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Patriot Act

The USA PATRIOT Act (commonly known as the Patriot Act) was a landmark Act of the United States Congress, signed into law by President George W. Bush. The formal name of the statute is the Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism (USA PATRIOT) Act of 2001, and the commonly used short name is a contrived acronym that is embedded in the name set forth in the statute.[1]

USA PATRIOT Act
Other short titlesUniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism Act of 2001
Long titleAn Act to deter and punish terrorist acts in the United States and across the globe, to enhance law enforcement investigatory tools, and for other purposes.
Acronyms (colloquial)USA PATRIOT Act
NicknamesPatriot Act
Enacted bythe 107th United States Congress
EffectiveOctober 26, 2001
Citations
Public lawPub. L.Tooltip Public Law (United States) 107–56 (text) (PDF)
Statutes at Large115 Stat. 272
Codification
Acts amendedElectronic Communications Privacy Act
Computer Fraud and Abuse Act
Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act
Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act
Money Laundering Control Act
Bank Secrecy Act
Right to Financial Privacy Act
Fair Credit Reporting Act
Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952
Victims of Crime Act of 1984
Telemarketing and Consumer Fraud and Abuse Prevention Act
Titles amended8, 12, 15, 18, 20, 31, 42, 47, 49, 50
U.S.C. sections created18 USC § 2712, 31 USC § 5318A, 15 USC § 1681v, 8 USC § 1226A, 18 USC § 1993, 18 USC § 2339, 18 USC § 175b, 50 USC § 403-5b, 51 USC § 5103a
U.S.C. sections amended8 USC § 1105, 8 USC § 1182g, 8 USC § 1189, 8 USC § 1202, 12 USC § 1828, 12 USC § 3414, 15 USC § 1681a, 15 USC § 6102, 15 USC § 6106, 18 USC § 7, 18 USC § 81, 18 USC § 175, 18 USC § 470, 18 USC § 471, 18 USC § 472, 18 USC § 473, 18 USC § 474, 18 USC § 476, 18 USC § 477, 18 USC § 478, 18 USC § 479, 18 USC § 480, 18 USC § 481, 18 USC § 484, 18 USC § 493, 18 USC § 917, 18 USC § 930, 18 USC § 981, 18 USC § 1029, 18 USC § 1030, 18 USC § 1362, 18 USC § 1363, 18 USC § 1366, 18 USC § 1956, 18 USC § 1960, 18 USC § 1961, 18 USC § 1992, 18 USC § 2155, 18 USC § 2325, 18 USC § 2331, 18 USC § 2332e, 18 USC § 2339A, 18 USC § 2339B, 18 USC § 2340A, 18 USC § 2510, 18 USC § 2511, 18 USC § 2516, 18 USC § 2517, 18 USC § 2520, 18 USC § 2702, 18 USC § 2703, 18 USC § 2707, 18 USC § 2709, 18 USC § 2711, 18 USC § 3056, 18 USC § 3077, 18 USC § 3103, 18 USC § 3121, 18 USC § 3123, 18 USC § 3124, 18 USC § 3127, 18 USC § 3286, 18 USC § 3583, 20 USC § 1232g, 20 USC § 9007, 31 USC § 310 (redesignated), 31 USC § 5311, 31 USC § 5312, 31 USC § 5317, 31 USC § 5318, 31 USC § 5319, 31 USC § 5321, 31 USC § 5322, 31 USC § 5324, 31 USC § 5330, 31 USC § 5331, 31 USC § 5332, 31 USC § 5341, 42 USC § 2284, 42 USC § 2284, 42 USC § 3796, 42 USC § 3796h, 42 USC § 10601, 42 USC § 10602, 42 USC § 10603, 42 USC § 10603b, 42 USC § 14601, 42 USC § 14135A, 47 USC § 551, 49 USC § 31305, 49 USC § 46504, 49 USC § 46505, 49 USC § 60123, 50 USC § 403-3c, 50 USC § 401a, 50 USC § 1702, 50 USC § 1801, 50 USC § 1803, 50 USC § 1804, 50 USC § 1805, 50 USC § 1806, 50 USC § 1823, 50 USC § 1824, 50 USC § 1842, 50 USC § 1861, 50 USC § 1862, 50 USC § 1863
Major amendments
USA Freedom Act

The Patriot Act was enacted following the September 11 attacks and the 2001 anthrax attacks with the stated goal of tightening U.S. national security, particularly as it related to foreign terrorism. In general, the act included three main provisions:

  • Expanded surveillance abilities of law enforcement, including by tapping domestic and international phones;
  • Easier interagency communication to allow federal agencies to more effectively use all available resources in counterterrorism efforts; and
  • Increased penalties for terrorism crimes and an expanded list of activities which would qualify for terrorism charges.

The law is extremely controversial due to its authorization of indefinite detention without trial of immigrants, and due to the permission given to law enforcement to search property and records without the owner's consent or knowledge. Since its passage, several legal challenges have been brought against the act, and federal courts have ruled that a number of provisions are unconstitutional.

It contains many sunset provisions beginning December 31, 2005, approximately four years after its passage. Before the sunset date, an extension was passed for four years which kept most of the law intact. In May 2011, President Barack Obama signed the PATRIOT Sunset Extensions Act of 2011, which extended three provisions.[2] These provisions were modified and extended until 2019 by the USA Freedom Act, passed in 2015.[3] In 2020, efforts to extend the provisions were not passed by the House of Representatives, and as such, the law has expired.[4]

History edit

The Patriot Act was enacted in direct response to the September 11 attacks on the World Trade Center in New York City and the Pentagon in Arlington County, Virginia, and the 2001 anthrax attacks, with the stated goal of dramatically strengthening national security. On October 23, 2001, U.S. Representative Jim Sensenbrenner (R-WI) introduced House bill H.R. 3162, which incorporated provisions from a previously-sponsored House bill, and a Senate bill introduced earlier in the month.[5] The next day, October 24, the Act passed the House by a vote of 357–66,[6] with Democrats comprising the overwhelming majority of "no"-votes. The three Republicans voting "no" were Robert Ney of Ohio, Butch Otter of Idaho, and Ron Paul of Texas. On October 25, the Act passed the Senate with a vote of 98–1. Russ Feingold (D-WI) voted "no".[7] It is not uncommon to see votes go toward far or center right parties/policies after a spike in terrorist activity. In this case, due to the passing of the act we can see the “stronger security platforms that resonate with citizens during periods of heightened anxiety following terrorist attacks compared with more moderate right parties.” (Wheatley, et al.)[8] On October 26, then US President George Bush signed the Patriot Act into law.[9]

Opponents of the law have criticized its provision for indefinite detention of immigrants; permission to law enforcement to search a home or business without the owner's or the occupant's consent or knowledge under certain circumstances; the expanded use of National Security Letters, which allows the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) to search telephone, email, and financial records without a court order; and the expanded access of law enforcement agencies to business records, including library and financial records. Since its passage, several court challenges have been brought against the act, and federal courts have ruled that a number of provisions are unconstitutional.[citation needed]

Many of the act's provisions were set to expire on December 31, 2005, approximately four years after its enactment. In the months preceding the sunset date, supporters of the act pushed to make those provisions permanent, while critics sought to revise various sections to enhance civil liberties protections. In July 2005, the U.S. Senate passed a reauthorization bill with substantial changes to several of the act's sections, while the House reauthorization bill kept most of the act's original language. The two bills were then reconciled in a conference committee criticized by senators from both the Republican and Democratic parties for ignoring civil liberty concerns.[10]

The bill, which removed most of the changes from the Senate version, passed Congress on March 2, 2006, and was signed by President Bush on March 9 and 10 of that year.

On May 11, 2012, President Barack Obama signed the PATRIOT Sunsets Extension Act of 2011, a four-year extension of three key provisions in the Act:[11] roving wiretaps, searches of business records, and conducting surveillance of "lone wolves" (individuals suspected of terrorist-related activities not linked to terrorist groups).[12]

After reauthorization bills failed to pass Congress, parts of the Patriot Act expired on June 1, 2015.[13] The USA Freedom Act, which became law on June 2, 2015, reenacted these expired sections through 2019.[14] However, Section 215 of the law was amended to disallow the National Security Agency (NSA) to continue its mass phone data collection program.[14] Instead, phone companies will retain the data and the NSA can obtain information about targeted individuals with a federal search warrant.[14]

In November 2019, the renewal of the Patriot Act was included in the stop-gap government funding bill.[15] The expired provisions required renewal by March 15, 2020.[16] The Senate passed a 77-day extension in March 2020, but the House of Representatives did not pass the legislation before departing for recess on March 27, 2020. Instead, the Patriot Act was split into two measures as a means of explaining to the public that the Patriot Act would no longer openly be in effect. [17][18][19][20]

Legislative history edit

Final House vote:

Vote by Party Yea Nay
Republicans 211 3
Democrats 145 62
Independents 1 1
Total 357 66
Not voting 6 4

Final Senate vote:

Vote by party Yea Nay
Republicans 49 0
Democrats 48 1
Independents 1 0
Total 98 1
Not voting 0 1

Titles edit

President George W. Bush in October 2001, elucidating the government's rationale behind the USA PATRIOT Act before signing into law.

Title I: Enhancing domestic security against terrorism edit

Title I of the Patriot Act authorizes measures to enhance the ability of domestic security services to prevent terrorism. The title established a fund for counter-terrorist activities and increased funding for the Terrorist Screening Center which is administered by the FBI. The military was authorized to provide assistance in some situations that involve weapons of mass destruction when so requested by the Attorney General. The National Electronic Crime Task Force was expanded, along with the President's authority and abilities in cases of terrorism. The title also condemned the discrimination against Arab and Muslim Americans that happened soon after the September 11 terrorist attacks. The impetus for many of the provisions came from earlier bills, for instance the condemnation of discrimination was originally proposed by Senator Tom Harkin (D-IA) in an amendment to the Combatting Terrorism Act of 2001, though in a different form. It originally included "the prayer of Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, the Archbishop of Washington in a Mass on September 12, 2001 for our Nation and the victims in the immediate aftermath of the terrorist hijackings and attacks in New York City, Washington, D.C., and Pennsylvania reminds all Americans that 'We must seek the guilty and not strike out against the innocent or we become like them who are without moral guidance or proper direction.'"[21] Further condemnation of racial vilification and violence is also spelled out in Title X, where there was condemnation of such activities against Sikh Americans, who were mistaken for Muslims after the September 11 terrorist attack.[22]

Title II: Enhanced surveillance procedures edit

Title II is titled "Enhanced Surveillance Procedures" and covers all aspects of the surveillance of suspected terrorists, those suspected of engaging in computer fraud or abuse, and agents of a foreign power who are engaged in clandestine activities. It primarily made amendments to FISA and the ECPA; furthermore, many of the most controversial aspects of the USA PATRIOT Act reside in this title. In particular, the title allows government agencies to gather "foreign intelligence information" from both U.S. and non-U.S. citizens and changed FISA to make gaining foreign intelligence information the significant purpose of FISA-based surveillance, where previously it had been the primary purpose.[23] The change in definition was meant to remove a legal "wall" between criminal investigations and surveillance for the purposes of gathering foreign intelligence, which hampered investigations when criminal and foreign surveillance overlapped.[24] However, that this wall even existed was found by the Federal Surveillance Court of Review to have actually been a long-held misinterpretation by government agencies. Also removed was the statutory requirement that the government prove a surveillance target under FISA is a non-U.S. citizen and agent of a foreign power, though it did require that any investigations must not be undertaken on citizens who are carrying out activities protected by the First Amendment.[25] The title also expanded the duration of FISA physical search and surveillance orders,[26] and gave authorities the ability to share information gathered before a federal grand jury with other agencies.[27]

The scope and availability of wiretapping and surveillance orders were expanded under Title II. Wiretaps were expanded to include addressing and routing information to allow surveillance of packet switched networks[28]—the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC) objected to this, arguing that it does not take into account email or web addresses, which often contain content in the address information.[29] The Act allowed any district court judge in the United States to issue such surveillance orders[28] and search warrants for terrorism investigations.[30] Search warrants were also expanded, with the Act amending Title III of the Stored Communications Access Act to allow the FBI to gain access to stored voicemail through a search warrant, rather than through the more stringent wiretap laws.[31]

Various provisions allowed for the disclosure of electronic communications to law enforcement agencies. Those who operate or own a "protected computer" can give permission for authorities to intercept communications carried out on the machine, thus bypassing the requirements of the Wiretap statute.[32] The definition of a "protected computer" is defined in 18 U.S.C. § 1030(e)(2) and broadly encompasses those computers used in interstate or foreign commerce or communication, including ones located outside the United States. The law governing obligatory and voluntary disclosure of customer communications by cable companies was altered to allow agencies to demand such communications under U.S.C. Title 18 provisions relating to the disclosure of electronic communications (chapter 119), pen registers and trap and trace devices (chapter 206) and stored communications (121), though it excluded the disclosure of cable subscriber viewing habits.[33] Subpoenas issued to Internet Service Providers were expanded to include not only "the name, address, local and long distance telephone toll billing records, telephone number or other subscriber number or identity, and length of service of a subscriber" but also session times and durations, types of services used, communication device address information (e.g. IP addresses), payment method and bank account and credit card numbers.[34] Communication providers are also allowed to disclose customer records or communications if they suspect there is a danger to "life and limb".[35]

Title II established three very controversial provisions: "sneak and peek" warrants, roving wiretaps and the ability of the FBI to gain access to documents that reveal the patterns of U.S. citizens. The so-called "sneak and peek" law allowed for delayed notification of the execution of search warrants. The period before which the FBI must notify the recipients of the order was unspecified in the Act—the FBI field manual says that it is a "flexible standard"[36]—and it may be extended at the court's discretion.[37] These sneak and peek provisions were struck down by judge Ann Aiken on September 26, 2007, after a Portland attorney, Brandon Mayfield, was wrongly jailed because of the searches. The court found the searches to violate the provision that prohibits unreasonable searches in the Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.[38][39]

Roving wiretaps are wiretap orders that do not need to specify all common carriers and third parties in a surveillance court order. These are seen as important by the Department of Justice because they believe that terrorists can exploit wiretap orders by rapidly changing locations and communication devices such as cell phones,[40] while opponents see it as violating the particularity clause of the Fourth Amendment.[41][42] Another highly controversial provision is one that allows the FBI to make an order "requiring the production of any tangible things (including books, records, papers, documents, and other items) for an investigation to protect against international terrorism or clandestine intelligence activities, provided that such investigation of a United States person is not conducted solely upon the basis of activities protected by the first amendment to the Constitution."[43] Though it was not targeted directly at libraries, the American Library Association (ALA), in particular, opposed this provision.[44] In a resolution passed on June 29, 2005, they stated that "Section 215 of the USA PATRIOT Act allows the government to secretly request and obtain library records for large numbers of individuals without any reason to believe they are involved in illegal activity."[45]

The title also covers a number of other miscellaneous provisions, including the expansion of the number of FISC judges from seven to eleven (three of which must reside within 20 miles (32 km) of the District of Columbia),[46] trade Sanctions against North Korea and Taliban-controlled Afghanistan[47] and the employment of translators by the FBI.[48]

At the insistence of Republican Representative Richard Armey,[49] the Act had a number of sunset provisions built in, which were originally set to expire on December 31, 2005. The sunset provision of the Act also took into account any ongoing foreign intelligence investigations and allowed them to continue once the sections had expired.[50] The provisions that were to expire are below.

