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Reader Privacy Soon Restored? CRP Lauds Leahy Vow to "Repair" Civil Liberties
December 20, 2006
On December 19, the sponsors of the Campaign for Reader Privacy (CRP) -- the
American Booksellers Association, the American Library Association, the Association
of American Publishers, and PEN American Center -- lauded Sen. Patrick Leahy's
(D-VT) call for the "restoration, repair, and renewal" of civil liberties
in the U.S., including new legislation to repair the "erosion of privacy."
Last week during a speech at Georgetown Law School in Washington, D.C., Leahy,
the incoming chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee, said, "Privacy rights
belong to the people, not the government." Promising that his committee
would lead the way, he added, "We will take an active role -- and, I hope,
a bipartisan role -- in charting a new course."
In a statement, CRP's sponsors expressed the hope that Leahy's emphasis on
protecting privacy will translate into early action by the Senate to restore
privacy safeguards for bookstore and library records that were eliminated by
the USA Patriot Act.
"Booksellers everywhere are grateful for Sen. Leahy's interest in restoring
privacy," said ABA COO Oren Teicher, "and we will do everything we
can to help build bipartisan support for his position." Teicher noted that
last year 38 Republican members of the House of Representatives helped pass
Vermont Rep. Bernie Sanders' Freedom to Read Amendment, which would have exempted
most bookstore and library records from search under the Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Act. The amendment, which was attached to an appropriations bill,
was later dropped during negotiations between House and Senate leaders.
"When the Patriot Act reauthorization was signed, I promised that the
fight for reader privacy was far from over," said former Congresswoman
Pat Schroeder, president and CEO of the Association of American Publishers.
"Sen. Leahy's expressed commitment to restore civil liberties gives us
the jump-start we need to renew that fight."
ALA President Leslie Burger noted, "Every state in the union protects
the privacy and confidentiality of library reading records. People visiting
libraries expect to enjoy the freedom to read without government monitoring.
We look forward to putting privacy back on the national legislative agenda where
it belongs."
In February, Congress reauthorized provisions of the Patriot Act that allow
the FBI to search bookstore and library records on an assertion they may contain
information "relevant" to a terrorism investigation. In 2005, the
Senate approved restrictions on the FBI's search authority that would have tied
such searches to a suspected terrorist or someone connected to the suspect.
The House refused to approve that safeguard, however.
CRP was organized in 2004 to fight for changes in the Patriot Act. In the spring
of 2004, it issued a statement on behalf of 35 organizations representing booksellers,
librarians, writers and publishers in the U.S., as well as many prominent companies
in the book publishing industry. It also launched a petition campaign that collected
more than 200,000 signatures in bookstores and libraries.
Topics: News - Bookselling, Free Expression,
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