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16 Sep 2009 07:22 pm
Obama's Extension Of The Patriot Act
David Kravets describes the three provisions set to expire that the Obama administration wants to renew:
*A secret court, known as the FISA court, may grant “roving
wiretaps” without the government identifying the target. Generally, the
authorities must assert that the target is an agent of a foreign power
and/or a suspected terrorist. The government said Tuesday that 22 such
warrants — which allow the monitoring of any communication device —
have been granted annually.
*The FISA court may grant warrants for “business records,” from
banking to library to medical records. Generally, the government must
assert that the records are relevant to foreign intelligence gathering
and/or a terrorism investigation. The government said Tuesday that 220
of these warrants had been granted between 2004 and 2007. It said 2004
was the first year those powers were used.
*A so-called “lone wolf” provision, enacted in 2004, allows FISA
court warrants for the electronic monitoring of an individual even
without showing that the person is an agent of a foreign power or a
suspected terrorist. The government said Tuesday it has never invoked
that provision, but said it wants to keep the authority to do so.
I don't have a major problem with these court-checked initiatives. And I never did. What worried me was the claim that the executive could do this without any accountability or scrutiny at all.
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