Title III: Anti-money-laundering to prevent terrorism edit

Title III of the Act, titled "International Money Laundering Abatement and Financial Anti-Terrorism Act of 2001," is intended to facilitate the prevention, detection, and prosecution of international money laundering and the financing of terrorism. It primarily amends portions of the Money Laundering Control Act of 1986 (MLCA) and the Bank Secrecy Act of 1970 (BSA). It was divided into three subtitles. The first subtitle deals primarily with strengthening banking rules against money laundering, especially on the international stage. The second subtitle attempts to improve communication between law enforcement agencies and financial institutions, as well as expanding recordkeeping and reporting requirements. The third subtitle deals with currency smuggling and counterfeiting, including quadrupling the maximum penalty for counterfeiting foreign currency.

The first subtitle also tightened the recordkeeping requirements for financial institutions, making them record the aggregate amounts of transactions processed from areas of the world where money laundering is a concern to the U.S. government. It even made institutions put into place reasonable steps to identify beneficial owners of bank accounts and those who are authorized to use or route funds through payable-through accounts.[51] The U.S. Department of Treasury was charged with formulating regulations intended to foster information sharing between financial institutions to prevent money-laundering.[52] Along with expanding record keeping requirements, it put new regulations into place to make it easier for authorities to identify money laundering activities and to make it harder for money launderers to mask their identities.[53] If money laundering was uncovered, the subtitle legislated for the forfeiture of assets of those suspected of doing the money laundering.[54] In an effort to encourage institutions to take steps that would reduce money laundering, the Treasury was given authority to block mergers of bank holding companies and banks with other banks and bank holding companies that had a bad history of preventing money laundering. Similarly, mergers between insured depository institutions and non-insured depository institutions that have a bad track record in combating money-laundering could be blocked.[55]

Restrictions were placed on accounts and foreign banks. It prohibited shell banks that are not an affiliate of a bank that has a physical presence in the U.S. or that are not subject to supervision by a banking authority in a non-U.S. country. It also prohibits or restricts the use of certain accounts held at financial institutions.[56] Financial institutions must now undertake steps to identify the owners of any privately owned bank outside the U.S. who have a correspondent account with them, along with the interests of each of the owners in the bank. It is expected that additional scrutiny will be applied by the U.S. institution to such banks to make sure they are not engaging in money laundering. Banks must identify all the nominal and beneficial owners of any private bank account opened and maintained in the U.S. by non-U.S. citizens. There is also an expectation that they must undertake enhanced scrutiny of the account if it is owned by, or is being maintained on behalf of, any senior political figure where there is reasonable suspicion of corruption.[57] Any deposits made from within the U.S. into foreign banks are now deemed to have been deposited into any interbank account the foreign bank may have in the U.S. Thus any restraining order, seizure warrant or arrest warrant may be made against the funds in the interbank account held at a U.S. financial institution, up to the amount deposited in the account at the foreign bank.[58] Restrictions were placed on the use of internal bank concentration accounts because such accounts do not provide an effective audit trail for transactions, and this may be used to facilitate money laundering. Financial institutions are prohibited from allowing clients to specifically direct them to move funds into, out of, or through a concentration account, and they are also prohibited from informing their clients about the existence of such accounts. Financial institutions are not allowed to provide any information to clients that may identify such internal accounts.[59] Financial institutions are required to document and follow methods of identifying where the funds are for each customer in a concentration account that co-mingles funds belonging to one or more customers.

The definition of money laundering was expanded to include making a financial transaction in the U.S. in order to commit a violent crime;[60] the bribery of public officials and fraudulent dealing with public funds; the smuggling or illegal export of controlled munition[61] and the importation or bringing in of any firearm or ammunition not authorized by the U.S. Attorney General[62] and the smuggling of any item controlled under the Export Administration Regulations.[63][64] It also includes any offense where the U.S. would be obligated under a mutual treaty with a foreign nation to extradite a person, or where the U.S. would need to submit a case against a person for prosecution because of the treaty; the import of falsely classified goods;[65] computer crime;[66] and any felony violation of the Foreign Agents Registration Act of 1938.[64] It also allows the forfeiture of any property within the jurisdiction of the United States that was gained as the result of an offense against a foreign nation that involves the manufacture, importation, sale, or distribution of a controlled substance.[67] Foreign nations may now seek to have a forfeiture or judgment notification enforced by a district court of the United States.[68] This is done through new legislation that specifies how the U.S. government may apply for a restraining order[69] to preserve the availability of property which is subject to a foreign forfeiture or confiscation judgement.[70] In taking into consideration such an application, emphasis is placed on the ability of a foreign court to follow due process.[68] The Act also requires the Secretary of Treasury to take all reasonable steps to encourage foreign governments make it a requirement to include the name of the originator in wire transfer instructions sent to the United States and other countries, with the information to remain with the transfer from its origination until the point of disbursement.[71] The Secretary was also ordered to encourage international cooperation in investigations of money laundering, financial crimes, and the finances of terrorist groups.[72]

The Act also introduced criminal penalties for corrupt officialdom. An official or employee of the government who acts corruptly—as well as the person who induces the corrupt act—in the carrying out of their official duties will be fined by an amount that is not more than three times the monetary equivalent of the bribe in question. Alternatively they may be imprisoned for not more than 15 years, or they may be fined and imprisoned. Penalties apply to financial institutions who do not comply with an order to terminate any corresponding accounts within 10 days of being so ordered by the Attorney General or the Secretary of Treasury. The financial institution can be fined $US10,000 for each day the account remains open after the 10-day limit has expired.[58]

The second annotation made a number of modifications to the BSA in an attempt to make it harder for money launderers to operate and easier for law enforcement and regulatory agencies to police money laundering operations. One amendment made to the BSA was to allow the designated officer or agency who receives suspicious activity reports to notify U.S. intelligence agencies.[73] A number of amendments were made to address issues related to record keeping and financial reporting. One measure was a new requirement that anyone who does business file a report for any coin and foreign currency receipts that are over US$10,000 and made it illegal to structure transactions in a manner that evades the BSA's reporting requirements.[74] To make it easier for authorities to regulate and investigate anti-money laundering operations Money Services Businesses (MSBs)—those who operate informal value transfer systems outside of the mainstream financial system—were included in the definition of a financial institution.[75] The BSA was amended to make it mandatory to report suspicious transactions and an attempt was made to make such reporting easier for financial institutions.[76]FinCEN was made a bureau of the United States Department of Treasury[77] and the creation of a secure network to be used by financial institutions to report suspicious transactions and to provide alerts of relevant suspicious activities was ordered.[78] Along with these reporting requirements, a considerable number of provisions relate to the prevention and prosecution of money-laundering.[79] Financial institutions were ordered to establish anti-money laundering programs and the BSA was amended to better define anti-money laundering strategy.[80] Also increased were civil and criminal penalties for money laundering and the introduction of penalties for violations of geographic targeting orders and certain record-keeping requirements.[81] A number of other amendments to the BSA were made through subtitle B, including granting the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System power to authorize personnel to act as law enforcement officers to protect the premises, grounds, property and personnel of any U.S. National reserve bank and allowing the Board to delegate this authority to U.S. Federal reserve bank.[82] Another measure instructed United States Executive Directors of international financial institutions to use their voice and vote to support any country that has taken action to support the U.S.'s War on Terrorism. Executive Directors are now required to provide ongoing auditing of disbursements made from their institutions to ensure that no funds are paid to persons who commit, threaten to commit, or support terrorism.[83]

The third subtitle deals with currency crimes. Largely because of the effectiveness of the BSA, money launders had been avoiding traditional financial institutions to launder money and were using cash-based businesses to avoid them. A new effort was made to stop the laundering of money through bulk currency movements, mainly focusing on the confiscation of criminal proceeds and the increase in penalties for money laundering. Congress found that a criminal offense of merely evading the reporting of money transfers was insufficient and decided that it would be better if the smuggling of the bulk currency itself was the offense. Therefore, the BSA was amended to make it a criminal offense to evade currency reporting by concealing more than US$10,000 on any person or through any luggage, merchandise or other container that moves into or out of the U.S. The penalty for such an offense is up to 5 years' imprisonment and the forfeiture of any property up to the amount that was being smuggled.[84] It also made the civil and criminal penalty violations of currency reporting cases[85] be the forfeiture of all a defendant's property that was involved in the offense, and any property traceable to the defendant.[86] The Act prohibits and penalizes those who run unlicensed money transmitting businesses.[87] In 2005, this provision of the USA PATRIOT Act was used to prosecute Yehuda Abraham for helping to arrange money transfers for British arms dealer Hemant Lakhani, who was arrested in August 2003 after being caught in a government sting. Lakhani had tried to sell a missile to an FBI agent posing as a Somali militant.[88] The definition of counterfeiting was expanded to encompass analog, digital or electronic image reproductions, and it was made an offense to own such a reproduction device. Penalties were increased to 20 years' imprisonment.[89] Money laundering "unlawful activities" was expanded to include the provision of material support or resources to designated foreign terrorist organizations.[90] The Act specifies that anyone who commits or conspires to undertake a fraudulent activity outside the jurisdiction of the United States, and which would be an offense in the U.S., will be prosecuted under 18 U.S.C. § 1029, which deals with fraud and related activity in connection with access devices.[91]

Title IV: Border security edit

Title IV of the Patriot Act amends the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952 to give more law enforcement and investigative power to the U.S. Attorney General and to the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS). The Attorney General was authorized to waive any cap on the number of full-time employees (FTEs) assigned to the INS on the Northern border of the United States.[92] Enough funds were set aside to triple the maximum number of U.S. Border Patrol personnel, Customs Service personnel and INS inspectors along with an additional US$50,000,000 funding for the INS and the U.S. Customs Service to improve technology for monitoring the Northern Border and acquiring additional equipment at the Canadian northern border.[93] The INS was also given the authority to authorize overtime payments of up to an extra US$30,000 a year to INS employees.[94] Access was given to the U.S. State Department and the INS to criminal background information contained in the National Crime Information Center's Interstate Identification Index (NCIC-III), and any other files maintained by the National Crime Information Center to determine whether visa applicants and applicants could be admitted to the U.S.[95] The U.S. Department of State was required to form final regulations governing the procedures for taking fingerprints and the conditions with which the department was allowed to use this information.[96] Additionally, the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) was ordered to develop a technology standard to verify the identity of persons applying for a United States visa.[96] The reason was to make the standard the technology basis for a cross-agency, the cross-platform electronic system used for conducting background checks, confirming identities and ensuring that people have not received visas under different names.[97] This report was released on November 13, 2002;[98] however, according to NIST, this was later "determined that the fingerprint system used was not as accurate as current state-of-the-art fingerprint systems and is approximately equivalent to commercial fingerprint systems available in 1998."[99] This report was later superseded by section 303(a) of the Enhanced Border Security and Visa Entry Reform Act of 2002.

