of a foreign power
|
||
which is disseminated for law enforcement
|
||
purposes shall be accompanied by a statement
|
||
that such information or any information
|
||
derived therefrom, may only be used in a
|
||
criminal proceeding with the advance
|
||
authorization of the Attorney General.
|
||
|
||
Prior to the passage of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, George
|
||
Hasen, Chairman of the Committee on Civil Rights wrote a letter to Senator
|
||
Inouye outlining this very problem. The text of his letter follows:
|
||
|
||
Dear Senator Inouye: We understand that your Committee has received from
|
||
the Committee on Federal Legislation of the Association of the Bar of the
|
||
City of New York its critique of the provisions of the proposed Foreign
|
||
Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1977 (S. 1506). Our Committee on Civil
|
||
Rights associates itself, generally, with that critique, but we disagree with
|
||
it in one important respect.
|
||
|
||
Both the Committee on Federal Legislation and the Committee on Civil
|
||
Rights are concerned because the standards imposed by S. 1566 for obtaining a
|
||
warrant to engage in electronic surveillance do not, in some instances,
|
||
require a probable cause showing of criminal conduct. It is the considered
|
||
judgment of the Committee on Civil Rights that a CRIMINAL STANDARD IS
|
||
ESSENTIAL to the bill and, unlike the Committee on Federal Legislation, we
|
||
believe that unless S. 1566 is amended to provide such a standard, it should
|
||
not be enacted.
|
||
|
||
We think that is important to remember why this legislation is needed.
|
||
Clearly it is not needed to empower government agencies to carry on
|
||
electronic surveillance. Rather, the need is for legislation which will
|
||
limit and control electronic surveillance and the consequent government
|
||
intrusion into the private lives of American Citizens. The findings of
|
||
Congressional committees which over the last several years have investigated
|
||
intelligence agency abuses HAVE MADE THIS ABUNDANTLY CLEAR. Based on such
|
||
findings, the Church Committee specifically concluded that no American should
|
||
"be targeted for electronic surveillance except upon a judicial finding of
|
||
probable criminal activity" and, further, that targeting "an American for
|
||
electronic surveillance in the absence of probable cause to believe he might
|
||
commit a crime, is unwise and unnecessary." (Intelligence Activities and the
|
||
Rights of Americans, Final Report of the Select Committee to Study
|
||
Governmental Operations with Respect to Intelligence Activities, U.S. Senate,
|
||
94th Cong., 2nd Sess. (1976), at 325.)
|
||
|
||
Further the Supreme Court has warned of the danger to First Amendment
|
||
rights inherent in national security surveillances:
|
||
|
||
"National security cases . . . often reflect a convergence of First and
|
||
Fourth Amendment values not present in cases of `ordinary' crime. Though the
|
||
investigative duty of the executive may be stronger in such cases, so also is
|
||
there greater jeopardy to constitutionally protected speech. `Historically
|
||
the struggle for freedom of speech and press in England was bound up with the
|
||
issue of the scope of the search and seizure power,' Marcus v. Search
|
||
Warrant, 367 U.S. 717, 724 (1961). History abundantly documents the tendency
|
||
of Government -- however benevolent and benign its motives -- to view with
|
||
suspicion those who most fervently dispute it policies. Fourth Amendment
|
||
protections become the more necessary when the targets of official
|
||
surveillance may be those suspected of unorthodoxy in their political
|
||
beliefs. The danger to political dissent is acute where the Government
|
||
attempts to act under so vague a concept as the power to protect `domestic
|
||
security.' Given the difficulty of defining the domestic security interest,
|
||
the danger of abuse in acting to protect that interest becomes apparent.'
|
||
United States v. United States District Court, 407 U.S. 297, 313 (1971).
|
||
|
||
Notwithstanding these warnings, S. 1566 would permit the electronic
|
||
surveillance of United States citizens and other persons for 90 days or more
|
||
without any showing that they are engaged in, or likely to be engaged in,
|
||
criminal activity. Section 2521(b)(2)(B)(iv)/1 would go even further and
|
||
would permit the electronic surveillance of individuals who "knowingly" aid
|
||
and abet persons whose conduct may be entirely lawful.
|
||
|
||
Surely, the burden of justifying such a departure from basic Fourth
|
||
Amendment principles -- if indeed it can be justified -- ought to be on the
|
||
proponents of such provisions. And, surely, they ought to be able to specify
|
||
precisely those lawful activities of American citizens which are so vital to
|
||
the safety of the nation that the Government must be permitted to
|
||
surreptitiously gather information about them and, worse, to do so by such an
|
||
intrusive method as electronic surveillance. In our opinion, however, two
|
||
Attorneys General have been unable to sustain that burden, and the few
|
||
examples are simply unconvincing. In our view, the necessity of a
|
||
non-criminal standard has not been demonstrated, and it should, therefore, be
|
||
rejected.
|
||
|
||
There is another and perhaps even more important reason why such a
|
||
standard should not be accepted. If, in this first legislative attempt to
|
||
control searches in national security matters, Congress authorizes the most
|
||
intrusive and least precise of techniques -- electronic surveillance -- where
|
||
no crime is involved, what justification will there be for barring in similar
|
||
situations more specific methods such as surreptitious entry and mail
|
||
openings? And if a non-criminal standard is necessary to protect the
|
||
national security where the connection with a foreign power can be as tenuous
|
||
as that provided in S. 1566, what arguments can be made against a similar
|
||
standard in domestic situations where the perceived danger to national
|
||
security may be just as great?
|
||
|
||
S. 1566 represents in some respects an advance over earlier proposals,
|
||
but in out view, IF A NON-CRIMINAL STANDARD IS RETAINED, ENACTMENT OF THIS
|
||
LEGISLATION WILL LEGITIMIZE THE VERY CONDUCT IT OUGHT TO PROHIBIT AND WILL
|
||
CONSTITUTE A SERIOUS BLOW TO CIVIL LIBERTIES.
|
||
|
||
If permitted by your procedures, it would be appreciated if this letter
|
||
were made a part of the record of the hearings of your Committee on this
|
||
bill. [emphassis added]
|
||
|
||
/1 This section was passed into law.
|
||
part of the record of the hearings of your Committee on this
|
||
bill. [ |