|

Immediate
Release
For Information Contact: Lynne Bradley (ALA), (800) 941-8478
Judith Platt (AAP), (202) 220-4551
Larry Siems (PEN), (212) 334-1660, ext. 105
Oren Teicher (ABA), (800) 637-0037, ext. 6661
READER PRIVACY ADVOCATES APPLAUD
INTRODUCTION OF NSL REFORM ACT
Washington, DC, September 25, 2007: The Campaign for Reader
Privacy, a coalition of organizations representing librarians,
booksellers, publishers, and authors, cheered the introduction today of
legislation to safeguard the privacy of ordinary Americans and curb the
FBI’s abuse of the National Security Letter power granted under the USA
Patriot Act.
National Security Letters are
administrative subpoenas which are issued by FBI field agents with no
judicial oversight and which give the government virtually unlimited
access to electronic communications transactions records, including
those of Internet service providers and public libraries. Recipients of
NSLs are bound to perpetual silence by a gag order.
The bipartisan National Security
Letter Reform Act of 2007, introduced by Senators Russ Feingold (D-WI),
John Sununu (R-NH), Dick Durbin (R-IL), Lisa Murkowski (R-AK), Ken
Salazar (D-CO), and Chuck Hagel (R-NE), is a response to a report by the
Inspector General of the Department of Justice documenting widespread
misuse of NSLs and to two federal court decisions striking down the NSL
provisions of the Patriot Act as unconstitutional.
Passage of the USA Patriot Act gave
the FBI virtually unchecked authority to issue these administrative
subpoenas without oversight, and the Inspector General’s March 2007
report confirmed that the number of NSLs issued by the FBI has
skyrocketed, with more than 140,000 requests for information served
between 2003 and 2005, and that more than 1,000, and perhaps many
thousands, of those requests potentially violated laws or agency rules.
Earlier this month, U.S. District Court Judge Victor Marrero ruled for
the second time that the NSL’s gag provision and lack of judicial review
violated the First and Fourth Amendments to the Constitution, noting
that changes which Congress made last year had failed to correct the
fundamental flaws.
The NSL Reform Act would correct many
of these flaws. Among other things, it would require the government to
make an individualized determination that each record sought with an
NSL relates to someone with a connection to terrorism or espionage, and
it would place a time limit on the gag order (which could be extended by
the courts, if necessary). Significantly, the legislation would also
establish an individualized standard of suspicion for Patriot Act
“Section 215” orders, which allow the FBI to seize any business records,
including library circulation and bookstore transaction records, merely
by telling a secret FISA court that the records are “relevant” to an
investigation.
Former Congresswoman Pat Schroeder,
President and CEO of the Association of American Publishers, said:
“When Congress reauthorized the Patriot Act they failed to provide the
single most important safeguard we sought: a requirement that in
order for the FBI to seize sensitive records, including those of
libraries and bookstores, the government would have to show a connection
with a suspected terrorist or spy. We’re deeply grateful to Senators
Feingold, Sununu, Durbin, Murkowski, Salazar, and Hagel for introducing
legislation to restore this and other important safeguards, and urge
other Senators to become co-sponsors. We intend to lobby hard for its
passage.”
Loriene Roy, President of the American
Library Association, said: “ALA has urged reforms to National Security
Letters from the get-go. Law enforcement is extremely important, but
those efforts must be balanced against Americans’ right to privacy, in
our case for their library and Internet usage records. The NSL Reform
Act addresses these very issues.”
“A federal court has twice ruled that
the Patriot Act NSLs are both unconstitutional and an open invitation to
abuse, and the Justice Department’s own Inspector General’s report left
no doubt that widespread abuses of these powers have been occurring,”
said Larry Siems, Director of Freedom to Write and International
Programs at PEN American Center. “There is no excuse for delay: Congress
should move quickly to pass the National Security Letter Reform Act.”
The Campaign for Reader Privacy was
organized in 2004 by the American Booksellers Association, the American
Library Association, the Association of American Publishers, and PEN
American Center to fight for changes in the Patriot Act to protect the
confidentiality of reading records of law-abiding Americans. The
Campaign has been pressing Congress to establish an individualized
standard of suspicion and to make it easier for librarians and
booksellers to challenge NSL and Section 215 orders in court and limit
the length and scope of the accompanying gag orders.
|