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Don't Expand the Police State
by
Rep. Ron Paul,
MD
by Rep. Ron Paul, MD
Before
the US House of Representatives, July 21, 2005
Mr.
Speaker, the USA PATRIOT Act and Terrorism Prevention Act (HR 3199)
in no way brings the PATRIOT Act into compliance with the Constitution
or allays concerns that the powers granted to the government in
the act will be used to abuse the rights of the people. Much of
the discussion surrounding this bill has revolved around the failure
of the bill to extend the sunset clauses.
However,
simply sunsetting troublesome provisions does not settle the debates
around the PATRIOT Act. If the PATRIOT Act is constitutional and
needed, as its proponents swear, why include sunset provisions at
all? If it is unconstitutional and pernicious, why not abolish it
immediately?
The
sunset clauses do perform one useful service in that they force
Congress to regularly re-examine the PATRIOT Act. As the peoples
representatives, it is our responsibility to keep a close eye on
the executive branch to ensure it does not abuse its power. Even
if the claims of HR 3199s supporters that there have been
no abuses of PATRIOT Act powers under this administration are true,
that does not mean that future administrations will not abuse these
powers.
HR
3199 continues to violate the constitution by allowing searches
and seizures of American citizens and their property without a warrant
issued by an independent court upon a finding of probable cause.
The drafters of the Bill of Rights considered this essential protection
against an overreaching government. For example, Section 215 of
the PATRIOT Act, popularly known as the library provision, allows
Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Courts, whose standards hardly
meet the constitutional requirements of the Fourth Amendment, to
issue warrants for individual records, including medical and library
records. HR 3199 does reform this provision by clarifying that it
can be used to acquire the records of an American citizen only during
terrorist investigations. However, this marginal change fails to
bring the section up to the constitutional standard of probable
cause.
Requiring
a showing of probable cause before a warrant may be issued will
in no way hamper terrorist investigations. For one thing, federal
authorities still would have numerous tools available to investigate
and monitor the activities of non-citizens suspected of terrorism.
Second, restoring the Fourth Amendment protections would in no way
interfere with the provisions of the PATRIOT Act removing the firewalls
that prevented the governments law enforcement and intelligence
agencies from sharing information.
The
probable cause requirements will not delay a terrorist investigation.
Preparations can be made for the issuance of a warrant in the event
of an emergency, and allowances can be made for cases where law
enforcement does not have time to obtain a warrant. In fact, a requirement
that law enforcement demonstrate probable cause may help law enforcement
focus their efforts on true threats, thus avoiding the problem of
information overload that is handicapping the governments
efforts to identify sources of terrorist financing.
The
requirement that law enforcement demonstrate probable cause before
a judge preserves the Founders system of checks and balances
that protects against one branch gathering too much power. The Founders
recognized that one of the chief dangers to liberty was the concentration
of power in a few hands, which is why they carefully divided power
among the three branches. I would remind those of my colleagues
who claim that we must set aside the constitutional requirements
during war that the founders were especially concerned about the
consolidation of power during times of war and national emergences.
My colleagues should also keep in mind that PATRIOT Act powers have
already been used in non-terrorism related cases, most notably in
a bribery investigation in Nevada.
Mr.
Speaker, HR 3199 does take some positive steps toward restoring
respect for constitutional liberties and checks and balances that
the original PATRIOT Act stripped away. However, it still leaves
in place large chunks of legislation that threaten individual liberty
by giving law enforcement power to snoop into American citizens
lives without adequate oversight. This power is unnecessary to effectively
fight terrorism. Therefore, I urge my colleagues to reject this
bill.
July
23, 2005
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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Paul Archives
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