A Review of
Civil Liberties One Year After 9/11
by Stephen Hartnett
As the failed hunt for Osama Bin
Laden gives way to preparations for the invasion of
Iraq, and as the passing of a year of mourning gives
way to commercial exploitation and political opportunism,
many Americans are beginning to realize that one of
our most pressing duties is to protect the Constitution
from the Patriot Act. Ponderously titled An
Act to Deter and Punish Terrorist Acts in the United
States and Around the World, to Enhance Law Enforcement
Investigatory Tools, and for Other Purposes,
the Act amounts to the most drastic revision of US
civil liberties since the shameful Espionage Acts
of 1917 and 1918. The Acts final phrase, and
for Other Purposes, sounds ominously like a
blank check for government intervention. As various
essays in the Public-i have noted throughout the past
year, federal authorities have not hesitated to use
that blank check to imprison immigrants and harass
peace activists and dissident journalists. Nonetheless,
the courageous work of supporters of liberty and justice
has triggered a national debate regarding the Patriot
Act. Focusing on recent developments, what follows
is a review of this ongoing debate and its impact
on the First, Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth Amendments.
The First Amendment:
Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment
of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof;
or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press,
or the right of the people peaceably to assemble,
and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.
Given the vitriol of John Ashcroft,
including his infamous claim before the Senate Judiciary
Committee that anyone criticizing the government only
aids terrorists, for they erode our national unity
and diminish our national resolve, many observers
assumed in the months following 9/11 that the First
Amendment was in dire jeopardy (see Ashcrofts
testimony in NY Times, 7 Dec 01). The shrill unison
of the mass media and the restrictive use of press
pools in war region coverage has also led many
observers to argue that even without official forms
of censorship public debate about the War on Terrorism
is so circumscribed that it mocks the robust exchange
of ideas envisioned in the First Amendment. But in
a wonderful turn of events that again shows the strength
of democracy in America, a diverse chorus of voices
has risen to champion the First Amendment and to question
the heavy-handed powers granted in the Patriot Act.
The case of Rabih Haddad is instructive.
Haddad is a Lebanese Muslim clergyman active in Ann
Arbor with the Global Relief Foundation, a group charged
by the Justice Department with (but as yet not proven
guilty of) supporting terrorist activity. Combining
this assumed link to terrorists with the fact that
Haddads tourist visa had expired, federal agents
arrested Haddad on December 14, 2001, and initiated
secret deportation hearings. Although still technically
innocent, Haddad has nonetheless been in custody for
over nine months. The Detroit News and Metro Times
(a solid weekly arts and politics paper roughly the
equivalent of a combination of our CU City View and
Public-i) appealed for the right to cover the hearings,
charging that secret proceedings clashed with the
First Amendments prohibition on abridging the
freedom of the press. When the newspapers request
was denied they joined forces with Congressman John
Conyers, Jr. (MI, Dem) and the American Civil Liberties
Unions Immigration Rights Project and sued.
The Federal District Court in Detroit overturned the
District Courts decision, which in turn prompted
Ashcroft to appeal to the United States Sixth Circuit
Court of Appeals, based in Cincinnati. In its remarkable
decision rejecting Ashcrofts appeal the Court
wrote that The First Amendment, through a free
press, protects the peoples right to know that
their government acts fairly, lawfully and accurately
in deportation proceedings. When government begins
closing doors, it selectively controls information
rightfully belonging to the people. Selective information
is misinformation (NY Times, 27 August 02).
In yet another blow to Ashcrofts dream of establishing
a post-Constitutional police state, Judge Nancy Edmunds
of the Federal District Court in Detroit ruled recently
that either Ashcroft would have to raise formal charges
against Haddad in an open court of law or release
him within ten days (NY Times, 18 September 02).
These decisions recognize that free
speech is useless without meaningful information and
that secret hearings contradict the spirit of public
scrutiny enshrined in the Constitution. Similar sentiments
have been echoed in cases in New Jersey and Washington,
thus demonstrating not only that free speech is alive
and well but that the Patriot Acts ham-fisted
assault on civil liberties may provoke Constitution-defending
courts to expand our understanding of the First Amendment
(see Edward Klaris in The Nation, 10 June 02). The
lesson here, then, is that activists should continue
using alternative media outlets such as WEFT, the
Public-i, and the Champaign-Urbana Independent Media
Center to fight for peace and justice in full confidence
that their First Amendment rights will be defended
in the courts as the truest form of patriotism.
The Fourth Amendment:
The right of the people to be secure in their
persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable
searches and seizures, shall not be violated and no
Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported
by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing
the place to be searched, and the persons or things
to be seized.
The Patriot Act administers a beating
to the Fourth Amendment. For example, in Section 213,
Authority for Delaying Notice of the Execution
of a Warrant, the Act amends the traditional
understanding of the Fourth Amendment to grant the
court serving a warrant the right to delay notice
if the court finds reasonable cause to believe
that providing immediate notification of the execution
of the warrant may have an adverse result. Translated,
that means that your Fourth Amendment right to be
secure in your persons, houses, papers, and effects
against unreasonable searches is dead. Indeed, the
bulk of Title II of the Act, entitled Enhanced
Surveillance Procedures, grants the federal
government almost limitless powers to intercept
wire, oral, and electronic communications relating
to terrorism (thats the heading of Section
201).
