[wordup] Reports from DC: Bush anti-terror bill, pro-liberty coalition
Adam Shand
adam at personaltelco.net
Wed Sep 19 14:42:58 EDT 2001
YAY! I can't explain how happy this makes me.
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Wed, 19 Sep 2001 11:04:43 -0400
From: Declan McCullagh <declan at well.com>
To: politech at politechbot.com
Subject: FC: Reports from DC: Bush anti-terror bill, pro-liberty coalition
http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,46953,00.html
Bush Bill Rewrites Spy Laws
By Declan McCullagh (declan at wired.com)
2:00 a.m. Sep. 19, 2001 PDT
WASHINGTON -- The Bush administration will ask for more power to
eavesdrop on phone calls, the Internet and voicemail messages,
according to an outline of a bill obtained by Wired News.
In response to last week's catastrophic terrorist attacks, President
Bush plans to ask Congress to approve far-reaching legislation that
rewrites U.S. laws dealing with electronic surveillance, immigration
and support for terrorists.
"We will call upon the Congress of the United States to enact these
important anti-terrorism measures this week," Attorney General John
Ashcroft said Monday. "We need these tools to fight the terrorism
threat which exists in the United States, and we must meet that
growing threat."
According to the two-page outline -- which lacks key details and could
change before it's sent to Capitol Hill -- police would be able to
conduct more wiretaps and use the Carnivore surveillance system in
more situations without court orders. That section of the bill appears
to mirror an amendment the Senate approved last Thursday evening.
No restrictions on encryption products, a prospect feared by some
civil libertarians, appear in the outline.
The bill hands prosecutors a courtroom edge, saying that accused
terrorists should stay in jail by default, that detention of suspected
terrorists is "mandatory," and that the Immigration and Naturalization
Service will have more authority to kick immigrants suspected of being
terrorists out of the United States.
[...]
**********
http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,46959,00.html
Coalition to Congress: Slow Down
By Declan McCullagh (declan at wired.com)
7:00 a.m. Sep. 19, 2001 PDT
WASHINGTON -- Dozens of groups worried about the future of free
speech, privacy and other liberties in wartime have gathered together
to ask Congress to tread carefully.
A quickly organized alliance of liberal, libertarian and conservative
organizations, tentatively named the In Defense of Freedom coalition,
says legislators should not rush to rewrite wiretapping, immigration
and surveillance laws.
At noon Thursday, the group will hold a press conference at the
National Press Club to present a list of principles they hope Congress
will follow when weighing laws in response to last week's attacks on
the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.
[...]
**********
http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,46900,00.html
Geeks Gather to Back Crypto
By Declan McCullagh (declan at wired.com)
2:00 a.m. Sep. 17, 2001 PDT
CATONSVILLE, Maryland -- Rob Carlson is worried about something that
most Americans would consider entirely obscure: the future of
encryption technology.
Carlson, a 21-year-old programmer who typically sports a floppy,
pin-studded safari hat, fears that the U.S. Congress, in the wake of
last week's bloody attacks, may vote for anti-terrorism legislation
that also threatens privacy. "There's nothing as permanent as a
temporary restriction," he says.
In an announcement distributed online Friday, Carlson suggested that
like-minded geeks gather at the University of Maryland's Baltimore
County campus on Saturday and Sunday "in order to get the word out
about the importance of civil liberties" and prepare for the worst on
Capitol Hill.
**********
http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,46915,00.html
What Future War Looks Like
By Declan McCullagh and Ben Polen
2:00 a.m. Sep. 18, 2001 PDT
President Bush has warned of a "different type of war" on terrorism.
Wired News asked Stephen Sloan, a professor of political science at
the University of Oklahoma, what a 21st century war might mean.
Sloan's books include Simulating Terrorism and the Historical
Dictionary of Terrorism. He has also served as a consultant to the
U.S. military.
[...]
**********
From: "Bridis, Ted" <Ted.Bridis at dowjones.com>
To: "'declan at well.com'" <declan at well.com>
Subject: DOJ seeks changes to law on bio attacks
Date: Wed, 19 Sep 2001 10:11:14 -0400
http://interactive.wsj.com/articles/SB1000851795317977400.htm
September 19, 2001
Justice Department Seeks Approval
For Wide Antiterrorism Legislation
By TED BRIDIS
Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
WASHINGTON -- The Justice Department is asking Congress to approve
unexpectedly wide-ranging antiterrorism legislation that includes provisions
covering everything from criminals wielding biological weapons, to use of
DNA in terrorist investigations and police seizure of office voice mail.
A draft of the proposal, called the Mobilization Against Terrorism Act and
provided to Republican lawmakers this week, includes sections on
intelligence, immigration, corporate records sought by police, U.S.
cooperation with foreign governments and tax disclosures. The draft goes
beyond specific requests to Congress made this week by Attorney General John
Ashcroft, who has so far focused publicly on the need for legislation to
relax restrictions on telephone and Internet wiretaps, and to strengthen
laws against money laundering.
The speed with which such proposals are moving -- the Senate already
approved some changes to U.S. wiretap laws last week -- has alarmed some
critics who say the Justice Department hasn't adequately explained its
sweeping plans.
Mr. Ashcroft said the changes are needed "to be able to fight effectively
against terrorism," and he praised lawmakers for "their ideas, their
comments, their suggestions and their support for a package that we would
hope to have ready in the next few days." Some criticism has come from
Republican lawmakers. In a letter to Mr. Ashcroft, Rep. Bob Barr of Georgia
warned of a "vast expansion of government power in a misguided attempt to
protect freedom," an effort that would "inevitably erode the very freedoms
we seek to protect."
National civil-liberties groups have quietly joined to form a single
coalition, to be announced tomorrow, to urge that Congress and the White
House take more time to weigh the Justice Department's requests.
Representatives of dozens of these groups met here late last week to draft a
statement of principles. The groups include the American Civil Liberties
Union, the Center for Democracy and Technology and the Free Congress
Foundation, as well as immigration, Arab-American and church groups.
The proposals include "things that are subject to abuse, that will be
abused," said Morton H. Halperin, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign
Relations. "We're going to try to slow down the process, so that these
things are done in an orderly and public way."
"Policy makers are being careful figuring out who to target in the Middle
East," added Jerry Berman, head of the Center for Democracy and Technology.
"They should be just as careful to figure out what to target in the
Constitution, so we don't experience collateral damage."
The coalition hasn't invited any corporations to join, believing that
companies would be reluctant to give the impression that they oppose
antiterrorism measures. But some proposals, including one affecting
"business records" sought by police, could be costly for corporations if it
is mandated that records be retained for long periods. The technology
industry previously has fought requirements that Internet companies keep
records about subscribers' use of the Internet, citing high costs and
privacy concerns. "We're not in the data-storage business," said America
Online spokesman Nicholas Graham.
"It's got everybody's antenna twitching," said Harris Miller, head of the
Information Technology Association of America, which isn't part of the
coalition. "Clearly if it does affect things like record retention, then it
potentially creates huge expense, liability and privacy issues."
Many companies probably will do much of their lobbying behind the scenes.
AOL Time Warner Inc., the Internet and entertainment company, is "deeply
interested in learning the details of each proposal," Mr. Graham said.
Mr. Halperin said the civil-liberties groups face the same dilemma, risking
a public impression that they are soft on terrorism if they oppose the
Justice Department's proposals.
**********
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