ACLU Says Rewriting of Domestic Spying
Restrictions Gives FBI New Powers Despite Growing Evidence of
Analytical Failures
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE-
American Civil Liberties Union
Thursday, May 30, 2002
WASHINGTON -- The American Civil Liberties
Union today said that Attorney General John Ashcroft's decision
to rewrite longstanding restrictions on domestic spying by law
enforcement agencies rewards analytical failure with new powers
and, by doing so, threatens core civil liberties guaranteed under
the Constitution and Bill of Rights. It also demonstrates, the
ACLU said, the Attorney General's seemingly insatiable appetite
for new powers that will do little to make us safer but will inevitably
make us less free.
"The government is rewarding failure,"
said Laura W. Murphy, Director of the ACLU's Washington National
Office. "When the government fails -- as it increasingly
appears to have done before September 11 -- the Bush Administration's
response is to give itself new powers rather than seriously investigating
why the failures occurred."
The rewritten guidelines to be announced
today by Attorney General Ashcroft were originally put in place
in response to law enforcement excesses in the 1950s and 1960s.
They were put in place after the FBI illegally spied on and persecuted
the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and other political dissenters.
In response to congressional investigations into law enforcement
abuse, the Justice Department adopted "Attorney General Guidelines"
that limited the scope of acceptable surveillance and infiltration
of religious and political organizations.
According to media reports, the new guidelines
will trash a central protection against government fishing expeditions
by ending the requirement that law enforcement agencies have at
least a scintilla of evidence -- or even a hunch -- of a crime
before engaging in certain investigative activities. Under the
new Ashcroft guidelines, the FBI can freely infiltrate mosques,
churches and synagogues and other houses of worship, listen in
on online chat rooms and read message boards even if it has no
evidence that a crime might be committed.
"Dr. King's legacy is not just the gains
made toward political and social equality," said Marvin Johnson,
an ACLU Legislative Counsel. "His persecution by law enforcement
is a necessary reminder of the potential abuse when a government
with too long a leash seeks to silence voices of dissent."
An ACLU special report on this aspect of the King legacy can be
found online at: http://www.aclu.org/congress/mlkreport.PDF
Gregory T. Nojeim, Associate Director and
Chief Legislative Counsel of the ACLU's Washington Office, said
the new rules fail to recognize the central problems of the investigations
before September 11. "Federal law enforcement failed to analyze
and act on relevant information," Nojeim said. "The
Attorney General's solution to that failure is to gather exponentially
more information." The ACLU said the new rules were the latest
power grab by an Administration that seems determined to undermine
the bedrock values of liberty, equality and government accountability
on which the nation was founded. A newly released ACLU report
- Insatiable Appetite: The Government's Demand for New and Unnecessary
Powers After September 11 - which details the government's new
powers can be found online at: http://www.aclu.org/congress/InsatiableAppetite.pdf
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