ACLU Fact Sheet on the “Police America Act"
The
so-called “Protect America Act of 2007," which we are calling the “Police America
Act," allows for massive, untargeted
collection of international communications without court order or meaningful
oversight by either Congress or the courts. It contains virtually no protections for
the U.S. end of the phone call or email, leaving decisions about the collection,
mining and use of Americans’ private communications up to this administration.
The “Police America Act" allows the Attorney
General (AG) to issue program warrants for international calls without court
review. This new program grants the
AG — not a court or independent body — the authority to issue year-long program
warrants for surveillance of people reasonably believed to be outside of the
United States. The secret intelligence court that has been overseeing such
activities for the last thirty years is cut out of the process, leaving the
executive branch unchecked.
The “Police America Act" has no protections for
American phone calls and emails that are caught up in the
dragnet. The new program only
requires that the surveillance be targeted at people overseas. While this will allow collection of
foreign-to-foreign calls, it also allows the government to pick up all
international communications where one party is in the United States, so long as
no one particular person in the U.S. is being “targeted.” The law is silent on how to treat these
American phone calls and emails — leaving the administration to decide how to
collect, store, datamine and use Americans’ private communications.
The “Police America Act" provides only a phony
court review of secret procedures. The AG is directed to submit to the intelligence court the procedures by
which this new program will operate.
However, the report to the court only need detail how the program is
directed at people reasonably believed to be overseas — it does not require the
AG to explain how it treats Americans’ calls or emails when they are
intercepted. The court will have no
information about how extensive the breach of American privacy is, nor the
authority to remedy it.
The “Police America Act" requires only meaningless
reporting to Congress. The new law
requires the AG to report to the Intelligence and Judiciary Committees twice a
year. But those reports will only
contain information about activity in violation of the AG’s own secret
guidelines about targeting foreigners over seas. Again, this ignores the impact that vast
international collections will have on U.S. persons. The AG does not have to report on how
many Americans’ calls it has tapped, incidentally picked up or how many
Americans have become targets, even though the AG will now be allowed to rummage
through all calls and emails coming into and out of the U.S.
The “Police America Act" has a sunset that may be
of little value. The ACLU will continue to work with
Congress over the next six months to insert real protections into FISA for
Americans who are going to be swept up in these new dragnets. However, the sunset will fall in the
middle of the politically charged primary season, where it may be even harder to
rein in intelligence activities already in progress than it is to resist
expansion of those authorities in the first place. Changes should be made immediately.
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