The key to triggering these powers
is the governments ability to argue the probable
threat of terrorist activity. Leaving aside the slippery
nature of the term probable, measuring
the Acts impact on the Fourth Amendment essentially
hinges on its definition of terrorism. In subsection
F.IV of Section 411, Definitions Relating to
Terrorism, the Act defines terrorist activity
as covering anyone or any group that attempts to
commit or to incite to commit, under circumstances
indicating an intention to cause death or serious
bodily injury, a terrorist activity; to prepare or
plan a terrorist activity; to gather information on
potential targets for terrorist activity; or to solicit
funds or other things of value for a terrorist activity.
This definition seems clear and sensible, but a more
ominous definition is given in Section 802, where
domestic terrorism is defined as any activity that
is intended to influence the policy of a government
by intimidation or coercion. Are strikes a form
of coercion? Are non-violent acts of social disobedience
acts of intimidation or coercion?
We may answer that question in part
by turning to President Bushs executive order
authorizing military tribunals, where he defined a
terrorist as any non-US citizen who has engaged
in, aided or abetted, or conspired to commit, acts
of international terrorism, or acts in preparation
therefore . . . to cause injury to or adverse effects
on the US, its citizens, national security, foreign
policy, or economy (NY Times, 14 Nov. 01). Although
specifically targeting non-US citizens, it is clear
that applying this broad definition of terrorism to
the Patriot Acts assault on search and seizure
policy means that anyone working against US foreign
policy may find their phones tapped, or that anyone
protesting the WTO may find their email monitored,
or that anyone protesting at nuclear missile sites
may be held without warrant as a terrorist threatening
national security. In short, the language defining
terrorism is so broadwho defines adverse
effects?that it grants federal authorities
a frighteningly wide range of options for turning
protesters into terrorists and thus people for whom,
according to the Patriot Act, traditional Fourth Amendment
protections no longer apply.
The only oversight for these powers
is the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court of
Review (FISA-CR), a three-member panel empowered to
hear appeals regarding the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance
Court (FISA), an 11-member group established in 1978
to oversee government requests for wiretaps and other
means of intelligence gathering above and beyond normal
legal procedures. Although FISA has approved more
than 10,000 such requests over the past twenty years
without rejecting even onea remarkable record
of rubber-stamping government intervention!it
nonetheless argued in a memorandum dated 17 May 2002
that the FBI had committed errors in some 75
FISA applications related to major terrorist attacks.
Furthermore, FISA observed in this memorandum that
In virtually every instance, the governments
misstatements and omissions in FISA applications and
violations of the Courts orders involved information
sharing and unauthorized disseminations to criminal
investigators and prosecutors. Translated, this
means that even FISA, a super-secretive Court with
a history of approving wire-taps and other forms of
government intervention, finds that Ashcroft has sought
to use Patriot Act powers to bridge the gap between
foreign intelligence operations and domestic criminal
investigations, and to do so by lying repeatedly (FISAs
memorandum is available on-line at http://news.findlaw.com/cnn/docs/terrorism/fisa51702opn.pdf).
By denying Ashcrofts grab
for more snooping authority FISA has led Ashcroft
to appeal to the higher FISA-CR (see NY Times, 23
August 02 and 27 August 02). If FISA-CR upholds FISAs
refusal of Ashcrofts request then Ashcrofts
last resort would be an appeal to the Supreme Court,
hence bringing these issues regarding surveillance
and the Fourth Amendment to the attention of the highest
court in the land. Given the recent election debacle,
however, it is hard to place any faith in the Supreme
Court, meaning that activists concerned with protecting
the Fourth Amendment should make use of the free speech
rights discussed above to make these hearings part
of our larger push to derail Ashcrofts hijacking
of the Constitution.
For brevitys sake I will discuss
the Fifth and Sixth Amendments together:
The Fifth Amendment:
No person shall be held to answer for a capital,
or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a presentment
or indictment of a Grand Jury, except in cases arising
in the land or naval forces, or in the Militia, when
in actual service in time of War or public danger;
nor shall any person be subject for the same offence
to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb, nor shall
be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness
against himself, nor be deprived of life, liberty,
or property, without due process of the law; nor shall
private property be taken for public use, without
just compensation.
The Sixth Amendment:
In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall
enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by an
impartial jury of the State and district wherein the
crime shall have been committed; which district shall
have been previously ascertained by law, and to be
informed of the nature and cause of the accusation;
to be confronted with the witness against him; to
have compulsory process for obtaining Witnesses in
his favor, and to have the Assistance of Counsel for
his defense.
