|
For further information, contact:
Chris Finan, American Booksellers Foundation for Free
Expression, (212) 587-4025
For Immediate Release
NEW YORK, N.Y., July 31, 2003–The American Booksellers
Foundation for Free Expression today endorsed two U.S. Senate
bills that significantly narrow the power of the FBI to secretly
search the
records of bookstore customers and library patrons. Under the
USA Patriot Act, the FBI can search the records of anyone it
believes may have information that is relevant to a foreign
intelligence
investigation. The Library, Bookseller and Personal Records
Privacy Act, introduced today by Russell D. Feingold (D-WI), and
the Protecting the Rights of Individuals Act, scheduled to be
introduced tomorrow by Lisa Murkowski (R-AK), limit searches
under the Patriot Act to the records of people who are "foreign
agents" engaged in acts of espionage or terrorism. "The Feingold
and Murkowski bills will discourage the FBI from engaging in
fishing expeditions in the private reading habits of American
citizens," ABFFE President Chris Finan said.
The Feingold bill is co-sponsored by
Jeff Bingaman (D-NM), Edward Kennedy (D-MA), Maria Cantwell
(D-WA), Dick Durbin (D-IL) Ron Wyden (D-OR), Daniel Akaka
(D-HI), Jim Jeffords (I-VT) and Jon Corzine (D-NJ).
The Patriot Act amended the Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) to give the FBI vastly
expanded authority to search business records, including the
records of bookstores and libraries: the FBI may request the
records secretly; it is not required to prove that there is
"probable cause" to believe the person whose records are being
sought has committed a crime; and, the bookseller or librarian
who receives an order is prohibited from revealing it to anyone
except those whose help is needed to produce the records.
In March, Representative Bernie
Sanders (I-VT) introduced the Freedom to Read Protection Act
(H.R. 1157) to limit the FBI's power: the government would have
to seek an order through regular court channels, giving a
bookseller or librarian the opportunity to object on First
Amendment grounds; it would have to show "probable cause," and
booksellers and librarians would be free to report the receipt
of subpoenas for customer records. H.R. 1157 is co-sponsored by
130 House members.
ABFFE will continue to strongly support H.R. 1157 and S. 1158,
the Library and Bookseller Protection Act, which was introduced
by Barbara Boxer (D-CA) and is similar to the Sanders bill.
Although the Feingold and Murkowski bills significantly narrow
FISA, they do not exempt bookstore and library records from it.
Under the Feingold bill, if the FBI has "specific and
articulable facts" that show that the person it is targeting is
a foreign agent, it may seek a search order from the secret FISA
court. The Murkowski bill creates an additional hurdle for the
FBI by requiring facts that establish "probable cause" for
believing the target is a foreign agent.
The Feingold bill was introduced
less than a day after ACLU filed a court challenge to the
section of the Patriot Act that authorizes secret searches of
bookstore and library records.
|