Under Subtitle B, various definitions relating to terrorism were altered and expanded. The INA was retroactively amended to disallow aliens who are part of or representatives of a foreign organization or any group who endorses acts of terrorism from entering the U.S. This restriction also included the family of such aliens.[100] The definition of "terrorist activity" was strengthened to include actions involving the use of any dangerous device (and not just explosives and firearms).[100] To "engage in terrorist activity" is defined as committing, inciting to commit or planning and preparing to undertake an act of terrorism. Included in this definition is the gathering of intelligence information on potential terrorist targets, the solicitation of funds for a terrorist organization or the solicitation of others to undertake acts of terrorism. Those who provide knowing assistance to a person who is planning to perform such activities are defined as undertaking terrorist activities. Such assistance includes affording material support, including a safe house, transportation, communications, funds, transfer of funds or other material financial benefit, false documentation or identification, weapons (including chemical, biological, or radiological weapons), explosives, or training to perform the terrorist act.[100] The INA criteria for making a decision to designate an organization as a terrorist organization was amended to include the definition of a terrorist act.[101] Though the amendments to these definitions are retroactive, it does not mean that it can be applied to members who joined an organization, but since left, before it was designated to be a terrorist organization under 8 U.S.C. § 1189 by the Secretary of State.[100]

The Act amended the INA to add new provisions enforcing mandatory detention laws. These apply to any alien who is engaged in terrorism, or who is engaged in an activity that endangers U.S. national security. It also applies to those who are inadmissible or who must be deported because it is certified they are attempting to enter to undertake illegal espionage; are exporting goods, technology, or sensitive information illegally; or are attempting to control or overthrow the government; or have, or will have, engaged in terrorist activities.[102] The Attorney General or the Attorney General's deputy may maintain custody of such aliens until they are removed from the U.S. unless it is no longer deemed they should be removed, in which case they are released. The alien can be detained for up to 90 days but can be held up to six months after it is deemed that they are a national security threat. However, the alien must be charged with a crime or removal proceedings start no longer than seven days after the alien's detention, otherwise the alien will be released. However, such detentions must be reviewed every six months by the Attorney General, who can then decide to revoke it, unless prevented from doing so by law. Every six months the alien may apply, in writing, for the certification to be reconsidered.[102] Judicial review of any action or decision relating to this section, including judicial review of the merits of a certification, can be held under habeas corpus proceedings. Such proceedings can be initiated by an application filed with the United States Supreme Court, by any justice of the Supreme Court, by any circuit judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, or by any district court otherwise having jurisdiction to entertain the application. The final order is subject to appeal to the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit.[102] Provisions were also made for a report to be required every six months of such decisions from the U.S. Attorney General to the Committee on the Judiciary of the House of Representatives and the Committee on the Judiciary of the Senate.[102]

A sense of Congress was given that the U.S. Secretary of State should expedite the full implementation of the integrated entry and exit data system for airports, seaports, and land border ports of entry specified in the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996 (IIRIRA). They also found that the U.S. Attorney General should immediately start the Integrated Entry and Exit Data System Task Force specified in section 3 of the Immigration and Naturalization Service Data Management Improvement Act of 2000. Congress wanted the primary focus of development of the entry-exit data system was to be on the utilization of biometric technology and the development of tamper-resistant documents readable at ports of entry. They also wanted the system to be able to interface with existing law enforcement databases.[103] The Attorney General was ordered to implement and expand the foreign student monitoring program that was established under section 641(a) of the IIRIRA.[104] which records the date and port of entry of each foreign student. The program was expanded to include other approved educational institutions, including air flight schools, language training schools or vocational schools that are approved by the Attorney General, in consultation with the Secretary of Education and the Secretary of State. US$36,800,000 was appropriated for the Department of Justice to spend on implementing the program.[105]

The Secretary of State was ordered to audit and report back to Congress on the Visa waiver program specified under 8 U.S.C. § 1187 for each fiscal year until September 30, 2007. The Secretary was also ordered to check for the implementation of precautionary measures to prevent the counterfeiting and theft of passports as well as ascertain that countries designated under the visa waiver program have established a program to develop tamper-resistant passports.[106] The Secretary was also ordered to report back to Congress on whether consulate shopping was a problem.[107]

The last subtitle, which was introduced by Senators John Conyers and Patrick Leahy, allows for the preservation of immigration benefits for victims of terrorism, and the families of victims of terrorism.[108] They recognized that some families, through no fault of their own, would either be ineligible for permanent residence in the United States because of being unable to make important deadlines because of the September 11 terrorist attacks, or had become ineligible to apply for special immigration status because their loved one died in the attacks.[109]

Title V: Removing obstacles to investigating terrorism edit

Title V allows the U.S. Attorney General to pay rewards pursuant of advertisements for assistance to the Department of Justice to combat terrorism and prevent terrorist acts, though amounts over $US250,000 may not be made or offered without the personal approval of the Attorney General or President, and once the award is approved the Attorney General must give written notice to the Chairman and ranking minority members of the Committee on Appropriations and the Judiciary of the Senate and of the House of Representatives.[110] The State Department Basic Authorities Act of 1956 was amended to allow the U.S. State Department to offer rewards, in consultation with the Attorney General, for the full or significant dismantling of any terrorist organization[111] and to identify any key leaders of terrorist organizations.[112] The U.S. Secretary of State was given authority to pay greater than $US5 million if he so determines it would prevent terrorist actions against the United States and Canada.[113] The DNA Analysis Backlog Elimination Act was amended to include terrorism or crimes of violence in the list of qualifying Federal offenses.[114] Another perceived obstacle was to allow federal agencies to share information with federal law enforcement agencies. Thus, the act now allows federal officers who acquire information through electronic surveillance or physical searches to consult with federal law enforcement officers to coordinate efforts to investigate or protect against potential or actual attacks, sabotage or international terrorism or clandestine intelligence activities by an intelligence service or network of a foreign power.[115]

U.S. Secret Service jurisdiction was extended to investigate computer fraud, access device frauds, false identification documents or devices, or any fraudulent activities against U.S. financial institutions.[116] The General Education Provisions Act was amended to allow the U.S. Attorney General or Assistant Attorney General to collect and retain educational records relevant to an authorized investigation or prosecution of an offense that is defined as a Federal crime of terrorism and which an educational agency or institution possesses. The Attorney General or Assistant Attorney General must "certify that there are specific and articulable facts giving reason to believe that the education records are likely to contain information [that a Federal crime of terrorism may be being committed]." An education institution that produces education records in response to such a request is given legal immunity from any liability that rises from such a production of records.[117]

One of the most controversial aspects of the USA PATRIOT Act is in Title V, and relates to National Security Letters (NSLs). An NSL is a form of administrative subpoena used by the FBI, and reportedly by other U.S. government agencies including the CIA and the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD). It is a demand letter issued to a particular entity or organization to turn over various records and data pertaining to individuals. They require no probable cause or judicial oversight and also contain a gag order, preventing the recipient of the letter from disclosing that the letter was ever issued. Title V allowed the use of NSLs to be made by a Special Agent in charge of a Bureau field office, where previously only the director or the deputy assistant director of the FBI were able to certify such requests.[118] This provision of the Act was challenged by the ACLU on behalf of an unknown party against the U.S. government on the grounds that NSLs violate the First and Fourth Amendments of the U.S. Constitution because there is no way to legally oppose an NSL subpoena in court, and that it was unconstitutional not to allow a client to inform their Attorney as to the order because of the gag provision of the letters. The court's judgement found in favour of the ACLU's case, and they declared the law unconstitutional.[119] Later, the USA PATRIOT Act was reauthorized and amendments were made to specify a process of judicial review of NSLs and to allow the recipient of an NSL to disclose receipt of the letter to an attorney or others necessary to comply with or challenge the order.[120] However, in 2007, the U.S. District Court struck down even the reauthorized NSLs because the gag power was unconstitutional as courts could still not engage in a meaningful judicial review of these gags. On August 28, 2015, Judge Victor Marrero of the federal district court in Manhattan ruled the gag order of Nicholas Merrill was unjustified. In his decision, Judge Marrero described the FBI's position as, "extreme and overly broad," affirming that "courts cannot, consistent with the First Amendment, simply accept the Government's assertions that disclosure would implicate and create a risk." He also found that the FBI's gag order on Mr. Merrill "implicates serious issues, both with respect to the First Amendment and accountability of the government to the people."[121] Initially, the ruling was released in redaction by Judge Marrero. The FBI was given 90 days to pursue any other alternative course of action but elected not to do so. Upon release of the unredacted ruling on November 30, 2015, it was revealed for the first time the extent to which the FBI's NSL accompanied by a gag order sought to collect information. Through the court documents, it was revealed for the first time that through an NSL, the FBI believes it can legally obtain information including an individual's complete web browsing history, the IP addresses of everyone a person has corresponded with, and all the records of all online purchases within the last 180 days. The FBI also claims via the extension of an NSL, it can obtain cell site location information. In the landmark case of Nicholas Merrill the FBI in specific sought to seek the following information on an account: DSL account information, radius log, subscriber name and related subscriber information, account number, date the account opened or closed, addresses associated with the account, subscriber day/evening telephone numbers, screen names or other on-line names associated with the account, order forms, records relating to merchandise orders/shipping information for the last 180 days, all billing related to the account, internet service provider (ISP), all email addresses associated with the account, internet protocol address assigned to the account, all website information registered to the account, uniform resource locator address assigned to the account, any other information which you consider to be an electronic communication transactional record. This was the first time it was revealed the extent to which an NSL under the Patriot Act could request communication information.[122][123]

Title VI: Victims and families of victims of terrorism edit

Title VI amended the Victims of Crime Act of 1984 (VOCA) to change how the U.S. Victims of Crime Fund was managed and funded, improving the speedy provision of aid to families of public safety officers by expedited payments to officers or the families of officers injured or killed in the line of duty. Payments must be made no later than 30 days later.[124] The Assistant Attorney General was given expanded authority under Section 614 of the USA PATRIOT Act to make grants to any organization that administers any Office of Justice Programs, which includes the Public Safety Officers Benefits Program.[125] Further changes to the Victims of Crime Fund increased the amount of money in the Fund and changed the way that funds were distributed.[126] The amount available for grants made through the Crime Victim Fund to eligible crime victim compensation programs were increased from 40 percent to 60 percent of the total in the Fund. A program can provide compensation to U.S. citizens who were adversely affected overseas. Means testing was also waived for those who apply for compensation.[127] Under VOCA, the director may make an annual grant from the Crime Victims Fund to support crime victim assistance programs. An amendment was made to VOCA to include offers of assistance to crime victims in the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the United States Virgin Islands, and any other U.S. territory.[128] VOCA also provides for compensation and assistance to victims of terrorism or mass violence.[129] This was amended to allow the director to make supplemental grants to States for eligible crime victim compensation and assistance programs, and to victim service organizations, public agencies (including Federal, State, or local governments) and non-governmental organizations that provide assistance to victims of crime. The funds could be used to provide emergency relief, including crisis response efforts, assistance, compensation, training and technical assistance for investigations and prosecutions of terrorism.[130]

Title VII: Increased information sharing for critical infrastructure protection edit

Title VII has one section. The purpose of this title is to increase the ability of U.S. law enforcement to counter terrorist activity that crosses jurisdictional boundaries. It does this by amending the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968 to include terrorism as a criminal activity.

Title VIII: Terrorism criminal law edit

Title VIII alters the definitions of terrorism and establishes or re-defines rules with which to deal with it. It redefined the term "domestic terrorism" to broadly include mass destruction as well as assassination or kidnapping as a terrorist activity. The definition also encompasses activities that are "dangerous to human life that are a violation of the criminal laws of the United States or of any State" and are intended to "intimidate or coerce a civilian population," "influence the policy of a government by intimidation or coercion," or are undertaken "to affect the conduct of a government by mass destruction, assassination, or kidnapping" while in the jurisdiction of the United States.[131] Terrorism is also included in the definition of racketeering.[132] Terms relating to cyber-terrorism are also redefined, including the term "protected computer," "damage," "conviction," "person," and "loss."[133]

New penalties were created to convict those who attack mass transportation systems. If the offender committed such an attack while no passenger was on board, they are fined and imprisoned for a maximum of 20 years. However, if the activity was undertaken while the mass transportation vehicle or ferry was carrying a passenger at the time of the offense, or the offense resulted in the death of any person, then the punishment is a fine and life imprisonment.[134] The title amends the biological weapons statute to define the use of a biological agent, toxin, or delivery system as a weapon, other than when it is used for "prophylactic, protective, bona fide research, or other peaceful purposes." Penalties for anyone who cannot prove reasonably that they are using a biological agent, toxin or delivery system for these purposes are 10 years' imprisonment, a fine or both.[135]

A number of measures were introduced in an attempt to prevent and penalize activities that are deemed to support terrorism. It was made a crime to harbor or conceal terrorists, and those who do are subject to a fine or imprisonment of up to 10 years, or both.[136] U.S. forfeiture law was also amended to allow authorities to seize all foreign and domestic assets from any group or individual that is caught planning to commit acts of terrorism against the U.S. or U.S. citizens. Assets may also be seized if they have been acquired or maintained by an individual or organization for the purposes of further terrorist activities.[137] One section of the Act (section 805) prohibited "material support" for terrorists, and in particular included "expert advice or assistance."[138] In 2004, after the Humanitarian Law Project filed a civil action against the U.S. government, a Federal District Court struck this down as unconstitutionally vague;[139] but in 2010 the Supreme Court upheld it.[140] Congress later improved the law by defining the definitions of the "material support or resources," "training," and "expert advise or resources."[141]

Cyberterrorism was dealt with in various ways. Penalties apply to those who either damage or gain unauthorized access to a protected computer and then commit a number of offenses. These offenses include causing a person to lose an aggregate amount greater than US$5,000, as well as adversely affecting someone's medical examination, diagnosis or treatment. It also encompasses actions that cause a person to be injured, a threat to public health or safety, or damage to a governmental computer that is used as a tool to administer justice, national defense or national security. Also prohibited was extortion undertaken via a protected computer. The penalty for attempting to damage protected computers through the use of viruses or other software mechanism was set to imprisonment for up to 10 years, while the penalty for unauthorized access and subsequent damage to a protected computer was increased to more than five years' imprisonment. However, should the offense occur a second time, the penalty increases up to 20 years' imprisonment.[142] The act also specified the development and support of cybersecurity forensic capabilities. It directs the Attorney General to establish regional computer forensic laboratories that have the capability of performing forensic examinations of intercepted computer evidence relating to criminal activity and cyberterrorism, and that have the capability of training and educating Federal, State, and local law enforcement personnel and prosecutors in computer crime, and to "facilitate and promote the sharing of Federal law enforcement expertise and information about the investigation, analysis, and prosecution of computer-related crime with State and local law enforcement personnel and prosecutors, including the use of multijurisdictional task forces." The sum of $50,000,000 was authorized for establishing such labs.[143]

Title IX: Improved intelligence edit

Title IX amends the National Security Act of 1947 to require the Director of Central Intelligence (DCI) to establish requirements and priorities for foreign intelligence collected under FISA and to provide assistance to the U.S. Attorney General to ensure that information derived from electronic surveillance or physical searches is disseminated for efficient and effective foreign intelligence purposes.[144] With the exception of information that might jeopardize an ongoing law enforcement investigation, it was made a requirement that the Attorney General, or the head of any other department or agency of the Federal Government with law enforcement responsibilities, disclose to the director any foreign intelligence acquired by the U.S. Department of Justice. The U.S. Attorney General and Director of Central Intelligence both were directed to develop procedures for the Attorney General to follow in order to inform the director, in a timely manner, of any intention of investigating criminal activity of a foreign intelligence source or potential foreign intelligence source based on the intelligence tip-off of a member of the intelligence community. The Attorney General was also directed to develop procedures on how to best administer these matters.[145] International terrorist activities were made to fall within the scope of foreign intelligence under the National Security Act.[146]

