|
Culmination of Reader Privacy Efforts to Come in Mid-December
December 01, 2005
With the U.S. House of Representatives adjourned until Tuesday, December 6,
and the Senate not reconvening until Monday, December 12, a vote on the USA
Patriot Act conference committee draft is expected to come sometime in mid-December.
To ensure Congress accepts a Patriot Act bill that protects readers' right to
privacy, the sponsors of the Campaign for Reader Privacy (CRP) are asking supporters
to be ready for a final big push in the coming weeks. The 16 sunsetting provisions
of the Patriot Act, including Section 215, are set to expire on December 31,
2005.
Two weeks ago, as a result of the outcry from free speech advocates, civil
liberties groups, and others, on Friday, November 18, Congress postponed a vote
on the draft USA Patriot Act conference committee report until after the Thanksgiving
recess.
The late rally in the favor of reader privacy proponents began after the House-Senate
conference committee produced a draft conference report that, among other things,
failed to include previously approved, critical protections for bookstore and
library records in the final version. As it currently stands, the conference
report does not include a Senate provision limiting searches to the records
of suspected terrorists. The bill outlines a new procedure that would allow
recipients of Section 215 orders to challenge them in the secret FISA court,
but the exact mechanism for such an appeal remains unclear. The bill makes permanent
many Patriot Act provisions and resets the sunset provision of Section 215 to
expire in seven years -- three years longer than the Senate recommended and
the House approved in a motion to instruct the conferees.
The news of the legislation spurred a public outcry from numerous free speech
and civil liberties groups, including CRP, and on Friday morning, November 18,
a bipartisan group of 10 House and Senate members, including Senate Judiciary
Chairman Arlen Specter (R-PA), held a press conference to announce their contention
that the current draft needed further revision.
Opponents of the Patriot Act conference committee draft want Congress to change
the language of the Patriot Act conference report to reflect these concerns:
- The current draft requires that in requesting a secret FISA court order
for records the FBI need only present facts establishing that the request
is "relevant"
to a national security investigation. This is a lower and less protective
standard than the Senate version of the bill that required the FBI to demonstrate
a connection between the records sought and a terrorist organization or a
suspected terrorist. CRP wants the Senate language.
- The current draft has seven-year sunsets: CRP wants a four-year sunset that
will make it possible to correct an abuse of Section 215 at an earlier date.
The sponsors of the Campaign for Reader Privacy are the American Booksellers
Association, the American Library Association, the Association of American Publishers,
and PEN American Center.
To read more about CRP's efforts, go to news.bookweb.org/freeexpression/.
Topics: News - Bookselling, Free Expression,
Printer friendly version
Email this article to a friend
ABA Booksellers: Discuss this article online
|