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General
Testimony of ACLU Washington Legislative Office Director, Caroline Fredrickson, Before the Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board (12/5/2006)
INTRODUCTION
I’m Caroline Fredrickson, director
of the American Civil Liberties Union Washington Legislative Office and I
represent more than 550,000 members and 53 affiliate offices across America. I’m
pleased you invited me here today. This hearing is a welcome but long overdue
first step in the right direction to air just some of the civil liberties
transgressions of this administration over the past five years. Our message to you is this: our
democracy is at risk when the unprecedented threats to privacy and civil
liberties undertaken in the name of the war on terror go unanswered and
unchecked. We ask today: when did the American people become the enemy?
GRIEVANCES
So much has changed in America
since 9/11. Unfortunately our privacy and civil liberties suffered significant
collateral damage in the subsequent war on terror. Americans have begun to piece together
the puzzle and we’re asking, “Why does the president think we’re the enemy in
the war on terror?”
We
have learned, in incomplete bits and pieces, the executive branch’s aggressive
abuse of power campaign that is stripping away our basic rights and freedoms as
guaranteed by the Constitution and the Bill of Rights. Here are the violations of civil
liberties that most concern the ACLU:
- Warrantless wiretapping and consumer call
information -- In violation
of federal statutes and the U.S. Constitution, the National Security Agency is
listening, without a warrant, to telephone calls involving Americans who are in
the United States who are talking to people abroad. In August, 2006, a federal judge in
Detroit found the eavesdropping program both unconstitutional and illegal as a
result of an ACLU lawsuit. The NSA
is also scanning phone records turned over to it by telecommunications companies
that violated state statutes and regulations when they provided sensitive
customer calling information to the NSA.
The NSA also gained direct access to the telecommunications
infrastructure through the willing cooperation of some of America's largest
phone companies. And, the NSA
appears to be using broad "data mining" systems that allow it to analyze
information about millions of innocent people in the United States without clear
legal authority to do so and at the cost of Americans' privacy.
- Torture,
kidnapping and detention – The government continues to claim that it has the
power to designate anyone, including Americans, as “enemy
combatants” without charge.
Investigations into detention centers have revealed severe human rights
abuses and violations of international law and the Geneva Conventions. The government has also engaged in the
practice of rendition: secretly kidnapping people and moving them to foreign
countries where they are tortured and abused. Last week, ACLU client Khaled El- Masri traveled from his
home in Germany to Richmond, Virginia and Washington D.C. to describe his
appalling experience of being abducted and tortured for months, then being
dumped along the side of a road in Albania. El-Masri is our client in the ACLU's
landmark lawsuit on his behalf charging former CIA director George Tenet, other
CIA officials and U.S.-based aviation corporations with violations of United
States and universal human rights laws.
The U.S. government-sponsored torture of the past several years is a
shameful chapter in American history and it must stop.
- A
growing surveillance society – In perhaps the greatest assault on the
privacy of ordinary Americans, the country is undergoing a rapid expansion of
data collection, storage, tracking and mining. Over and above the invasion of privacy
represented by any one specific program, a combination of new technologies,
expanded government powers and expanded private-sector data collection efforts
is creating a new “surveillance society” beyond what George Orwell could have
imagined. Recently, we heard
reports of a Bush Administration administration project known as Tangram – named
after a children’s shape-shifting puzzle – that seems to be the infamous Total
Information Awareness program that Congress shut down, reborn under a
new name.
- Patriot
Act reauthorization – Several Patriot Act provisions were set to expire at
the end of 2005, but Congress reauthorized the law without
reforming its most flawed provisions.
It passed up an opportunity to ensure adequate judicial oversight of the
surveillance powers authorized in the Patriot Act. With several provisions set to expire
again in 2009, Congress must use this time to make meaningful changes to bring
this law in line with the Constitution.
- Government
secrecy – The Bush administration has been one of the most secretive in our
history. The Freedom of Information
Act has been weakened through willful noncompliance, the administration has led
a campaign of reclassification and increased secrecy -- including the expansion
of a catch-all category of “sensitive but unclassified” -- and has made sweeping
claims of “state secrets” to stymie judicial review of its policies that erode
civil liberties. Until recently it
even refused to grant administration investigators the security clearances they
needed to investigate the illegal and unconstitutional NSA wiretapping program.
This Board board had to wait 11 months
to be even partially briefed on some aspects of a program the public learned
about from the New York Times
almost one year ago. The
administration wants to prosecute journalists under the Espionage Act of 1917 to
thwart the media’s role in exposing questionable, and illegal conduct.