A number of reports were commissioned relating to various intelligence-related government centers. One was commissioned into the best way of setting up the National Virtual Translation Center, with the goal of developing automated translation facilities to assist with the timely and accurate translation of foreign intelligence information for elements of the U.S. intelligence community.[147] The USA PATRIOT Act required this to be provided on February 1, 2002; however, the report, entitled "Director of Central Intelligence Report on the National Virtual Translation Center: A Concept Plan to Enhance the Intelligence Community's Foreign Language Capabilities, April 29, 2002" was received more than two months late, which the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence reported was "a delay which, in addition to contravening the explicit words of the statute, deprived the Committee of timely and valuable input into its efforts to craft this legislation."[148] Another report was commissioned on the feasibility and desirability of reconfiguring the Foreign Terrorist Asset Tracking Center and the Office of Foreign Assets Control of the Department of the Treasury.[149] It was due by February 1, 2002; however, it was never written. The Senate Select Committee on Intelligence later complained that "[t]he Director of Central Intelligence and the Secretary of the Treasury failed to provide a report, this time in direct contravention of a section of the USA PATRIOT Act" and they further directed "that the statutorily-directed report be completed immediately, and that it should include a section describing the circumstances which led to the Director's failure to comply with lawful reporting requirements."[150]

Other measures allowed certain reports on intelligence and intelligence-related matters to be deferred until at least February 1, 2002, if the official involved certified that preparation and submission on February 1, 2002, would impede the work of officers or employees engaged in counterterrorism activities. Any such deferral required congressional notification before it was authorized.[151] The Attorney General was charged with training officials in identifying and utilizing foreign intelligence information properly in the course of their duties. The government officials include those in the Federal Government who do not normally encounter or disseminate foreign intelligence in the performance of their duties, and State and local government officials who encounter, or potentially may encounter in the course of a terrorist event, foreign intelligence in the performance of their duties.[152] A sense of Congress was expressed that officers and employees of the intelligence community should be encouraged to make every effort to establish and maintain intelligence relationships with any person, entity, or group while they conduct lawful intelligence activities.[146]

Title X: Miscellaneous edit

Title X created or altered a number of miscellaneous laws that did not fit into any other section of the USA PATRIOT Act. Hazmat licenses were limited to drivers who pass background checks and who can demonstrate they can handle the materials.[153] The Inspector General of the Department of Justice was directed to appoint an official to monitor, review and report back to Congress all allegations of civil rights abuses against the DoJ.[154] It amended the definition of "electronic surveillance" to exclude the interception of communications done through or from a protected computer where the owner allows the interception, or is lawfully involved in an investigation.[155] Money laundering cases may now be brought in the district where the money laundering was committed or where a money laundering transfer started from.[156] Aliens who committed money laundering were also prohibited from entering the U.S.[157] Grants were provided to first responders to assist them in responding to and preventing terrorism.[158] US$5,000,000 was authorized to be provided to the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) to train police in South and East Asia.[159] The Attorney General was directed to commission a study on the feasibility of using biometric identifiers to identify people as they attempt to enter the United States, and which would be connected to the FBI's database to flag suspected criminals.[160] Another study was also commissioned to determine the feasibility of providing airlines names of suspected terrorists before they boarded flights.[161] The Department of Defense was given temporary authority to use their funding for private contracts for security purposes.[162] The last title also created a new Act called the Crimes Against Charitable Americans Act[163] which amended the Telemarketing and Consumer Fraud and Abuse Prevention Act to require telemarketers who call on behalf of charities to disclose the purpose and other information, including the name and mailing address of the charity the telemarketer is representing.[164] It also increased the penalties from one year's imprisonment to five years' imprisonment for those committing fraud by impersonating a Red Cross member.[165]

Section expirations edit

#FIXME LEGEND NEEDED

Status Section Title Expiration date
PA 201 Authority to intercept wire, oral, and electronic communications relating to terrorism and others 2006-03-10
PA 202 Authority to intercept wire, oral, and electronic communications relating to computer fraud and abuse offenses 2006-03-10
PA 203(b) Authority to share electronic, wire and oral interception information 2006-03-10
PA 204 Clarification of intelligence exceptions from limitations on interception and disclosure of wire, oral, and electronic communications 2006-03-10
PA 206
50 USC 1805(c)(2)(B)
Roving surveillance authority under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978. 2019-12-15
PA 207 Duration of FISA surveillance of non-United States persons who are agents of a foreign power 2006-03-10
PA 209 Seizure of voice-mail messages pursuant to warrants 2006-03-10
PA 212 Emergency disclosure of electronic communications to protect life and limb 2006-03-10
PA 214 Pen register and trap and trace authority under FISA 2006-03-10
PA 215

50 USC 1861

Access to records and other items under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. 2015-06-01
PA 217 Interception of computer trespasser communications 2006-03-10
PA 218 Foreign intelligence information 2006-03-10
PA 220 Nationwide service of search warrants for electronic evidence 2006-03-10
PA 223 Civil liability for certain unauthorized disclosures 2006-03-10
PA 225 Immunity for compliance with FISA wiretap 2006-03-10
IRTPA 6001
50 USC 1801(b)(1)(C)
"Lone wolf" provision 2019-12-15

Controversy edit

The USA PATRIOT Act has generated a great deal of controversy since its enactment.

Opponents of the Act have been quite vocal in asserting that it was passed opportunistically after the September 11 attacks, believing that there would have been little debate. They view the Act as one that was hurried through the Senate with little change before it was passed (senators Patrick Leahy (D-VT) and Russ Feingold (D-WI) proposed amendments to modify the final revision).[166][167][168]

The sheer magnitude of the Act itself was noted by Michael Moore in his controversial film Fahrenheit 9/11. In one of the scenes of the movie, he records Congressperson Jim McDermott (D-WA) alleging that no Senator had read the bill[169] and John Conyers, Jr. (D-MI) as saying, "We don't read most of the bills. Do you really know what that would entail if we read every bill that we passed?" Congressperson Conyers answers his own question, saying that if they did read every bill, it would "slow down the legislative process".[170] As a dramatic device, Moore then hired an ice-cream van and drove around Washington, D.C., with a loudspeaker, reading out the Act to puzzled passers-by, including a few senators.[171]

Moore was not the only commentator to notice that not many people had read the Act. When Dahlia Lithwick and Julia Turne for Slate asked, "How bad is PATRIOT, anyway?", they decided that it was "hard to tell" and stated:

The ACLU, in a new fact sheet challenging the DOJ Web site, wants you to believe that the act threatens our most basic civil liberties. Ashcroft and his roadies call the changes in law "modest and incremental." Since almost nobody has read the legislation, much of what we think we know about it comes third-hand and spun. Both advocates and opponents are guilty of fear-mongering and distortion in some instances.[172]

One prime example of how the Patriot Act has stirred controversy is the case of Susan Lindauer. Lindauer is a former Congressional staffer and antiwar activist who was charged under the Patriot Act with "acting as an unregistered agent of a foreign government," then ruled by a court mentally unfit to stand trial. Lindauer has emphatically denied both on many occasions, saying that she in fact had been a CIA agent serving as a link between the U.S. and Iraqi governments. In 2010 she wrote a book called Extreme Prejudice: The Terrifying Story of the Patriot Act and the Cover-Ups of 9/11 and Iraq to that effect.[173][self-published source] The charges were dropped in 2009.

Another example of controversy in the Patriot Act is the 2012 court case United States v. Antoine Jones. A nightclub owner was linked to a drug trafficking stash house via a law enforcement GPS tracking device attached to his car. It was placed there without a warrant, which caused a serious conviction obstacle for federal prosecutors in court. The case eventually reached the U.S. Supreme Court, where the conviction was overturned. The court found that increased monitoring of suspects caused by such legislation like the Patriot Act violated the defendant's constitutional rights.[citation needed]

The Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC) has criticized the law as unconstitutional, especially when "the private communications of law-abiding American citizens might be intercepted incidentally",[174] while the Electronic Frontier Foundation held that the lower standard applied to wiretaps "gives the FBI a 'blank check' to violate the communications privacy of countless innocent Americans".[42] Others do not find the roving wiretap legislation to be as concerning. Professor David D. Cole of the Georgetown University Law Center, a critic of many of the provisions of the Act, found that though they come at a cost to privacy are a sensible measure[175] while Paul Rosenzweig, a Senior Legal Research Fellow in the Center for Legal and Judicial Studies at The Heritage Foundation, argues that roving wiretaps are just a response to rapidly changing communication technology that is not necessarily fixed to a specific location or device.[176]

The Act also allows access to voicemail through a search warrant rather than through a title III wiretap order.[177] James Dempsey, of the CDT, believes that it unnecessarily overlooks the importance of notice under the Fourth Amendment and under a Title III wiretap,[178] and the EFF criticizes the provision's lack of notice. However, the EFF's criticism is more extensive—they believe that the amendment "is in possible violation of the Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution" because previously if the FBI listened to voicemail illegally, it could not use the messages in evidence against the defendant.[179] Others disagree with these assessments. Legal Scholar Orin Kerr believes that the ECPA "adopted a rather strange rule to regulate voicemail stored with service providers" because "under ECPA, if the government knew that there was one copy of an unopened private message in a person's bedroom and another copy on their remotely stored voicemail, it was illegal for the FBI to simply obtain the voicemail; the law actually compelled the police to invade the home and rifle through people's bedrooms so as not to disturb the more private voicemail." In Professor Kerr's opinion, this made little sense and the amendment that was made by the USA PATRIOT Act was reasonable and sensible.[180][181]

The Patriot Act's expansion of court jurisdiction to allow the nationwide service of search warrants proved controversial for the EFF.[182] They believe that agencies will be able to "'shop' for judges that have demonstrated a strong bias toward law enforcement with regard to search warrants, using only those judges least likely to say no—even if the warrant doesn't satisfy the strict requirements of the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution",[183] and that it reduces the likelihood that smaller ISPs or phone companies will try to protect the privacy of their clients by challenging the warrant in court—their reasoning is that "a small San Francisco ISP served with such a warrant is unlikely to have the resources to appear before the New York court that issued it."[183] They believe that this is bad because only the communications provider will be able to challenge the warrant as only they will know about it—many warrants are issued ex parte, which means that the target of the order is not present when the order is issued.[183]

For a time, the USA PATRIOT Act allowed for agents to undertake "sneak and peek" searches.[37] Critics such as EPIC and the ACLU strongly criticized the law for violating the Fourth Amendment,[184] with the ACLU going so far as to release an advertisement condemning it and calling for it to be repealed.[185][186]

In 2004, FBI agents used this provision to search and secretly examine the home of Brandon Mayfield, who was wrongfully jailed for two weeks on suspicion of involvement in the Madrid train bombings. While the U.S. Government did publicly apologize to Mayfield and his family,[187] Mayfield took it further through the courts. On September 26, 2007, Judge Ann Aiken found the law was, in fact, unconstitutional as the search was an unreasonable imposition on Mayfield and thus violated the Fourth Amendment.[38][39]

Laws governing the material support of terrorism proved contentious. It was criticized by the EFF for infringement of freedom of association. The EFF argues that had this law been enacted during Apartheid, U.S. citizens would not have been able to support the African National Congress (ANC) as the EFF believes the ANC would have been classed as a terrorist organization. They also used the example of a humanitarian social worker being unable to train Hamas members how to care for civilian children orphaned in the conflict between Israelis and Palestinians, a lawyer being unable to teach IRA members about international law, and peace workers being unable to offer training in effective peace negotiations or how to petition the United Nations regarding human rights abuses.[188]

Another group, the Humanitarian Law Project, also objected to the provision prohibiting "expert advise and assistance" to terrorists and filed a suit against the U.S. government to have it declared unconstitutional. In 2004 a Federal District Court struck the provision down as unconstitutionally vague,[139] but in 2010 the Supreme Court reversed that decision.[140]

Perhaps one of the biggest controversies involved the use of National Security Letters (NSLs) by the FBI. Because they allow the FBI to search telephone, email, and financial records without a court order, they were criticized by many parties, including the American Civil Liberties Union. Although FBI officials have a series of internal "checks and balances" that must be met before the issue of an NSL, Federal Judge Victor Marrero ruled the NSL provisions unconstitutional.[189][190][191][192] In November 2005, BusinessWeek reported that the FBI had issued tens of thousands of NSLs and had obtained one million financial, credit, employment, and in some cases, health records from the customers of targeted Las Vegas businesses. Selected businesses included casinos, storage warehouses and car rental agencies. An anonymous Justice official claimed that such requests were permitted under section 505 of the USA PATRIOT Act and despite the volume of requests insisted "We are not inclined to ask courts to endorse fishing expeditions".[193] Before this was revealed, however, the ACLU challenged the constitutionality of NSLs in court. In April 2004, they filed suit against the government on behalf of an unknown internet service provider who had been issued an NSL, for reasons unknown. In ACLU v. DoJ, the ACLU argued that the NSL violated the First and Fourth Amendments of the U.S. Constitution because the USA PATRIOT Act failed to spell out any legal process whereby a telephone or Internet company could try to oppose an NSL subpoena in court. The court agreed, and found that because the recipient of the subpoena could not challenge it in court it was unconstitutional.[119] Congress later tried to remedy this in a reauthorization Act, but because they did not remove the non-disclosure provision a Federal court again found NSLs to be unconstitutional because they prevented courts from engaging in meaningful judicial review.[190][194][195]

 
A warrant canary, posted in a Craftsbury, Vermont library in 2005: "The FBI has not been here (watch very closely for removal of this sign)". Announcing the receipt of a national security letter would violate the associated gag order, while removing the sign would not.

