But
Which Books Are 'Suspicious'?
by
Vin Suprynowicz
by Vin Suprynowicz
Finally freed
to speak – months after a judge ordered their gag order lifted –
a group of four Connecticut librarians are hopping mad about the
infringement of their customers’ First Amendment rights, and a government
that wouldn’t even let them participate in the debate about it.
U.S. District
Judge Janet Hall ruled last year that the gag order must be lifted,
saying it unfairly prevented the librarians from participating in
the debate over how the Patriot Act should be rewritten. (No one
in government seems willing to pronounce the word "repealed.")
But it wasn’t until April that prosecutors dropped an appeal of
that order.
The librarians,
at a March 30 press conference organized by the American Civil Liberties
Union which represents them – did little to hide their displeasure
at being told by the government to keep quiet about the FBI demanding
their patrons’ book-borrowing records.
"I am
incensed that the government uses provisions of the Patriot Act
to justify unrestrained and secret access to the records of libraries,"
said George Christian of Windsor, Conn., executive director of the
Library Connection, Inc., a consortium of libraries in the central
part of the state.
Mr. Christian
noted that the gag order was lifted only after Congress voted to
reauthorize the Patriot Act.
"The fact
that I can speak now is a little like being permitted to call the
fire department only after a building has burned to the ground,"
he said.
Peter Chase,
the vice president of Library Connection and director of the Plainville
Public Library, said as a librarian he has a duty "to speak
out about any infringement to the intellectual freedom of library
patrons. But until today, my own government prevented me from fulfilling
that duty."
The librarians,
although now "allowed" to speak, are continuing to fight
the FBI’s request for information about their patrons, said Ann
Beeson, the ACLU’s associate legal director.
The Patriot
Act, passed in 2001 shortly after the Sept. 11 attacks, allows expanded
warrantless surveillance of terror suspects, increased use of material
witness warrants to hold suspects incommunicado, and secret proceedings
in immigration cases. It also removed a requirement that any records
sought in a terrorism investigation must be those of someone under
suspicion. Now, anyone’s records can be obtained if the FBI considers
them relevant to a terrorism or spy investigation.
Prosecutors
argue that secrecy about demands for records is necessary to avoid
alerting suspects and jeopardizing investigations. They contend
the gag order prevented only the release of librarians’ identities,
not their ability to speak about the Patriot Act.
Oh, please.
Is this just a test to see how much guff we’ll swallow? Are reading
habits about to be given evidentiary weight in court?
To say this
all has a chilling effect on the freedom of Americans to write and
read what we please is like saying the Titanic is overdue.
What is the
recommended procedure now, if Americans want to buy or read a book
which our own government might consider "suspicious" or
"terrorist-related"? Whether the would-be reader is a
college kid preparing a report, a journalist on assignment, or a
novelist researching his or her next story line, dare we head to
the library and borrow books on demolitions, hijackings, power plants
and nuclear fission? Is it OK if your name is Thomson or Jones but
not if it’s Faisal or Bashir?
Is there any
procedure we can use to get these readings "cleared" in
advance with the FBI, the HSD, the CIA, the NSA, the DIA and the
TSA before we inadvertently cause our local librarian to receive
a call from two officious guys in black suits and shiny shoes who
insist on seeing all our records – followed up with a nice, crisp
"national security letter" informing her that if she even
tells us they’ve been snooping around, SHE could be sent to prison?
We are past
the point of warning that if we don’t watch out an American police
state "might happen." This is precisely what it looks
like. They’re taking it around the block for a test drive, and we’re
supposed to believe we can trust them – we have nothing to fear
so long as we haven’t done anything wrong.
Yes, but which
books? Which book or magazines or newspapers are the ones that,
if we borrow and read them, will lead the G-men to suspect we’ve
"done something wrong"?
They
don’t have to tell you. You don’t need to know.
June
8, 2006
Vin
Suprynowicz [send
him mail] is assistant editorial page editor of the daily Las
Vegas Review-Journal and author of The
Black Arrow.
Copyright
© 2006 Vin Suprynowicz
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