- Real
ID – The Real ID Act lays the foundation for a national ID card. Under the law, states must standardize
their driver’s licenses (under standards that have yet to be determined) and
link to databases shared with every federal, state and local government official
in every other state. Conservative estimates place the cost of the program at
$11 to 17 billion. The aggregation
of our private information into one massive database would create “one stop
shopping” for identity thieves. The
act also makes it more difficult for persecuted people to seek asylum. Yet,
defying all logic, the Department of Homeland Security refuses to build data
privacy protections into the database, the ID card or the data transmission
systems because the Act act fails to mention the word “privacy.”
- No fly lists – These were established to keep track of dangerous
people the government prohibits from traveling. Since 9/11 the number of similar watch
lists has mushroomed, all with subjective or inconclusive criteria for placing
names on the lists, and with little or no means to remove them. These lists name an estimated 30,000 to
50,000 people. The lists are
so erroneous several members of Congress, including Senator Ted Kennedy, have
been flagged.
- Political spying – Government
agencies such as the FBI and the Department of Defense spied on innocent,
law-abiding Americans. The ACLU
learned through the Freedom of Information Act that the FBI consistently
monitored peaceful groups such as Quakers, People for the Ethical Treatment of
Animals, Greenpeace, the Arab American Anti-Defamation Committee and, of course,
the ACLU.
- Abuse
of material witness statute – Following 9/11, the government gathered and
detained many people -- mostly Muslims in the US – -- by exploiting a
narrow technicality that permits the arrest and brief detention of “material
witnesses,” or those possessing important information about a crime. Most of those detained were never
treated as witnesses to the crimes of 9/11, and though they were detained to
secure testimony, in many cases, the government did not actually seek such
testimony. Some were imprisoned for
more than six months and one actually spent more than a year behind bars.
- Attacks on academic freedom – The Bush administration used a provision in the
Patriot Act to engage in a policy of “censorship at the border” to keep scholars
with differing political views out of the United States. The ACLU has filed a lawsuit challenging
this ideological exclusion, charging that it is being used to prevent United
States citizens and residents from hearing speech protected by the First
Amendment. Government policies and
practices have also hampered academic freedom and scientific inquiry since 9/11,
creating a system where science has come under siege. The government over-classifies
information and engages in outright censorship and pre-screening of scientific
articles before publication.
ALL IS NOT
WELL
These continuous incursions into
our privacy and civil liberties violations combine to put our democracy at
risk. When our government is
torturing innocent people and spying on Americans without a warrant, the PCLOB
should act -- indeed, should have acted
long ago. Clearly you’ve been fiddling while Rome burns. The claimed 17 PCLOB
meetings consist mainly of phone calls or teleconferences with administration
insiders and agencies. This board needs to bring a little sunshine. So far America is kept in the dark –
--
and this is the first public meeting you have had. While I appreciate the chance to speak
at this forum today, I must note that today’s meeting has been rescheduled twice
over the last 10 months.
SUMMARY OF PCLOB INACTIVITY
The PCLOB should begin aggressive
investigation and oversight into several important matters that have yet to be
addressed:
- First,
review how the NSA and other federal agencies are involved with anti-terrorism
efforts that target innocent citizens or other lawful residents,
- Second,
hold public hearings and issue public reports that reveal important privacy and
civil liberties issues raised by new government anti-terrorism efforts;
- Third,
examine the implications of watch lists for individuals and the government, the
exponential growth in the number of names on watch lists, and the constitutional
and legal implications for being placed on such a list;
-
And
fourth, candidly advise the president regarding the legality and
propriety of permitting government agencies to contract with private companies
to achieve eavesdropping and data mining capabilities. Oversight is only effective when the
truth – and not deference to those in power – --
prevails.
I’ll briefly expand on each of
those points.
The board should review the
policies and procedures by which the NSA or other federal agencies intercept
communications where there is no probable cause to believe the people targeted
are either agents of a foreign power, or criminals. This is the most public dispute
concerning the intersection of new anti-terror efforts and those civil liberties
and privacy principles Congress found to be vital to our way of life. Some of
you have recently been quoted as saying that your recent review of this
warrantless wiretapping left you with greater confidence that protections were
built into the program. Yet it remains clear that this program was built outside
of, and in direct contradiction to, the Foreign Intelligence and Surveillance
Act and Fourth Amendment guaranteed protections. You can put lipstick on a pig, but it
remains a pig. The PCLOB’s
integrity and usefulness will be questioned if it dodges its duty to undertake a
full review of these matters.
The board should use its authority
to conduct public hearings and issue regular public reports that explain its
findings. Doing both will heighten
public and government awareness of the importance of vigorously protecting
privacy and civil liberties. The
PCLOB should model itself after the successful 9/11 Commission.
