Unfathomed Dangers in Patriot Act Reauthorization
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
A provision
in the "Patriot Act" creates a new federal police force
with power to violate the Bill of Rights. You might think that this
cannot be true as you have not read about it in newspapers or heard
it discussed by talking heads on TV.
Go to House
Report 109-333 USA PATRIOT IMPROVEMENT AND REAUTHORIZATION ACT OF
2005 and check it out for yourself. Sec.
605 reads:
"There
is hereby created and established a permanent police force, to
be known as the ’United States Secret Service Uniformed Division’."
This new federal
police force is "subject to the supervision of the Secretary
of Homeland Security."
The new police
are empowered to "make arrests without warrant for any offense
against the United States committed in their presence, or for any
felony cognizable under the laws of the United States if they have
reasonable grounds to believe that the person to be arrested has
committed or is committing such felony."
The new police
are assigned a variety of jurisdictions, including "an event
designated under section 3056(e) of title 18 as a special event
of national significance" (SENS).
"A special
event of national significance" is neither defined nor does
it require the presence of a "protected person" such as
the president in order to trigger it. Thus, the administration,
and perhaps the police themselves, can place the SENS designation
on any event. Once a SENS designation is placed on an event, the
new federal police are empowered to keep out and to arrest people
at their discretion.
The language
conveys enormous discretionary and arbitrary powers. What is "an
offense against the United States"? What are "reasonable
grounds"?
You can bet
that the Alito/Roberts court will rule that it is whatever the executive
branch says.
The obvious
purpose of the act is to prevent demonstrations at Bush/Cheney events.
However, nothing in the language limits the police powers from being
used only in this way. Like every law in the US, this law also will
be expansively interpreted and abused. It has dire implications
for freedom of association and First Amendment rights. We can take
for granted that the new federal police will be used to suppress
dissent and to break up opposition. The Brownshirts are now arming
themselves with a Gestapo.
Many naïve
Americans will write to me to explain that this new provision in
the reauthorization of the "Patriot Act" is necessary
to protect the president and other high officials from terrorists
or from harm at the hands of angry demonstrators: "No one else
will have anything to fear." Some will accuse me of being an
alarmist, and others will say that it is unpatriotic to doubt the
law’s good intentions.
Americans will
write such nonsense despite the fact that the president and foreign
dignitaries are already provided superb protection by the Secret
Service. The naïve will not comprehend that the president cannot
be endangered by demonstrators at SENS at which the president is
not present. For many Americans, the light refuses to turn on.
In
Nazi Germany did no one but Jews have anything to fear from the
Gestapo?
By Stalin’s
time Lenin and Trotsky had eliminated all members of the "oppressor
class," but that did not stop Stalin from sending millions
of "enemies of the people" to the Gulag.
It
is extremely difficult to hold even local police forces accountable.
Who is going to hold accountable a federal police protected by Homeland
Security and the president?
January
24, 2006
Dr.
Roberts [send him mail]
is
Chairman of the Institute for Political Economy and Research Fellow
at the Independent Institute.
He is a former associate editor of the Wall Street Journal,
former contributing editor for National Review, and a former
assistant secretary of the U.S. Treasury. He is the co-author of
The
Tyranny of Good Intentions.
Copyright
© 2006 Creators Syndicate
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