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You’ve
Got Mail and Now We Have It Too
by
Adam Young
On
March 2 it was revealed that for years the government of Canada
has been randomly opening the incoming mail of Canadian citizens
and copying the contents into a central database all in the name
of fighting illegal immigration. At Canada Post’s facilities all
across the country, federal agents routinely open letters and parcels
originating from other countries that weigh more than 30 grams (1.06
ounces) in the battle against people smuggling and "international
criminals."
Customs
officials regularly pass along the information they find to other
government departments. In some cases customs will confiscate documents
and send them to other departments; in others, documents are merely
copied and sent along, while the original mail continues on to the
addressee. Officers are not required to obtain any warrant before
opening and photocopying the material.
Citizenship
and Immigration Canada (CIC) has created a centralized database
that catalogs the documents and information passed along by customs;
the database can be accessed by Immigration officials all across
the country.
Customs
Canada officials have admitted that they open packages randomly
as they come into the country, and Citizenship and Immigration officials
have also admitted that they routinely receive documents from customs
inspectors, but continue to claim that the measures are needed to
police migration into Canada.
Canada’s
federal privacy commissioner, George Radwanski, criticized Canada
Customs and has now launched an investigation into the way the mail
is being "inspected." "Opening people’s mail, particularly
on a large scale without benefit of a warrant, is not a good or
attractive thing." said Radwanski.
To
most people, his response should be striking because of what it
is missing: namely, a flat-out statement that this sort of activity
by government agents is illegal. Sadly, in Canada, it is not. In
1992, the government gave itself the legal approval to open mail
at all border and customs checkpoints. It may not be a good thing,
or an attractive thing, but in Canada it is a perfectly legal thing.
The
federal department of immigration was given the authority to begin
collecting such information in a barely-publicized amendment to
the Customs Act, which was passed by Parliament in 1992 in a favorite
tool of politicians an omnibus bill. Before 1992 Customs could
only seize goods if it suspected their transportation was a violation
of the Customs Act. With the new amendment Customs Canada inspectors
are authorized to open mail that weighs more than 30 grams without
a warrant and are permitted to seize goods, including parcels and
packages, if a customs officer suspects a violation of "any
Act of Parliament."
This
little-known at least until now legislative change authorizes
Canada Customs officers to act as agents for the intelligence branch
of Citizenship and Immigration Canada (CIC) in its business of identifying,
intercepting, seizing and/or copying "suspect" mail or
courier packages.
A
training manual for immigration intelligence officers who record
the details of "inspections" explains that the objective
is "the creation of a national database relative to documentation
being sent in the mails or by courier services internationally."
This training manual, which was released with several sections censored,
was obtained by Richard Kurland, an immigration lawyer, using the
Access to Information Act. The 24-page manual instructs them to
record the names, birthdates, family information, destinations,
travel histories, and to describe any other documents seized. If
a package contains travel documents, it recommends recording airline
tickets, baggage tags and seat numbers. The manual also says that
the database is scheduled to be upgraded with digital scanning capabilities,
allowing officials to enter photographs and text images.
Clearly
Marked?
Canada
Post claims that any letters and packages that have been opened
are clearly marked so the recipients know their contents have been
inspected. But some immigration lawyers say that they’ve suspected
for a long time that their mail was being opened without notice.
Several immigration lawyers from across Canada say they have discovered
their mail especially correspondence with clients had been opened,
and some say that they believe they are being targeted by Immigration
Canada. They insist they were never told that their mail was being
opened, whether information was kept or copied, or why.
Kurland
believes his mail has been opened regularly for years. He says his
mail has been opened so frequently that his colleagues would usually
gather around him to see how his latest packages had been stamped
or repackaged. "We don’t let the government tap our phones
without permission from a court. Why should it be any different
with the mail?" Kurland asked. He said that there is nothing
to stop Citizenship and Immigration from expanding their interception
of letters to any group of Canadians. "This is not about immigrants;
they can open the mail of all sorts of people. How do they choose
whose mail to open? Who knows?"
Another
immigration lawyer from Montreal said that once when she inquired
about a late courier package she was told by customs that they made
random checks of mail and photocopied any documents involving immigration
or tax issues and then sent them on to the appropriate federal department.
A
Vancouver immigration lawyer, Elizabeth Bryson, said that mail from
the same client was held up on twice when it was opened by customs
officials. On the second occasion the package of letters, applications,
photographs, and copies of documents was expressly marked as privileged
and confidential communication between a client and a lawyer. She
said she was told by a customs official that they opened mail based
"on a roster to view documents" and did not target her
or her client specifically.
"From
what they say, it seems they are on fishing expeditions in the hope
of finding something," Ms. Bryson remarked. "How can I
promise my clients confidentiality if there is a government agency,
without any reasonable basis, that is opening my correspondence?"
"I’m
not 100 percent sure what this has to do with [people] smuggling
at all, because the documents are being sent to people in Canada,"
said Joyce Yedid, a Montreal lawyer whose own clients’ documents
have gone missing or arrived unsealed. "They’re not being sent
for any other purpose, so I don’t see the connection. This is a
non sequitur." Ms. Yedid also said that mail addressed to her
at her law office had also been opened.