Another provision of the USA PATRIOT Act has caused a great deal of consternation among librarians. Section 215 allows the FBI to apply for an order to produce materials that assist in an investigation undertaken to protect against international terrorism or clandestine intelligence activities. Among the "tangible things" that could be targeted, it includes "books, records, papers, documents, and other items".[43]

Supporters of the provision point out that these records are held by third parties, and therefore are exempt from a citizen's reasonable expectations of privacy and also maintain that the FBI has not abused the provision.[196] As proof, then Attorney General John Ashcroft released information in 2003 that showed that section 215 orders had never been used.[197]

However, the American Library Association strongly objected to the provision, believing that library records are fundamentally different from ordinary business records, and that the provision would have a chilling effect on free speech. The association became so concerned that it adopted a resolution condemning the USA PATRIOT Act and urging members to defend free speech and protect patrons' privacy.[198]

The association urged librarians to seek legal advice before complying with a search order, and advised its members to keep records only for as long as was legally required.[199] Consequently, reports started filtering in that librarians were shredding records to avoid having to comply with such orders.[200][201][202]

In 2005, Library Connection, a nonprofit consortium of 27 libraries in Connecticut, known as the Connecticut Four worked with the ACLU to lift a gag order for library records, challenging the government's power under Section 505 to silence four citizens who wished to contribute to public debate on the PATRIOT Act. This case became known as Doe v. Gonzales. In May 2006, the government finally gave up its legal battle to maintain the gag order. In a summary of the actions of the Connecticut Four and their challenge to the USA PATRIOT Act, Jones (2009: 223) notes: "Librarians need to understand their country's legal balance between the protection of freedom of expression and the protection of national security. Many librarians believe that the interests of national security, important as they are, have become an excuse for chilling the freedom to read."[203]

Another controversial aspect of the USA PATRIOT Act is the immigration provisions that allow for the indefinite detention of any alien who the Attorney General believes may cause a terrorist act.[102] Before the USA PATRIOT Act was passed, Anita Ramasastry, an associate professor of law and a director of the Shidler Center for Law, Commerce, & Technology at the University of Washington School of Law in Seattle, Washington, accused the Act of depriving basic rights for immigrants to America, including legal permanent residents. She warned that "Indefinite detention upon secret evidence—which the USA PATRIOT Act allows—sounds more like Taliban justice than ours. Our claim that we are attempting to build an international coalition against terrorism will be severely undermined if we pass legislation allowing even citizens of our allies to be incarcerated without basic U.S. guarantees of fairness and justice."[204] Many other parties have also been strongly critical of the provision. Russell Feingold, in a Senate floor statement, claimed that the provision "falls short of meeting even basic constitutional standards of due process and fairness [as it] continues to allow the Attorney General to detain persons based on mere suspicion".[205] The University of California passed a resolution condemning (among other things) the indefinite detention provisions of the Act,[206] while the ACLU has accused the Act of giving the Attorney General "unprecedented new power to determine the fate of immigrants ... Worse, if the foreigner does not have a country that will accept them, they can be detained indefinitely without trial."[207]

Another controversial aspect of the USA PATRIOT Act is its effect on the privacy of Canadians living in the province of British Columbia (B.C.). British Columbia's privacy commissioner raises concerns that the USA PATRIOT Act will allow the United States government to access Canadians' private information, such as personal medical records, that are outsourced to American companies. Although the government of B.C. has taken measures to prevent United States authorities from obtaining information, the widespread powers of the USA PATRIOT Act could overcome legislation that is passed in Canada.[208] B.C. Privacy Commissioner David Loukidelis stated in a report on the consequences of the USA PATRIOT Act, "once information is sent across borders, it's difficult, if not impossible, to control".[209]

In an effort to maintain their privacy, British Columbia placed amendments on the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FOIPPA), which was enacted as law on October 21, 2004. These amendments aim to place more firm limitations on "storing, accessing, and disclosing of B.C. public sector data by service providers."[210] These laws only pertain to public sector data and do not cover trans-border or private sector data in Canada. The public sector establishments include an estimated 2,000 "government ministries, hospitals, boards of health, universities and colleges, school boards, municipal governments and certain Crown corporations and agencies."[210] In response to these laws, many companies are now specifically opting to host their sensitive data outside the United States.[211]

Legal action has been taken in Nova Scotia to protect the province from the USA PATRIOT Act's data collecting methods. On November 15, 2007, the government of Nova Scotia passed legislation aimed to protect Nova Scotians' personal information from being brought forward by the USA PATRIOT Act. The act was entitled "The new Personal Information International Disclosure Protection Act". The goal of the act is to establish requirements to protect personal information from being revealed, as well as punishments for failing to do so. Justice Minister Murray Scott stated, "This legislation will help ensure that Nova Scotians' personal information will be protected. The act outlines the responsibilities of public bodies, municipalities and service providers and the consequences if these responsibilities are not fulfilled."[181][212] In the 1980s, the Bank of Nova Scotia was the center of an early, pre-Internet data-access case that led to the disclosure of banking records.[213]

After suspected abuses of the USA PATRIOT Act were brought to light in June 2013 with articles about collection of American call records by the NSA and the PRISM program (see 2013 mass surveillance disclosures), Representative Jim Sensenbrenner, Republican of Wisconsin, who introduced the Patriot Act in 2001, said that the National Security Agency overstepped its bounds.[214] He released a statement saying "While I believe the Patriot Act appropriately balanced national security concerns and civil rights, I have always worried about potential abuses." He added: "Seizing phone records of millions of innocent people is excessive and un-American."[214][215]

Sami Al-Arian edit

Sami Al-Arian was a Palestinian-American tenured computer engineering professor at the University of South Florida, who also actively promoted dialogue between the West and the Middle East, especially about the plight of Palestinians. He was indicted in February 2003 on 17 counts under the Patriot Act. A jury acquitted him on 8 counts and deadlocked on the remaining 9 counts. He later struck a plea bargain and admitted to one of the remaining charges in exchange for being released and deported by April 2007. However, instead of being released, he was held under house arrest in Northern Virginia from 2008 until 2014 when federal prosecutors filed a motion to dismiss charges against him.[216] He was deported to Turkey on February 4, 2015.[217]

Reauthorizations edit

The USA PATRIOT Act was reauthorized by three bills. The first, the USA PATRIOT and Terrorism Prevention Reauthorization Act of 2005, was passed by Congress in July 2005. This bill reauthorized some, but not all, provisions of the original USA PATRIOT Act, as well as the newer Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004. It created new provisions relating to the death penalty for terrorists,[218] enhancing security at seaports,[219] new measures to combat the financing of terrorism,[220] new powers for the Secret Service,[221] anti-methamphetamine initiatives[222] and a number of other miscellaneous provisions. The second reauthorization act, the USA PATRIOT Act Additional Reauthorizing Amendments Act of 2006, amended the first and was passed in February 2006.

The first act reauthorized all but two Title II provisions. Two sections were changed to sunset on December 31, 2009: section 206—the roving wiretap provision—and section 215, which allowed access to business records under FISA. Section 215 was amended further to give greater judicial oversight and review. Such orders were also restricted to be authorized by only the FBI Director, the FBI Deputy Director, or the Executive Assistant Director for National Security, and minimization procedures were specified to limit the dissemination and collection of such information. Section 215 also had a "gag" provision, which was changed to allow the defendant to contact their attorney.[223] However, the change meant that the defendant was also required to tell the FBI who they were disclosing the order to; this requirement was removed by the USA PATRIOT Act Additional Reauthorizing Amendments Act.[224]

On Saturday, February 27, 2010, President Barack Obama signed into law legislation that would temporarily extend, for one year, three controversial provisions of the Patriot Act that had been set to expire:[225][226][227][228]

  • Authorize court-approved roving wiretaps that permit surveillance on multiple phones.
  • Allow court-approved seizure of records and property in anti-terrorism operations.
  • Permit surveillance against a so-called lone wolf (a non-U.S. citizen engaged in terrorism who may not be part of a recognized terrorist group).[229]

In a vote on February 8, 2011, the House of Representatives considered a further extension of the Act through the end of 2011.[230] House leadership moved the extension bill under suspension of the rules, which is intended for noncontroversial legislation and requires two-thirds majority to pass.[230] After the vote, the extension bill did not pass; 277 members voted in favor, which was less than the 290 votes needed to pass the bill under suspension of the rules.[230] Without an extension, the Act was set to expire on February 28, 2011. However, it eventually passed, 275–144.[231] The FISA Sunsets Extension Act of 2011 was signed into law February 25, 2011.

On May 26, 2011, President Barack Obama used an Autopen to sign the PATRIOT Sunsets Extension Act of 2011, a four-year extension of three key provisions in the USA PATRIOT Act while he was in France:[11] roving wiretaps, searches of business records (the "library records provision"), and conducting surveillance of "lone wolves"—individuals suspected of terrorist-related activities not linked to terrorist groups.[12] Republican leaders[232] questioned if the use of the Autopen met the constitutional requirements for signing a bill into law.[233]

As NSL provisions of the USA PATRIOT Act had been struck by the courts[119] the reauthorization Act amended the law in an attempt to make them lawful. It provided for judicial review and the legal right of a recipient to challenge the validity of the letter. The reauthorization act still allowed NSLs to be closed and all evidence to be presented in camera and ex parte.[234] Gag provisions were maintained but were not automatic. They only occurred when the deputy assistant director of the FBI or a special agent in charge in a bureau field office certified that disclosure would result in "a danger to the national security of the United States, interference with a criminal, counterterrorism, or counterintelligence investigation, interference with diplomatic relations, or danger to the life or physical safety of any person".[235] However, should there be no non-disclosure order, the defendant can disclose the fact of the NSL to anyone who can render them assistance in carrying out the letter, or to an attorney for legal advice. Again, however, the recipient was ordered to inform the FBI of such a disclosure.[235] Because of the concern over the chilling effects of such a requirement, the Additional Reauthorization Amendments Act removed the requirement to inform the FBI that the recipient spoke about the NSL to their Attorney.[236] Later, the Additional Reauthorization Amendments Act excluded libraries from receiving NSLs, except where they provide electronic communications services.[237] The reauthorization Act also ordered the Attorney General submit a report semi-annually to the House and Senate Judiciary Committees, the House and Senate Intelligence Committees and the House Committee on Financial Services and the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs on all NSL request made under the Fair Credit Reporting Act.[238]

Changes were made to the roving wiretap provisions of the USA PATRIOT Act. Applications and orders for such wiretaps must describe the specific target of the electronic surveillance if the identity of the target is not known. If the nature and location of each of the facilities or places targeted for surveillance is not known, then after 10 days the agency must provide notice to the court. The notice must include the nature and location of each new facility or place at which the electronic surveillance was directed. It must also describe the facts and circumstances relied upon by the applicant to justify the applicant's belief that each new surveillance place or facility under surveillance is or was being used by the target of the surveillance. The applicant must also provide a statement detailing any proposed minimization procedures that differ from those contained in the original application or order, that may be necessitated by a change in the facility or place at which the electronic surveillance is directed. Applicants must detail the total number of electronic surveillances that have been or are being conducted under the authority of the order.[239]

Section 213 of the USA PATRIOT Act was modified. Previously it stated that delayed notifications would be made to recipients of "sneak and peek" searches in a "reasonable period". This was seen as unreasonable, as it was undefined and could potentially be used indefinitely. Thus, the reauthorization act changed this to a period not exceeding 30 days after the date of the execution of the search warrant. Courts were given the opportunity to extend this period if they were provided good cause to do so. Section 213 states that delayed notifications could be issued if there is "reasonable cause to believe that providing immediate notification of the execution of the warrant may have an adverse result". This was criticized, particularly by the ACLU, for allowing potential abuse by law enforcement agencies[240] and was later amended to prevent a delayed notification "if the adverse results consist only of unduly delaying a trial".[241] In September 2007 an Oregon US District Court struck down the Sneak and Peak provisions of the USA PATRIOT ACT,[242] but in December 2009 the Ninth Circuit overturned this decision.[243]

The reauthorization act also legislates increased congressional oversight for emergency disclosures by communication providers undertaken under section 212 of the USA PATRIOT Act.[244] The duration of FISA surveillance and physical search orders were increased. Surveillance performed against "lone wolf terrorists" under section 207 of the USA PATRIOT Act were increased to 120 days for an initial order, while pen registers and trap and trace device extensions under FISA were increased from 90 days to a year. The reauthorization act also increased congressional oversight, requiring a semi-annual report into physical searches and the use of pen registers and trap and trace devices under FISA.[245] The "lone wolf terrorist" provision (Section 207) was a sunset provision that also was to have expired; however, this was enhanced by the Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004. The reauthorization act extended the expiration date to December 31, 2009.[246] The amendment to material support law done in the Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act[141] was also made permanent.[247] The definition of terrorism was further expanded to include receiving military-type training from a foreign terrorist organization and narcoterrorism.[248] Other provisions of the reauthorization act was to merge the law outlawing train wrecking (18 U.S.C. § 992) and the law outlawing attacks on mass transportation systems (18 U.S.C. § 1993) into a new section of Title 18 of the U.S. Code (18 U.S.C. § 1992) and also to criminalize the act of planning a terrorist attack against a mass transport system.[249][250] Forfeiture law was further changed and now assets within U.S. jurisdiction will be seized for illegally trafficking in nuclear, chemical, biological or radiological weapons technology or material, if such offense is punishable under foreign law by death or imprisonment for a term exceeding one year. Alternatively, this applies if similar punishment would be so punishable if committed within the U.S.[251] A sense of Congress was further expressed that victims of terrorism should be entitled to the forfeited assets of terrorists.[252]

The Trump administration delivered a letter to Congress in August 2019 urging them to make permanent three surveillance provisions of the Patriot Act. The provisions included section 215, which enables domestic call-record collection as well as the collection of other types of business records.[253]

In November 2019, the House approved a three-month extension of the Patriot Act which would have expired on December 15, 2019. It was included as part of a bigger stop-gap spending bill aimed at preventing government shutdown which was approved by a vote of 231–192. The vote was mostly along party lines with Democrats voting in favor and Republicans voting against. Republican opposition was largely due to the bill's failure to include $5 billion for border security.[254] Ten Democrats voted against the bill. This group included a number of progressive Democrats who urged their colleagues to oppose the bill over the measure to extend surveillance.[255] Representative Justin Amash (Independent) submitted an amendment to remove the Patriot Act provisions, but it was defeated by the House Rules committee.[256]

