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The ranking members of the House Judiciary Committee have sent
Attorney General John Ashcroft a letter requesting details about the implementation of the
USA PATRIOT Act, including a provision that gives the FBI the right to obtain a secret
court order to search the records of bookstores, libraries and newspapers. The letter from
James Sensenbrenner (R-WI) and John Conyers (D-MI) is the first official inquiry into a
potential threat to First Amendment rights that has bothered booksellers and others since
the passage of the PATRIOT Act in October, only weeks after the Sept. 11 attacks. See ABFFE Update, Nov. 1, 2001.
The Sensenbrenner/Conyers letter, asks Ashcroft questions about how the
Justice Department is implementing 50 provisions of the PATRIOT Act,
http://judiciary.house.gov/.
With respect to the business records section of the act, it asks how many court orders
have been issued to bookstores, libraries and newspapers. (Reporters' notes can also be
subpoenaed under the PATRIOT Act even if they are protected by state "shield
laws" designed to protect their confidentiality.) The letter also asks whether the
Justice Department has put in place any safeguards like requiring supervisory approval
before the records are sought or "requiring a determination that the information is
essential to an investigation and could not be obtain through any other means."
Sensenbrenner has asked Ashcroft to provide answers to his questions at a
hearing on Thursday.
Following a protest by parents and civil liberties groups, including
ABFFE, the New York Commissioner of Education has promised that his department will stop
censoring the literary passages used in the state's Regents proficiency examinations. The
commissioner acted after it was revealed that 19 of the 24 excerpts that had appeared on
the tests in the last three years had been purged of nearly all references to race,
religion, ethnicity, sex, nudity, and alcohol as well as even the mildest profanity.
Censored works included Annie Dillard's "An American Childhood," Isaac Bashevis
Singer's "In My Father's Court," Anne Lamott's "Bird by Bird," and
Anton Chekov's "An Upheaval." Despite the commissioner's assurances, critics
remain concerned. One of the criticisms of the test is that material was removed without
indicating where. The state may try to defuse criticism by using ellipses to indicate
deletions or it could choose passages that do not contain any potentially offensive
material because they are so boring. Neither alternative is acceptable to the critics of
the test.
Following an adverse ruling by the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals
last May, lawyers for the Margaret Mitchell estate announced that they were going to the
U.S. Supreme Court with their claim that Alice Randall's "The Wind Done Gone"
violated the copyright protecting "Gone With The Wind." Last month, without
conceding defeat, the Mitchell estate abandoned its effort to collect damages from the
publisher, Houghton Mifflin. Houghton reports that it has sold over 200,000 hardcover and
paperback copies of the book. Despite the court victory, however, Michael Gerber, a
parodist and the author of the forthcoming "Barry Trotter and the Unauthorized
Parody," told librarians at their recent convention in Atlanta, that publishers are
increasingly unwilling to publish parodies because of their fear of being sued for
violating copyrights. ABFFE filed two amicus briefs opposing the effort to ban the
publication of "The Wind Done Gone." It also co-sponsored the ALA program at
which Gerber spoke, "Barry Trotter Done Gone: The Perils of Publishing Parody."
Mitchell Kaplan of Books & Books, Coral Gables, Florida, Matt
Miller of Denver's Tattered Cover and Wendy Strothman, the executive vice president of
Houghton Mifflin, were recently elected to three-year terms on the ABFFE Board of
Directors. Kaplan, who is vice president and secretary of the American Booksellers
Association, will serve as vice president of ABFFE. Miller retired from the ABA board this
year. Strothman, who recently announced that she was stepping down from her position at
Houghton, formerly directed Beacon Press. She is a former member of the Association of
American Publishers' Freedom to Read Committee. The new directors are replacing Ann
Christophersen of Women & Children First in Chicago, Joyce Meskis of Tattered Cover
and Rhett Jackson of the Happy Bookseller in Columbia, SC.
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