The board should review the vast
implications posed by terrorist and criminal watch lists. Certainly it is useful for the
government to maintain a list of people who are known to be
dedicated to committing violent acts against America. But the utility of such lists is limited
particularly since nearly 5 years after 9/11 there is no reliable method of
redress to allow innocent people to get off - -- and stay off
--- these lists. And the implications for mistakenly
being placed on a list are profound.
We know from testimony and published reports that the No-Fly lists were
cobbled together from numerous agencies that had no anti-terror capabilities.
The lists are deeply flawed because they are not focused exclusively on the
group of individuals they intended to stop. A recent report found that the National
Counter Terrorism Center, which shares some overlapping list-keeping duties with
the FBI’s Terrorist Screening Center, now has over 325,000 names on its master
list. A government official stated
on a CBS broadcast in September that the list was over 400,000 names. Various government agencies maintain at
least 13 different
watch lists. Congress never
established any legal criteria for placing people on any list and no court has
ever squarely decided the constitutionality of using such lists to deny the
exercise of certain rights and privileges. Nor, has any
body fully reviewed how names are shared between agencies or the implications
for of such sharing. Thus, the result is a wholly unregulated
process that threatens due process and impedes the exercise of First Amendment
rights of petition of redress, the right to travel, and may prevent individuals
from entering government buildings to obtain services, benefits and
entitlements.
Finally, the board should
investigate the government’s contracting with private companies to perform
quasi-governmental roles to aid the nation’s anti-terrorism efforts. In particular, the investigation should
focus on those companies facilitating voice and data communications
interception, data mining analysis, and background and clearance searches on
potential government employees. For
example, data aggregator Choice Point has many government contracts to perform
data aggregation and data mining services for most federal anti-terror and
anti-crime agencies. Their data is
notoriously rife with errors, including the well-documented merging of files of
several individuals with similar names.
Thus, the security of the information aggregated by these companies
remains suspect, which could limit the data’s
effectiveness for anti-terror efforts if hacked, and could lead to
subsequent egregious breaches of individual privacy. The legal implications for both
companies and the government are unclear.
ALL BARK,
NO BITE
But the board lacks any power
whatsoever to affect those changes – -- it’s all bark
and no bite. While the PCLOB’s mandate is broad, it remains unclear what power
you possess and how the PCLOB’s placement within the executive office of the
president will affect its efforts.
The PCLOB’s board appears to be directed towards a
balancing of anti-terror needs with privacy and civil liberties
principles, a formulation that the ACLU rejects as we argue that we can
be both safe and
free.
When Congress created the PCLOB, it
found that:
- In
conducting the war on terrorism, the federal government may need additional
powers and may need to enhance the use of its
existing powers.
- And, this potential shift of power and authority to the federal
government calls for an enhanced system of checks and balances to
protect the precious liberties that are vital to our way of
life.
The board’s power to accomplish its
mission is limited. While, the
board may “access” information and documents from an executive branch agency or
department, including some classified information, it does not have
subpoena power. Instead,
the board has to rely upon the Attorney General to undertake action on the
board’s behalf to respond to “noncompliance.” Further, the board may
interview officers of other agencies and request information from state, tribal
or local governments, but cannot demand participation or compliance. Finally, information may be withheld
from the board at the discretion of either the National Intelligence Director to
“protect the national security interests” of the country, or the Attorney
General to “protect sensitive law enforcement or counterterrorism
operations.”
The
board’s influence may also be limited in that the members serve at the pleasure
of the president and, although the PCLOB is required to report to Congress
annually on its activities, the board’s central function is to advise the
president. Thus, it is not
independent of the president. Contrary to its name, the board has little if any
real “oversight” authority.
Representatives
Carolyn
Maloney (D-NY), Christopher
Shays (R-CT) and Tom Udall (D-NM), have introduced
legislation that we support, which would take the
civil liberties board out from under the president's control and would give it
subpoena powers. We strongly support that necessary move
to ensure that the board has true oversight powers.
CONCLUSION
This week one we representedof our
clients Khaled El Masri –
--
a German citizen who was kidnapped by our government and thrown in to a
secret prison where he was tortured for months. When our government realized that he was
an innocent man, they dumped him by the side of a road in Albania. I wish the members of the PCLOB had been
able to look Mr. Masri in the eye as I did this week and hear his first-
hand account of this dark chapter in American history. As we have outlined, his story is just one of many about this
government’s ongoing abuse of power and disregard for the rule of law. History has shown that a nation that
compromises freedom unnecessarily, only comes to regret it. And
History history will show this administration is on the
wrong side of civil liberties. The ACLU and its members urge you to expeditiously undertake the review
of the pressing matters I’ve addressed today, and then make your findings and
recommendations known not only to the president and executive branch, but also
to the public.
Thank you .
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