Yedid
mentioned years of frustration trying to determine who intercepted
her clients’ mail and where it went. She also questioned the legality
of the whole procedure. "My clients have told me that some
of these envelopes were clearly marked as being covered by solicitor-client
privilege," she said. "To the best of my knowledge, they
have no right to open these things."
The
Immigration Act allows officials to seize documents at ports of
entry such as airports or harbor ports. But with the release even
of the censored version, the intelligence manual acknowledges what
immigration lawyers have long suspected that the federal government
has been seizing personal mail and keeping it on file.
An
Immigration Canada spokeswoman, Danielle Sarazin, admitted the department
regularly receives documents seized by customs officials, but defended
the whole practice with the claim that it was a necessary measure
against the increasing frequency of document fraud and false refugee
claims. "The whole purpose of seizing mail is to preserve program
integrity," she said. "What we want to do is take fraudulent
documents out of circulation. We also want to seize documents that
can be used to effect the removal of people who should not be in
Canada."
Questionable
Packages
Sarazin
went further and reassured Canadians that "Immigration knows
what kinds of packages are questionable, so we’ll share that information
with Customs." She claimed that only immigration staff members
with special clearance are allowed access to the central database
and that CIC provides customs officers with the profiles of suspect
pieces of mail. She could not, however, identify the precise criteria
which Customs uses to seize immigration-related mail. She also said
she didn’t know if correspondence between clients and lawyers, or
others, were kept by the Immigration Department, but she insisted
that there is no attempt to interfere in or subvert the legal process.
The
spokeswoman for the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency, Colette Gentes-Hawn,
said she couldn’t comment specifically on the allegations made by
the lawyers, but acknowledged that Customs regularly opens mail
at random. "Most packages that are opened at the border are
those that seem suspicious for one reason or another, but "we
do enough of a plain random [search] so we know what’s going on,"
she said. "No warrant is necessary and a report is filled out
only if something illegal is found. Otherwise, the contents are
repackaged and stamped opened by customs."
She
said letter-sized envelopes weighing less than 30 grams usually
go untouched, but that some larger ones are opened with an attempt
to screen out contraband. "If the package is from Colombia,
obviously that says something. If it’s from France or Holland, there
could be ecstasy in there."
According
to the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, the cabinet minister responsible
for Customs, the National Revenue Minister Martin Cauchon, couldn’t
explain to reporters why some mail was being copied and sent to
other government departments. He walked away in the middle of an
interview returning about five minutes later with an explanation.
Cauchon said his agents refer the contents of packages to other
government departments if they find any evidence of criminal activity.
This
discovery of criminal activity follows the invasion of property
required to make the "discovery" in the first place. One
crime legitimizes another. Supposedly, Customs officers can open
mail only if they "feel" that it might contain something
illegal, like drugs, but the Act requires that officials have only
"reasonable grounds" to believe the contents of a parcel
"might" be illegal. Why then even bother to specify that
only parcels above 30 grams are fair game?
Private-Sector
Collection
For
comparison, consider how the government treats the information that
it controls with the way the government requires the private sector
to treat its consumer information. On January 1, the act of governmental
hypocrisy called the Personal Information and Electronic Documents
Act became law. It requires airlines, telephone companies, banks,
and other federally-regulated organizations to specifically ask
customers for permission before taking down their personal information.
They must also tell customers exactly why they need it and who will
see it, and also ensure the information is protected.
This
legislation allegedly establishes the right in Canada of protection
of personal information. Except when it comes to mail apparently.
Originally
created to instill consumer confidence in the security of electronic
commercial transactions, the Act is so strict that an organization
is forbidden to use personal information for anything other than
the purpose originally specified. If the organization wants to use
the data for something else, it has to ask permission again.
This
Act sets up a system of policing to protect consumers from the dire
consequences of junk mail. First, a person must take a complaint
to the organization in question. If that doesn’t work, then the
complainant can write to the federal privacy commissioner, who then
has an entire year to file a response report with his recommendations
to the organization about what it should do. To make this recommendation,
the privacy commissioner has the power to subpoena witnesses or
obtain search warrants. From there, a person can decide to take
the matter to Federal Court.
There
is no dollar limit on the amount of the fines the court can impose
on a business or institution.
Shouldn’t
all this apply to the state’s vastly more pernicious collection
and cataloging of data on its citizens?
One
has to ask what is the greater threat to privacy: the latest AOL
carpet bombing of North America or the state’s confiscating your
mail and copying the contents into a centralized state database.
Perhaps
what is worst of all is that this invasion of privacy and confidentiality
by the state was a one-day news story. Where is the outrage? This
is just proof yet again of Canadians’ timid and obedient submission
to the dictates of political power.
November
22, 2001
Adam
Young [send him mail]
is studying computer science in Ontario, Canada. His
articles have appeared in Ideas on Liberty, Mises.org, LewRockwell.com,
and The Free Market. This article originally appeared in
the August 2001 issue of Ideas on Liberty.
©
2001 LewRockwell.com
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