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With a Whisper, Not a
Bang Bush signs parts of
Patriot Act II into law — stealthily. On December 13,
when By signing the
bill on the day of Hussein's capture, Bush effectively consigned a dramatic
expansion of the USA Patriot Act to a mere footnote. Consequently, while most
Americans watched as Hussein was probed for head lice, few were aware that the
FBI had just obtained the power to probe their financial records, even if the
feds don't suspect their involvement in crime or terrorism. The Bush
Administration and its Congressional allies tucked away these new executive
powers in the Intelligence Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2004, a legislative
behemoth that funds all the intelligence activities of the federal government.
The Act included a simple, yet insidious, redefinition of "financial
institution," which previously referred to banks, but now includes
stockbrokers, car dealerships, casinos, credit card companies, insurance
agencies, jewelers, airlines, the U.S. Post Office, and any other business
"whose cash transactions have a high degree of usefulness in criminal, tax,
or regulatory matters." Congress passed
the legislation around Thanksgiving. Except for U.S. Representative Charlie
Gonzalez, all Supporters of
expanding the Patriot Act claim that the new law is necessary to prevent future
terrorist attacks on the Opponents of the
PATRIOT Act and its expansion claim that safeguards like judicial oversight and
the Fourth Amendment, which prohibits unreasonable search and seizure, are
essential to prevent abuses of power. "There's a reason these protections
were put into place," says Chip Berlet, senior analyst at Political
Research Associates, and a historian of U.S. political repression. "It has
been shown that if you give [these agencies] this power they will abuse it. For
any investigative agency, once you tell them that they must make sure that they
protect the country from subversives, it inevitably gets translated into a
program to silence dissent." Opponents claim
the FBI already has all the tools to stop crime and terrorism. Moreover,
explains Patrick Filyk, an attorney and vice president of the local chapter of
the ACLU, "The only thing the act accomplishes is the removal of judicial
oversight and the transfer of more power to law enforcements agents." This broadening
of the Patriot Act represents a political victory for the Bush Administration's
stealth legislative strategy to increase executive power. Last February, shortly
before Bush launched the war on Iraq, the Center for Public Integrity obtained a
draft of a comprehensive expansion of the Patriot Act, nicknamed Patriot Act II,
written by Attorney General John Ashcroft's staff. Again, the timing was
suspicious; it appeared that the Bush Administration was waiting for the start
of the Iraq war to introduce Patriot Act II, and then exploit the crisis to ram
it through Congress with little public debate. The leak and
ensuing public backlash frustrated the Bush administration's strategy, so
Ashcroft and Co. disassembled Patriot Act II, then reassembled its parts into
other legislation. By attaching the redefinition of "financial
institution" to an Intelligence Authorization Act, the Bush Administration
and its Congressional allies avoided public hearings and floor debates for the
expansion of the Patriot Act. Even proponents
of this expansion have expressed concern about these legislative tactics.
"It's a problem that some of these riders that are added on may not receive
the scrutiny that we would like to see," says St. Mary's Professor Robert
Summers. The Bush
Administration has yet to answer pivotal questions about its latest
constitutional coup: If these new executive powers are necessary to protect
United States citizens, then why would the legislation not withstand the test of
public debate? If the new act's provisions are in the public interest, why use
stealth in ramming them through the legislative process? ------- |