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For Immediate Release
Free Speech Groups Support Patriot Act Challenge
For further information, contact: Chris Finan, American Booksellers
Foundation for Free Expression, (212) 587-4025 NEW YORK, NY, November
3, 2003
Free speech groups representing booksellers, librarians, publishers,
writers and others today filed a brief that strongly supports
a legal challenge to the constitutionality of the provision of
the USA Patriot Act that gives the FBI virtually unlimited access
to personal, organization and business records, including bookstore
and library records. The U.S. Justice Department has filed a motion
to dismiss the case. "The Patriot Act authorizes the FBI to engage
in fishing expeditions in bookstore and library records and then
bars booksellers and librarians from protesting even after the
fact. Such an unprecedented extension of prosecutorial power demands
immediate court review," Chris Finan, president of the American
Booksellers Foundation for Free Expression (ABFFE), said today.
The American Civil Liberties Union filed the federal lawsuit
in Detroit in July on behalf of six non-profit organizations that
provide a wide range of religious, medical, social, and educational
services to various communities around the country. The plaintiffs
allege that they are likely targets of investigation under Section
215 of the Patriot Act, which gives the FBI access to the records
of almost any person, organization or business in the course of
an investigation of terrorism or espionage. In a brief filed today
opposing the government's motion to dismiss, one plaintiff, the
Muslim Community Association of Ann Arbor, says that attendance
at prayer services and association events as well as donations
have dropped dramatically as a result of fear that the government
might try to obtain its records.
The book and library community has also expressed alarm about
Section 215 because FBI agents do not need to prove they have
"probable cause" before searching bookstore or library records:
they can get access to the records of anyone whom they believe
to have information that may be relevant to a terrorism investigation,
including people who are not suspected of committing a crime or
of having any knowledge of a crime. The request for an order authorizing
the search is heard by a secret court in a closed proceeding,
making it impossible for a bookseller or librarian to have the
opportunity to object on First Amendment grounds prior to the
execution of the order. Because the order contains a gag provision
forbidding a bookseller or librarian from alerting anyone to the
fact that a search has occurred, it would be difficult to protest
the search even after the fact.
Recently, Attorney General John Ashcroft attempted to ease concerns
about Section 215 by announcing that the FBI has not used it.
However, critics continue to worry about the potential for abuse
in the future. The amicus brief quotes a spokesman for the Justice
Department upholding the necessity for the provision. Once the
government decides someone is a terrorist, the spokesman explained,
"We would want to know what they're reading."
In addition to ABFFE, the groups signing the amicus brief are
the Association of American Publishers, the Association of American
University Presses, the Center for First Amendment Rights, the
Comic Book Legal Defense Fund, the Electronic Frontier Foundation,
Feminists for Free Expression, the First Amendment Project, the
Freedom to Read Foundation and PEN American Center.
The amicus brief, which was written by Dan Mach and Theresa
Chmara of Jenner & Block, is available online at http://www.abffe.com/amicus_brief.pdf.
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