On March 10, 2020, Jerry Nadler proposed a bill to reauthorize the Patriot Act, and it was then approved by the majority of US House of Representatives after 152 Democrats joined the GOP in supporting the extension.[18] The surveillance powers of the Patriot Act needed renewal by March 15, 2020,[16] and after it expired, the U.S. Senate approved an amended version of the bill.[17] After President Donald Trump threatened to veto the bill, the House of Representatives issued an indefinite postponement of the vote to pass the Senate version of the bill; as of December 2020, the Patriot Act remains expired.[257][258]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Pub. L.Tooltip Public Law (United States) 107–56 (text) (PDF), § 1(a), 115 Stat. 272, 272.
  2. ^ Mascaro, Lisa (May 27, 2011). "Patriot Act provisions extended just in time". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved August 30, 2021.
  3. ^ Kelly, Erin. "Senate approves USA Freedom Act". USA Today. Retrieved August 31, 2021.
  4. ^ Savage, Charlie (March 27, 2020). "House Departs Without Vote to Extend Expired F.B.I. Spy Tools". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved August 31, 2021.
  5. ^ "Bill Summary & Status 107th Congress (2001–2002)H.R.3162 Major Congressional Actions", thomas.loc.gov Retrieved August 11, 2012.
  6. ^ "FINAL VOTE RESULTS FOR ROLL CALL 398", clerk.house.gov. October 24, 2001. Retrieved August 11, 2012.
  7. ^ "U.S. Senate Roll Call Votes 107th Congress – 1st Session", www.senate.gov. October 25, 2001. Retrieved August 11, 2012.
  8. ^ Wheatley, William; Robbins, Joseph; Hunter, Lance Y.; Ginn, Martha Humphries (March 2020). "Terrorism's effect on Europe's centre- and far-right parties". European Political Science. 19 (1): 100–121. doi:10.1057/s41304-019-00210-8. ISSN 1680-4333. S2CID 256557728.
  9. ^ "The White House: President George W. Bush". The White House. October 26, 2001. Retrieved January 25, 2016.
  10. ^ "Safe Act Co-Sponsors say PATRIOT Act Conference Report Unacceptable", Washington Times, November 5, 2005.
  11. ^ a b "Obama Signs Last-Minute Patriot Act Extension". Fox News. May 27, 2011. Retrieved May 27, 2011.
  12. ^ a b Mascaro, Lisa (May 27, 2011). "Congress votes in time to extend key Patriot Act provisions". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved May 27, 2011.
  13. ^ "Parts Of Patriot Act Expire, Even As Senate Moves On Bill Limiting Surveillance".
  14. ^ a b c Kelly, Erin (June 2, 2015). "Senate approves USA Freedom Act". USA Today. Retrieved June 3, 2015.
  15. ^ Adler-Bell, Sam (November 20, 2019). "Why the Hell Did Democrats Just Extend the Patriot Act?". The New Republic.
  16. ^ a b "Coronavirus Spending Bill Could be Used to Cement Spying Powers, Surveillance Critics in Congress Warned". February 27, 2020.
  17. ^ a b "FISA Update". National Review. March 18, 2020.
  18. ^ a b "152 House Democrats Join GOP to Reauthorize 'Abusive Government Surveillance Powers'".
  19. ^ Savage, Charlie (March 27, 2020). "House Departs Without Vote to Extend Expired F.B.I. Spy Tools". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved April 12, 2020.
  20. ^ Crocker, India McKinney and Andrew (April 16, 2020). "Yes, Section 215 Expired. Now What?". Electronic Frontier Foundation. Retrieved April 25, 2020.
  21. ^ 2001 Congressional Record, Vol. 147, Page S9368 (September 11, 2001)
  22. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title X, Sec. 1002.
  23. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title II, Sec. 218.
  24. ^ Andrew C. McCarthy, . Retrieved January 23, 2006. The Patriot Debates.
  25. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title II, Sec. 214.
  26. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title II, Sec. 207.
  27. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title II, Sec. 203.
  28. ^ a b USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title II, Sec. 216.
  29. ^ Analysis of Specific USA PATRIOT Act Provisions: Pen Registers, the Internet and Carnivore October 15, 2007, at the Wayback Machine, Electronic Privacy Information Center. Accessed December 4, 2005.
  30. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title II, Sec. 219.
  31. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title II, Sec. 204 & 209.
  32. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title II, Sec. 217.
  33. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title II, Sec. 211.
  34. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title II, Sec. 210.
  35. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title II, Sec. 212.
  36. ^ Field Guidance on New Authorities (Redacted), Federal Bureau of Investigation (hosted by the Electronic Privacy Information Center). Retrieved September 24, 2007.
  37. ^ a b USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title II, Sec. 213.
  38. ^ a b Singel, Ryan (September 26, 2007). "Court Strikes Down 2 Key Patriot Act Provisions". Wired.
  39. ^ a b Keller, Susan Jo (September 27, 2007). "Judge Rules Provisions in Patriot Act to Be Illegal". The New York Times.
  40. ^ United States Department of Justice, The USA PATRIOT Act: Preserving Life and Liberty, pg. 2. Retrieved September 24, 2007. March 9, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  41. ^ James Dempsey, "Why Section 206 Should be Modified" January 13, 2007, at the Wayback Machine (undated), accessed January 7, 2006.
  42. ^ a b . Electronic Frontier Foundation. Archived from the original on June 5, 2006. Retrieved December 21, 2011.
  43. ^ a b USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title II, Sec. 215.
  44. ^ Phillips, Heather A. (May 17, 2006). "Phillips, Heather A., "Libraries and National Security Law: An Examination of the USA Patriot Act". Progressive Librarian, Vol. 25, Summer 2005". Papers.ssrn.com. SSRN 901266. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  45. ^ American Library Association, Resolution on the USA PATRIOT Act and Libraries, enacted June 29, 2005
  46. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title II, Sec. 208.
  47. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title II, Sec. 221.
  48. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title II, Sec. 205.
  49. ^ O'Harrow, Jr., Robert (October 27, 2002). "Six Weeks in Autumn". The Washington Post. p. W06. Retrieved July 11, 2008.[dead link]
  50. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title II, Sec. 224.
  51. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title III, Subtitle A, Sec. 311.
  52. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title III, Subtitle A, Sec. 314.
  53. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title III, Subtitle A, Sec. 317.
  54. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title III, Subtitle A, Sec. 312, 313, 319 & 325.
  55. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title III, Subtitle A, Sec. 327.
  56. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title III, Subtitle A, Sec. 313.
  57. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title III, Subtitle A, Sec. 312.
  58. ^ a b USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title III, Subtitle A, Sec. 319. Amended 31 U.S.C. § 5318(k)(3)(C)(iii)
  59. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title III, Subtitle A, Sec. 325.
  60. ^ Amendment made to 18 U.S.C. § 1956(c)(7)(B)(ii)—for some reason an extra parenthesis was inserted into 18 U.S.C. § 1956(c)(7)(B)(iii), according to Cornell University, this was probably mistakenly added by law makers
  61. ^ Illegal export of controlled munitions is defined in the United States Munitions List, which is part of the Arms Export Control Act (22 U.S.C. § 2778)
  62. ^ See 18 U.S.C. § 922(l) and 18 U.S.C. § 925(d)
  63. ^ Defined in 15 CFR 730–774
  64. ^ a b USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title III, Subtitle A, Sec. 315.
  65. ^ Defined in 18 U.S.C. § 541
  66. ^ Defined in 18 U.S.C. § 1030
  67. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title III, Subtitle A, Sec. 320. Amended 18 U.S.C. § 981(A)(1)(B)
  68. ^ a b USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title III, Subtitle A, Sec. 323. Amended 28 U.S.C. § 2467
  69. ^ Pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 983(j)
  70. ^ 28 U.S.C. § 2467(d)(3)(A)
  71. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title III, Subtitle A, Sec. 328.
  72. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title III, Subtitle A, Sec. 330.
  73. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title III, Subtitle B, Sec. 356.
  74. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title III, Subtitle B, Sec. 365.
  75. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title III, Subtitle B, Sec. 359.
  76. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title III, Subtitle B, Sec. 352, 354 & 365.
  77. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title III, Subtitle B, Sec. 361.
  78. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title III, Subtitle B, Sec. 362.
  79. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title III, Subtitle B, Sec. 352.
  80. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title III, Subtitle B, Sec. 354.
  81. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title III, Subtitle B, Sec. 353.
  82. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title III, Subtitle B, Sec. 364.
  83. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title III, Subtitle B, Sec. 360.
  84. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title III, Subtitle C, Sec. 371.
  85. ^ So defined in 31 U.S.C. § 5313, 31 U.S.C. § 5316 and 31 U.S.C. § 5324
  86. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title III, Subtitle C, Sec. 372. Amended 31 U.S.C. § 5317(c)
  87. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title III, Subtitle C, Sec. 371. Amended 18 U.S.C. § 1960
  88. ^ "The Patriot Act: Justice Department Claims Success". National Public Radio. July 20, 2005.
  89. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title III, Subtitle C, Sec. 374. Amended 18 U.S.C. § 1960
  90. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title III, Subtitle C, Sec. 376. Amended 18 U.S.C. § 1956(c)(7)(D)
  91. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title III, Subtitle C, Sec. 377.
  92. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title IV, Subtitle A, Sec. 401.
  93. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title IV, Subtitle A, Sec. 402.
  94. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title IV, Subtitle A, Sec. 404. Amended the Department of Justice Appropriations Act, 2001.
  95. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title IV, Subtitle A, Sec. 403. Amends 8 U.S.C. § 1105
  96. ^ a b USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title IV, Sec. 403. Final regulations are specified in 22 CFR 40.5
  97. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title IV, Subtitle A, Sec. 405.
  98. ^ National Institute of Standards and Technology, November 14, 2002. "Use of Technology Standards and Interoperable Databases With Machine-Readable, Tamper-Resistant Travel Documents"[permanent dead link] (Appendix A)
  99. ^ NIST Image Group's Fingerprint Research December 26, 2007, at the Wayback Machine, see the section "NIST Patriot Act Work" (accessed June 28, 2006)
  100. ^ a b c d USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title IV, Subtitle B, Sec. 411.
  101. ^ As specified in section 140(d)(2) of the Foreign Relations Authorization Act, Fiscal Years 1988 and 1989; see 22 U.S.C. § 2656f(d)(2)
  102. ^ a b c d e USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title IV, Subtitle B, Sec. 412. A new section was created by the Act—8 U.S.C. § 1226a
  103. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title IV, Subtitle B, Sec. 414.
  104. ^ 8 U.S.C. § 1372(a)
  105. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title IV, Subtitle B, Sec. 416.
  106. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title IV, Subtitle B, Sec. 417.
  107. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title IV, Subtitle B, Sec. 418.
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  111. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title V, Sec 502. Amended 22 U.S.C. § 2708(b)(5)
  112. ^ USA PATRIOT Act (U.S. H.R. 3162, Public Law 107-56), Title V, Sec 502. Amended 22 U.S.C. § 2708(b)(6)
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Further reading edit

Law review articles edit

  • Chesney, Robert M. "The Sleeper Scenario: Terrorism Support Laws and the Demands of Prevention". Harvard Journal on Legislation (2005).
  • Gouvin, Eric J. (2003). . Baylor Law Review. 55: 955. Archived from the original on September 7, 2004.
  • Kerr, Orin. "Digital Evidence and the New Criminal Procedure". Columbia Law Review (2005).
  • Lecours, Alain P.
  • Mojuyé, Benjamin, "What Banks Need to Know About the PATRIOT Act", 124 Banking L.J. 258, 258 (2007).
  • Slovove, Daniel J. "Fourth Amendment Codification and Professor Kerr's Misguided Call for Judicial Deference". Fordham Law Review 74 (2005).
  • Van Bergen, Jennifer. "In the Absence of Democracy: The Designation and Material Support Provisions of the Anti-Terrorism Laws". Cardozo Pub. [?] Law Policy & Ethics Journal 2 (2003): 107.
  • Wong, Kam C. "Implementing the USA PATRIOT Act: A Case Study of the Student and Exchange Visitor Information System (SEVIS)". Brigham Young University Education and Law Journal 2 (2006).
  • Wong, Kam C. "The making of the USA PATRIOT Act I: Legislative Process and Dynamics". International Journal of the Sociology of Law 34.3 (2006): 179–219.
  • Wong, Kam C. "The making of the USA PATRIOT ACT II: Public Sentiments, Legislative Climate, Political Gamesmanship, Media Patriotism". International Journal of the Sociology of Law 34.2 (2006): 105–140.
  • Wong, Kam C. "USA PATRIOT Act and a Policy of Alienation". Michigan Journal of Minority Rights 1 (2006): 1–44.
  • Wong, Kam C. "USA PATRIOT Act: Some Unanswered Questions". International Journal of the Sociology of Law 43.1 (2006): 1–41.

