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ABFFE Endorses Security and Freedom Ensured Act
October 16, 2003
On Wednesday, October 15, the American Booksellers Foundation for Free Expression (ABFFE) endorsed
the Security and Freedom Ensured Act (SAFE) of 2003, which was introduced in
the Senate on October 2 by Senators Larry Craig (R-ID) and Richard Durbin (D-IL).
The legislation (S. 1709) would amend parts of the USA Patriot Act, including
Section 215, which gives law enforcement officials broad authority to demand
that libraries or bookstores turn over books, records, papers, and documents.
"The introduction of a bi-partisan bill in the Senate to limit bookstore
and library searches under the Patriot Act is the clearest sign yet that Attorney
General Ashcroft's public relations campaign [to drum up support for the USA
Patriot Act] has failed," said Chris Finan, president of ABFFE. "Congressional
support continues to grow for restoring the privacy protections eliminated by
Section 215."
SAFE limits searches under the Patriot Act to the records of people who are
"foreign agents" engaged in acts of espionage or terrorism. S. 1709
requires the FBI to have "specific and articulable facts" that show
that the person it is targeting is a foreign agent before it may seek a search
order from the secret FISA court. The bill also limits other powers given to
the FBI by the Patriot Act, including the power to conduct "roving"
wire taps and to issue National Security Letters, which authorize searches of
library computers, and "sneak and peak" search warrants.
Two other Republicans, Mike Crapo of Idaho and John E. Sununu of New Hampshire,
are co-sponsoring the bill, S. 1709. The other Democratic co-sponsors of S.1709
are Russell D. Feingold of Wisconsin, Ron Wyden of Oregon, and Jeff Bingaman
of New Mexico.
The SAFE Act is the fourth bill introduced in the Senate that would restore
the protections for the privacy of bookstore customers and library patrons that
were eliminated by the Patriot Act and the second to be introduced by a Republican.
ABFFE has endorsed Feingold's Library, Bookseller, and Personal Records Privacy
Act (S. 1507), the Protecting the Rights of Individuals Act (S. 1552), introduced
by Lisa Murkowski (R-AK), and the Library and Bookseller Protection Act (S.
1158), introduced by Barbara Boxer (D-CA).
The campaign to amend the sweeping powers of the USA Patriot Act began in March
2003, when Rep. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) introduced the Freedom to Read Protection
Act (H.R. 1157), which would amend Section 215. Sanders' bill currently has
137 co-sponsors.
Topics: Free Expression, News - Bookselling,
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