The most obvious blow to the Fifth
and Sixth Amendments has been the FBIs relentless
dragnet for terrorists. The Justice Department reported
recently that 1,200 suspects were arrested in the
weeks following 9/11, that 750 of them were held on
immigration violations, and that all but 74 of these
750 have since been expelled from the country (NY
Times, 11 July 02). Thus the federal government uses
INS technicalities to justify what amounts to sweeps
through immigrant communities where the Fifth and
Sixth Amendments appear to be dead. David Cole reports
that the number of detainees may be as high as 2,000
(see The Nation, 23 September 02 and Amnesty Now,
Spring 02), while Amy Goodman has repeatedly argued
on Democracy Now (the Pacifica news show,
available on WEFT, 90.1 FM, every weekday at 4:00)
that there have been as many as 3,000 arrests in the
New York City area alone.
Consider the case of the Board of
Immigration Appeals (BIA), the lone source of appeal
for anyone caught in such INS-swathed War on Terror
deportation proceedings. Currently a 19-member board,
Ashcroft has just announced that he is slashing the
BIA back to 11 members. Typically handling as many
as 30,000 cases per year, Ashcroft has ordered the
BIA to clear its backlogged cases by March of 2003,
leaving the now reduced BIA roughly five months to
handle an overwhelming number of cases. Do the math:
if the BIA has to hear even 20,000 cases by next March,
with 11 members serving, then that means that each
judge will need to decide on 363 cases per month,
91 per week, 18 per day, 2 per hour (assuming a nine
hour work day). This means that the Patriot Act grants
the government the authority to make arrests where
the only recourse, if lucky, is 30 minutes before
an over-worked BIA judge. Additionally, Deidre Davidson
reports that last year 36% of those who appeared before
the BIA had no legal counsel, thus directly violating
the Sixth Amendment (see Immigration Rights
Community Outraged, available at www.talkleft.com).
As ordered by Ashcroft, then, the
BIA cannot possibly function as a court that honors
due process or that provides defendants the aid of
legal counsel. In short, thousands of immigrants are
being deported at the whim of federal agents, thus
practicing precisely the kind of unilateral and extra-judicial
state powers that the Fifth and Sixth Amendments were
meant to protect against. Nonetheless, as Champaign
activists learned this summer when AWARE organized
mutual aid for Ahmed Bensouda, grassroots pressure
can shed light on such injustices and make it clear
to federal authorities that we will not stand idly
by while they arrest our neighbors.
Checks and Balances in the
Balance
The news on civil liberties one year after 9/11 is
therefore complicated and contested.
Ashcrofts attack on the BIA
is clearly intended to destroy the possibility of
checks and balances regarding immigrant deportation
hearings, yet as the Haddad case demonstrates, US
courts may not roll over as easily as Ashcroft and
Bush may have hoped. A similar power struggle is evident
in recent Washington gamesmanship. Suspecting as we
all do that Ashcroft is attempting to circumvent the
rule of law, the House Judiciary Committee (HJC) has
recently requested information from the Justice Department
regarding its handling of Patriot Act powers. The
Justice Department has responded by sending written
answers not to the HJC but to the House Intelligence
Committee (HIC) (see NY Times, 15 August 02, A14).
This misdirection is politically important, for the
generally critical HJC plans to hold hearings into
the response to 9/11, whereas the in-bed-with-the-administration
HIC does not. In effect, then, the Justice Department
has sent its answers to a dead letter office, to a
bureaucratic black hole where no one will study their
response. The HJC could therefore use support from
activists in making an even more forceful and public
push to make the Justice Department submit to the
lawful process of checks and balances.
As always, then, it is up to grassroots
activists to use their First Amendment rights to hold
the government accountable. Indeed, more than ever
the old motto use em or lose em
appears to be true: for democracy in America to survive,
now is the time to make some noise.
For more printed information
on these topics see the most recent press releases
from the American Civil Liberties Union at www.aclu.org,
the materials collected under Justice and Human
Rights by Amnesty International at www.amnestyusa.org/usacrisis,
and the documents under Homefront Confidential
by The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press
at www.rcfp.org; for audio updates listen to Democracy
Now on WEFT, 90.1 FM, Monday through Friday
from 4:00-5:00 and Free Speech Radio,
also on WEFT, every Monday through Friday from 5:00-5:30;
to get involved locally log on to www.anti-war.net.
Stephen Hartnett is Assistant Professor
of Speech Communication at The University of Illinois.
He is the author of Democratic Dissent & The Cultural
Fictions of Antebellum America, which recently won
the Winans and Wichelns Memorial Award for Distinguished
Scholarship in Rhetoric and Public Address. He is
co-author with Robert James Branham of Sweet Freedoms
Song: My Country Tis of Thee and Democracy
in America. His first book of poems, Democracy is
Difficult: Investigative Prison Poems, will be published
this spring. He has taught college in prisons for
nine years and has spent the past four years working
on The Waiting Room, an interactive art installation
organized around community conversations about the
death penalty. He is married to Brett Kaplan, and
lives in Champaign, where he is a member of The Teachers
for Peace and Justice.
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