Books edit

  • Brasch, Walter. America's Unpatriotic Acts: The Federal Government's Violation of Constitutional and Civil Rights. Peter Lang Publishing, 2005. ISBN 0-8204-7608-0 (A long list of civil rights abuse claims by the Bush Administration inside the United States and other countries.)
  • Cole, Dave, and James X. Dempsey. Terrorism and the Constitution: Sacrificing Civil Liberties in the Name of National Security. 2nd ed. New York: W. W. Norton & Co., 2002. ISBN 1-56584-782-2. (Full discussion of prior legislative history of the Act, going back more than ten years.)
  • Etzioni, Amitai. How Patriotic is the Patriot Act?: Freedom Versus Security in the Age of Terrorism October 19, 2018, at the Wayback Machine. New York, NY: Routledge, 2004. ISBN 0-415-95047-3
  • Harvey, Robert and Hélène Volat. De l'exception à la règle. USA PATRIOT Act . Paris: Lignes, 2006. 215 p.
  • Herman, Susan N. Taking Liberties: The War on Terror and the Erosion of American Democracy. Oxford University Press, 2011. ISBN 978-0-19-978254-3.
  • Mailman, Stanley, Jeralyn Merritt, Theresa M. B. Van Vliet, and Stephen Yale-Loehr. Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism (USA Patriot Act) Act of 2001: An Analysis. Newark, NJ and San Francisco, CA: Matthew Bender & Co., Inc. (a member of the LexisNexis Group), 2002. (Rel.1-3/02 Pub. 1271) ("An expert analysis of the significant changes in the new USA Patriot Act of 2001 [which]...track[s] the legislation by section, explaining both the changes and their potential impact with respect to: enhanced surveillance procedures;money laundering and financial crimes; protecting the border; investigation of terrorism; information sharing among federal and state authorities; enhanced criminal laws and penalties for terrorism offenses, and more.")
  • Michaels, C. William. No Greater Threat: America Since September 11 and the Rise of the National Security State. Algora Publishing, Completely Updated for 2005. ISBN 0-87586-155-5. (Covers all ten titles of the USA PATRIOT Act; Includes review and analysis of: Homeland Security Act, "PATRIOT Act II," Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act, Supreme Court decisions, "National Strategy" documents, 9-11 Commission recommendations, and various ongoing developments nationally and internationally in the "war on terrorism.")
  • Phelan, James Clancy; PATRIOT ACT, Hachette, ISBN 978-0-7336-2283-0; 2007.
  • Van Bergen, Jennifer. The Twilight of Democracy: The Bush Plan for America. Common Courage Press, 2004. ISBN 1-56751-292-5. (A constitutional analysis for the general public of the USA PATRIOT Act and other administrative measures, with the first half of the book spent on principles of democracy and constitutional law.)
  • Wheeler, Theodore. In Our Other Lives. (New York: Little A, 2020.) A fiction exploration of the effect an NSA-FBI investigation has on the family of a young man who has gone missing in Pakistan. ISBN 978-1542016513
  • Wong, Kam C. The Impact of USA Patriot Act on American Society: An Evidence Based Assessment (N.Y.: Nova Press, 2007) (In print)
  • Wong, Kam C. The Making of USA Patriot Act: Legislation, Implementation, Impact (Beijing: China Law Press, 2007) (In print)

External links edit

  • USA PATRIOT Act as amended (PDF/details) in the GPO Statute Compilations collection
  • USA PATRIOT Act as enacted (details) in the US Statutes at Large
  • USA PATRIOT ACT on Congress.gov
  • USA PATRIOT Improvement and Reauthorization Act of 2005 on Congress.gov

Supportive views edit

  • "The USA PATRIOT Act: Preserving Life and Liberty" by the Department of Justice
  • Lowry, Rich (August 28, 2003). . National Review. Archived from the original on August 29, 2003.
  • , JURIST

Critical views edit

  • , JURIST
  • American Library Association's resolution on the PATRIOT Act
  • . PEN American Center. Archived from the original on March 1, 2005.

Other edit

  • National Security and Freedom December 7, 2009, at the Wayback Machine A series of short readings exploring historical and current issues of national security from Constitutional Rights Foundation.
  • Patriot Act news and resources, JURIST
  • Phillips, Heather A., "Libraries and National Security Law: An Examination of the USA Patriot Act". Progressive Librarian, Vol. 25, Summer 2005

patriot, other, uses, disambiguation, patriot, redirects, here, other, uses, patriot, disambiguation, patriot, commonly, known, landmark, united, states, congress, signed, into, president, george, bush, formal, name, statute, uniting, strengthening, america, p. For other uses see Patriot Act disambiguation PATRIOT redirects here For other uses see Patriot disambiguation The USA PATRIOT Act commonly known as the Patriot Act was a landmark Act of the United States Congress signed into law by President George W Bush The formal name of the statute is the Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism USA PATRIOT Act of 2001 and the commonly used short name is a contrived acronym that is embedded in the name set forth in the statute 1 USA PATRIOT ActOther short titlesUniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism Act of 2001Long titleAn Act to deter and punish terrorist acts in the United States and across the globe to enhance law enforcement investigatory tools and for other purposes Acronyms colloquial USA PATRIOT ActNicknamesPatriot ActEnacted bythe 107th United States CongressEffectiveOctober 26 2001CitationsPublic lawPub L Tooltip Public Law United States 107 56 text PDF Statutes at Large115 Stat 272CodificationActs amendedElectronic Communications Privacy ActComputer Fraud and Abuse ActForeign Intelligence Surveillance ActFamily Educational Rights and Privacy ActMoney Laundering Control ActBank Secrecy ActRight to Financial Privacy ActFair Credit Reporting ActImmigration and Nationality Act of 1952Victims of Crime Act of 1984Telemarketing and Consumer Fraud and Abuse Prevention ActTitles amended8 12 15 18 20 31 42 47 49 50U S C sections created18 USC 2712 31 USC 5318A 15 USC 1681v 8 USC 1226A 18 USC 1993 18 USC 2339 18 USC 175b 50 USC 403 5b 51 USC 5103aU S C sections amended8 USC 1105 8 USC 1182g 8 USC 1189 8 USC 1202 12 USC 1828 12 USC 3414 15 USC 1681a 15 USC 6102 15 USC 6106 18 USC 7 18 USC 81 18 USC 175 18 USC 470 18 USC 471 18 USC 472 18 USC 473 18 USC 474 18 USC 476 18 USC 477 18 USC 478 18 USC 479 18 USC 480 18 USC 481 18 USC 484 18 USC 493 18 USC 917 18 USC 930 18 USC 981 18 USC 1029 18 USC 1030 18 USC 1362 18 USC 1363 18 USC 1366 18 USC 1956 18 USC 1960 18 USC 1961 18 USC 1992 18 USC 2155 18 USC 2325 18 USC 2331 18 USC 2332e 18 USC 2339A 18 USC 2339B 18 USC 2340A 18 USC 2510 18 USC 2511 18 USC 2516 18 USC 2517 18 USC 2520 18 USC 2702 18 USC 2703 18 USC 2707 18 USC 2709 18 USC 2711 18 USC 3056 18 USC 3077 18 USC 3103 18 USC 3121 18 USC 3123 18 USC 3124 18 USC 3127 18 USC 3286 18 USC 3583 20 USC 1232g 20 USC 9007 31 USC 310 redesignated 31 USC 5311 31 USC 5312 31 USC 5317 31 USC 5318 31 USC 5319 31 USC 5321 31 USC 5322 31 USC 5324 31 USC 5330 31 USC 5331 31 USC 5332 31 USC 5341 42 USC 2284 42 USC 2284 42 USC 3796 42 USC 3796h 42 USC 10601 42 USC 10602 42 USC 10603 42 USC 10603b 42 USC 14601 42 USC 14135A 47 USC 551 49 USC 31305 49 USC 46504 49 USC 46505 49 USC 60123 50 USC 403 3c 50 USC 401a 50 USC 1702 50 USC 1801 50 USC 1803 50 USC 1804 50 USC 1805 50 USC 1806 50 USC 1823 50 USC 1824 50 USC 1842 50 USC 1861 50 USC 1862 50 USC 1863Legislative historyIntroduced in the House of Representatives as H R 3162 by Jim Sensenbrenner R WI on October 23 2001Committee consideration by United States House Committee on the Judiciary Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence Committee on Financial Services Committee on International Relations Committee on Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Telecommunications and the Internet Committee on Education and the Workforce Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure Committee on Armed ServicesPassed the House on October 24 2001 Yeas 357 Nays 66 Passed the Senate on October 25 2001 Yeas 98 Nays 1 Signed into law by President George W Bush on October 26 2001Major amendmentsUSA Freedom ActThe Patriot Act was enacted following the September 11 attacks and the 2001 anthrax attacks with the stated goal of tightening U S national security particularly as it related to foreign terrorism In general the act included three main provisions Expanded surveillance abilities of law enforcement including by tapping domestic and international phones Easier interagency communication to allow federal agencies to more effectively use all available resources in counterterrorism efforts and Increased penalties for terrorism crimes and an expanded list of activities which would qualify for terrorism charges The law is extremely controversial due to its authorization of indefinite detention without trial of immigrants and due to the permission given to law enforcement to search property and records without the owner s consent or knowledge Since its passage several legal challenges have been brought against the act and federal courts have ruled that a number of provisions are unconstitutional It contains many sunset provisions beginning December 31 2005 approximately four years after its passage Before the sunset date an extension was passed for four years which kept most of the law intact In May 2011 President Barack Obama signed the PATRIOT Sunset Extensions Act of 2011 which extended three provisions 2 These provisions were modified and extended until 2019 by the USA Freedom Act passed in 2015 3 In 2020 efforts to extend the provisions were not passed by the House of Representatives and as such the law has expired 4 Contents 1 History 2 Legislative history 3 Titles 3 1 Title I Enhancing domestic security against terrorism 3 2 Title II Enhanced surveillance procedures 3 3 Title III Anti money laundering to prevent terrorism 3 4 Title IV Border security 3 5 Title V Removing obstacles to investigating terrorism 3 6 Title VI Victims and families of victims of terrorism 3 7 Title VII Increased information sharing for critical infrastructure protection 3 8 Title VIII Terrorism criminal law 3 9 Title IX Improved intelligence 3 10 Title X Miscellaneous 4 Section expirations 5 Controversy 5 1 Sami Al Arian 6 Reauthorizations 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 9 1 Law review articles 9 2 Books 10 External links 10 1 Supportive views 10 2 Critical views 10 3 OtherHistory editMain article History of the Patriot Act The Patriot Act was enacted in direct response to the September 11 attacks on the World Trade Center in New York City and the Pentagon in Arlington County Virginia and the 2001 anthrax attacks with the stated goal of dramatically strengthening national security On October 23 2001 U S Representative Jim Sensenbrenner R WI introduced House bill H R 3162 which incorporated provisions from a previously sponsored House bill and a Senate bill introduced earlier in the month 5 The next day October 24 the Act passed the House by a vote of 357 66 6 with Democrats comprising the overwhelming majority of no votes The three Republicans voting no were Robert Ney of Ohio Butch Otter of Idaho and Ron Paul of Texas On October 25 the Act passed the Senate with a vote of 98 1 Russ Feingold D WI voted no 7 It is not uncommon to see votes go toward far or center right parties policies after a spike in terrorist activity In this case due to the passing of the act we can see the stronger security platforms that resonate with citizens during periods of heightened anxiety following terrorist attacks compared with more moderate right parties Wheatley et al 8 On October 26 then US President George Bush signed the Patriot Act into law 9 Opponents of the law have criticized its provision for indefinite detention of immigrants permission to law enforcement to search a home or business without the owner s or the occupant s consent or knowledge under certain circumstances the expanded use of National Security Letters which allows the Federal Bureau of Investigation FBI to search telephone email and financial records without a court order and the expanded access of law enforcement agencies to business records including library and financial records Since its passage several court challenges have been brought against the act and federal courts have ruled that a number of provisions are unconstitutional citation needed Many of the act s provisions were set to expire on December 31 2005 approximately four years after its enactment In the months preceding the sunset date supporters of the act pushed to make those provisions permanent while critics sought to revise various sections to enhance civil liberties protections In July 2005 the U S Senate passed a reauthorization bill with substantial changes to several of the act s sections while the House reauthorization bill kept most of the act s original language The two bills were then reconciled in a conference committee criticized by senators from both the Republican and Democratic parties for ignoring civil liberty concerns 10 The bill which removed most of the changes from the Senate version passed Congress on March 2 2006 and was signed by President Bush on March 9 and 10 of that year On May 11 2012 President Barack Obama signed the PATRIOT Sunsets Extension Act of 2011 a four year extension of three key provisions in the Act 11 roving wiretaps searches of business records and conducting surveillance of lone wolves individuals suspected of terrorist related activities not linked to terrorist groups 12 After reauthorization bills failed to pass Congress parts of the Patriot Act expired on June 1 2015 13 The USA Freedom Act which became law on June 2 2015 reenacted these expired sections through 2019 14 However Section 215 of the law was amended to disallow the National Security Agency NSA to continue its mass phone data collection program 14 Instead phone companies will retain the data and the NSA can obtain information about targeted individuals with a federal search warrant 14 In November 2019 the renewal of the Patriot Act was included in the stop gap government funding bill 15 The expired provisions required renewal by March 15 2020 16 The Senate passed a 77 day extension in March 2020 but the House of Representatives did not pass the legislation before departing for recess on March 27 2020 Instead the Patriot Act was split into two measures as a means of explaining to the public that the Patriot Act would no longer openly be in effect 17 18 19 20 Legislative history editFinal House vote Vote by Party Yea NayRepublicans 211 3Democrats 145 62Independents 1 1Total 357 66Not voting 6 4Final Senate vote Vote by party Yea NayRepublicans 49 0Democrats 48 1Independents 1 0Total 98 1Not voting 0 1Titles edit source source source source source source President George W Bush in October 2001 elucidating the government s rationale behind the USA PATRIOT Act before signing into law Title I Enhancing domestic security against terrorism edit Main article Title I of the Patriot Act Title I of the Patriot Act authorizes measures to enhance the ability of domestic security services to prevent terrorism The title established a fund for counter terrorist activities and increased funding for the Terrorist Screening Center which is administered by the FBI The military was authorized to provide assistance in some situations that involve weapons of mass destruction when so requested by the Attorney General The National Electronic Crime Task Force was expanded along with the President s authority and abilities in cases of terrorism The title also condemned the discrimination against Arab and Muslim Americans that happened soon after the September 11 terrorist attacks The impetus for many of the provisions came from earlier bills for instance the condemnation of discrimination was originally proposed by Senator Tom Harkin D IA in an amendment to the Combatting Terrorism Act of 2001 though in a different form It originally included the prayer of Cardinal Theodore McCarrick the Archbishop of Washington in a Mass on September 12 2001 for our Nation and the victims in the immediate aftermath of the terrorist hijackings and attacks in New York City Washington D C and Pennsylvania reminds all Americans that We must seek the guilty and not strike out against the innocent or we become like them who are without moral guidance or proper direction 21 Further condemnation of racial vilification and violence is also spelled out in Title X where there was condemnation of such activities against Sikh Americans who were mistaken for Muslims after the September 11 terrorist attack 22 Title II Enhanced surveillance procedures edit Main article Title II of the Patriot Act Title II is titled Enhanced Surveillance Procedures and covers all aspects of the surveillance of suspected terrorists those suspected of engaging in computer fraud or abuse and agents of a foreign power who are engaged in clandestine activities It primarily made amendments to FISA and the ECPA furthermore many of the most controversial aspects of the USA PATRIOT Act reside in this title In particular the title allows government agencies to gather foreign intelligence information from both U S and non U S citizens and changed FISA to make gaining foreign intelligence information the significant purpose of FISA based surveillance where previously it had been the primary purpose 23 The change in definition was meant to remove a legal wall between criminal investigations and surveillance for the purposes of gathering foreign intelligence which hampered investigations when criminal and foreign surveillance overlapped 24 However that this wall even existed was found by the Federal Surveillance Court of Review to have actually been a long held misinterpretation by government agencies Also removed was the statutory requirement that the government prove a surveillance target under FISA is a non U S citizen and agent of a foreign power though it did require that any investigations must not be undertaken on citizens who are carrying out activities protected by the First Amendment 25 The title also expanded the duration of FISA physical search and surveillance orders 26 and gave authorities the ability to share information gathered before a federal grand jury with other agencies 27 The scope and availability of wiretapping and surveillance orders were expanded under Title II Wiretaps were expanded to include addressing and routing information to allow surveillance of packet switched networks 28 the Electronic Privacy Information Center EPIC objected to this arguing that it does not take into account email or web addresses which often contain content in the address information 29 The Act allowed any district court judge in the United States to issue such surveillance orders 28 and search warrants for terrorism investigations 30 Search warrants were also expanded with the Act amending Title III of the Stored Communications Access Act to allow the FBI to gain access to stored voicemail through a search warrant rather than through the more stringent wiretap laws 31 Various provisions allowed for the disclosure of electronic communications to law enforcement agencies Those who operate or own a protected computer can give permission for authorities to intercept communications carried out on the machine thus bypassing the requirements of the Wiretap statute 32 The definition of a protected computer is defined in 18 U S C 1030 e 2 and broadly encompasses those computers used in interstate or foreign commerce or communication including ones located outside the United States The law governing obligatory and voluntary disclosure of customer communications by cable companies was altered to allow agencies to demand such communications under U S C Title 18 provisions relating to the disclosure of electronic communications chapter 119 pen registers and trap and trace devices chapter 206 and stored communications 121 though it excluded the disclosure of cable subscriber viewing habits 33 Subpoenas issued to Internet Service Providers were expanded to include not only the name address local and long distance telephone toll billing records telephone number or other subscriber number or identity and length of service of a subscriber but also session times and durations types of services used communication device address information e g IP addresses payment method and bank account and credit card numbers 34 Communication providers are also allowed to disclose customer records or communications if they suspect there is a danger to life and limb 35 Title II established three very controversial provisions sneak and peek warrants roving wiretaps and the ability of the FBI to gain access to documents that reveal the patterns of U S citizens The so called sneak and peek law allowed for delayed notification of the execution of search warrants The period before which the FBI must notify the recipients of the order was unspecified in the Act the FBI field manual says that it is a flexible standard 36 and it may be extended at the court s discretion 37 These sneak and peek provisions were struck down by judge Ann Aiken on September 26 2007 after a Portland attorney Brandon Mayfield was wrongly jailed because of the searches The court found the searches to violate the provision that prohibits unreasonable searches in the Fourth Amendment to the U S Constitution 38 39 Roving wiretaps are wiretap orders that do not need to specify all common carriers and third parties in a surveillance court order These are seen as important by the Department of Justice because they believe that terrorists can exploit wiretap orders by rapidly changing locations and communication devices such as cell phones 40 while opponents see it as violating the particularity clause of the Fourth Amendment 41 42 Another highly controversial provision is one that allows the FBI to make an order requiring the production of any tangible things including books records papers documents and other items for an investigation to protect against international terrorism or clandestine intelligence activities provided that such investigation of a United States person is not conducted solely upon the basis of activities protected by the first amendment to the Constitution 43 Though it was not targeted directly at libraries the American Library Association ALA in particular opposed this provision 44 In a resolution passed on June 29 2005 they stated that Section 215 of the USA PATRIOT Act allows the government to secretly request and obtain library records for large numbers of individuals without any reason to believe they are involved in illegal activity 45 The title also covers a number of other miscellaneous provisions including the expansion of the number of FISC judges from seven to eleven three of which must reside within 20 miles 32 km of the District of Columbia 46 trade Sanctions against North Korea and Taliban controlled Afghanistan 47 and the employment of translators by the FBI 48 At the insistence of Republican Representative Richard Armey 49 the Act had a number of sunset provisions built in which were originally set to expire on December 31 2005 The sunset provision of the Act also took into account any ongoing foreign intelligence investigations and allowed them to continue once the sections had expired 50 The provisions that were to expire are below Title III Anti money laundering to prevent terrorism edit Main article Title III of the Patriot Act Title III of the Act titled International Money Laundering Abatement and Financial Anti Terrorism Act of 2001 is intended to facilitate the prevention detection and prosecution of international money laundering and the financing of terrorism It primarily amends portions of the Money Laundering Control Act of 1986 MLCA and the Bank Secrecy Act of 1970 BSA It was divided into three subtitles The first subtitle deals primarily with strengthening banking rules against money laundering especially on the international stage The second subtitle attempts to improve communication between law enforcement agencies and financial institutions as well as expanding recordkeeping and reporting requirements The third subtitle deals with currency smuggling and counterfeiting including quadrupling the maximum penalty for counterfeiting foreign currency The first subtitle also tightened the recordkeeping requirements for financial institutions making them record the aggregate amounts of transactions processed from areas of the world where money laundering is a concern to the U S government It even made institutions put into place reasonable steps to identify beneficial owners of bank accounts and those who are authorized to use or route funds through payable through accounts 51 The U S Department of Treasury was charged with formulating regulations intended to foster information sharing between financial institutions to prevent money laundering 52 Along with expanding record keeping requirements it put new regulations into place to make it easier for authorities to identify money laundering activities and to make it harder for money launderers to mask their identities 53 If money laundering was uncovered the subtitle legislated for the forfeiture of assets of those suspected of doing the money laundering 54 In an effort to encourage institutions to take steps that would reduce money laundering the Treasury was given authority to block mergers of bank holding companies and banks with other banks and bank holding companies that had a bad history of preventing money laundering Similarly mergers between insured depository institutions and non insured depository institutions that have a bad track record in combating money laundering could be blocked 55 Restrictions were placed on accounts and foreign banks It prohibited shell banks that are not an affiliate of a bank that has a physical presence in the U S or that are not subject to supervision by a banking authority in a non U S country It also prohibits or restricts the use of certain accounts held at financial institutions 56 Financial institutions must now undertake steps to identify the owners of any privately owned bank outside the U S who have a correspondent account with them along with the interests of each of the owners in the bank It is expected that additional scrutiny will be applied by the U S institution to such banks to make sure they are not engaging in money laundering Banks must identify all the nominal and beneficial owners of any private bank account opened and maintained in the U S by non U S citizens There is also an expectation that they must undertake enhanced scrutiny of the account if it is owned by or is being maintained on behalf of any senior political figure where there is reasonable suspicion of corruption 57 Any deposits made from within the U S into foreign banks are now deemed to have been deposited into any interbank account the foreign bank may have in the U S Thus any restraining order seizure warrant or arrest warrant may be made against the funds in the interbank account held at a U S financial institution up to the amount deposited in the account at the foreign bank 58 Restrictions were placed on the use of internal bank concentration accounts because such accounts do not provide an effective audit trail for transactions and this may be used to facilitate money laundering Financial institutions are prohibited from allowing clients to specifically direct them to move funds into out of or through a concentration account and they are also prohibited from informing their clients about the existence of such accounts Financial institutions are not allowed to provide any information to clients that may identify such internal accounts 59 Financial institutions are required to document and follow methods of identifying where the funds are for each customer in a concentration account that co mingles funds belonging to one or more customers The definition of money laundering was expanded to include making a financial transaction in the U S in order to commit a violent crime 60 the bribery of public officials and fraudulent dealing with public funds the smuggling or illegal export of controlled munition 61 and the importation or bringing in of any firearm or ammunition not authorized by the U S Attorney General 62 and the smuggling of any item controlled under the Export Administration Regulations 63 64 It also includes any offense where the U S would be obligated under a mutual treaty with a foreign nation to extradite a person or where the U S would need to submit a case against a person for prosecution because of the treaty the import of falsely classified goods 65 computer crime 66 and any felony violation of the Foreign Agents Registration Act of 1938 64 It also allows the forfeiture of any property within the jurisdiction of the United States that was gained as the result of an offense against a foreign nation that involves the manufacture importation sale or distribution of a controlled substance 67 Foreign nations may now seek to have a forfeiture or judgment notification enforced by a district court of the United States 68 This is done through new legislation that specifies how the U S government may apply for a restraining order 69 to preserve the availability of property which is subject to a foreign forfeiture or confiscation judgement 70 In taking into consideration such an application emphasis is placed on the ability of a foreign court to follow due process 68 The Act also requires the Secretary of Treasury to take all reasonable steps to encourage foreign governments make it a requirement to include the name of the originator in wire transfer instructions sent to the United States and other countries with the information to remain with the transfer from its origination until the point of disbursement 71 The Secretary was also ordered to encourage international cooperation in investigations of money laundering financial crimes and the finances of terrorist groups 72 The Act also introduced criminal penalties for corrupt officialdom An official or employee of the government who acts corruptly as well as the person who induces the corrupt act in the carrying out of their official duties will be fined by an amount that is not more than three times the monetary equivalent of the bribe in question Alternatively they may be imprisoned for not more than 15 years or they may be fined and imprisoned Penalties apply to financial institutions who do not comply with an order to terminate any corresponding accounts within 10 days of being so ordered by the Attorney General or the Secretary of Treasury The financial institution can be fined US10 000 for each day the account remains open after the 10 day limit has expired 58 The second annotation made a number of modifications to the BSA in an attempt to make it harder for money launderers to operate and easier for law enforcement and regulatory agencies to police money laundering operations One amendment made to the BSA was to allow the designated officer or agency who receives suspicious activity reports to notify U S intelligence agencies 73 A number of amendments were made to address issues related to record keeping and financial reporting One measure was a new requirement that anyone who does business file a report for any coin and foreign currency receipts that are over US 10 000 and made it illegal to structure transactions in a manner that evades the BSA s reporting requirements 74 To make it easier for authorities to regulate and investigate anti money laundering operations Money Services Businesses MSBs those who operate informal value transfer systems outside of the mainstream financial system were included in the definition of a financial institution 75 The BSA was amended to make it mandatory to report suspicious transactions and an attempt was made to make such reporting easier for financial institutions 76 FinCEN was made a bureau of the United States Department of Treasury 77 and the creation of a secure network to be used by financial institutions to report suspicious transactions and to provide alerts of relevant suspicious activities was ordered 78 Along with these reporting requirements a considerable number of provisions relate to the prevention and prosecution of money laundering 79 Financial institutions were ordered to establish anti money laundering programs and the BSA was amended to better define anti money laundering strategy 80 Also increased were civil and criminal penalties for money laundering and the introduction of penalties for violations of geographic targeting orders and certain record keeping requirements 81 A number of other amendments to the BSA were made through subtitle B including granting the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System power to authorize personnel to act as law enforcement officers to protect the premises grounds property and personnel of any U S National reserve bank and allowing the Board to delegate this authority to U S Federal reserve bank 82 Another measure instructed United States Executive Directors of international financial institutions to use their voice and vote to support any country that has taken action to support the U S s War on Terrorism Executive Directors are now required to provide ongoing auditing of disbursements made from their institutions to ensure that no funds are paid to persons who commit threaten to commit or support terrorism 83 The third subtitle deals with currency crimes Largely because of the effectiveness of the BSA money launders had been avoiding traditional financial institutions to launder money and were using cash based businesses to avoid them A new effort was made to stop the laundering of money through bulk currency movements mainly focusing on the confiscation of criminal proceeds and the increase in penalties for money laundering Congress found that a criminal offense of merely evading the reporting of money transfers was insufficient and decided that it would be better if the smuggling of the bulk currency itself was the offense Therefore the BSA was amended to make it a criminal offense to evade currency reporting by concealing more than US 10 000 on any person or through any luggage merchandise or other container that moves into or out of the U S The penalty for such an offense is up to 5 years imprisonment and the forfeiture of any property up to the amount that was being smuggled 84 It also made the civil and criminal penalty violations of currency reporting cases 85 be the forfeiture of all a defendant s property that was involved in the offense and any property traceable to the defendant 86 The Act prohibits and penalizes those who run unlicensed money transmitting businesses 87 In 2005 this provision of the USA PATRIOT Act was used to prosecute Yehuda Abraham for helping to arrange money transfers for British arms dealer Hemant Lakhani who was arrested in August 2003 after being caught in a government sting Lakhani had tried to sell a missile to an FBI agent posing as a Somali militant 88 The definition of counterfeiting was expanded to encompass analog digital or electronic image reproductions and it was made an offense to own such a reproduction device Penalties were increased to 20 years imprisonment 89 Money laundering unlawful activities was expanded to include the provision of material support or resources to designated foreign terrorist organizations 90 The Act specifies that anyone who commits or conspires to undertake a fraudulent activity outside the jurisdiction of the United States and which would be an offense in the U S will be prosecuted under 18 U S C 1029 which deals with fraud and related activity in connection with access devices 91 Title IV Border security edit Main article Title IV of the Patriot Act Title IV of the Patriot Act amends the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952 to give more law enforcement and investigative power to the U S Attorney General and to the Immigration and Naturalization Service INS The Attorney General was authorized to waive any cap on the number of full time employees FTEs assigned to the INS on the Northern border of the United States 92 Enough funds were set aside to triple the maximum number of U S Border Patrol personnel Customs Service personnel and INS inspectors along with an additional US 50 000 000 funding for the INS and the U S Customs Service to improve technology for monitoring the Northern Border and acquiring additional equipment at the Canadian northern border 93 The INS was also given the authority to authorize overtime payments of up to an extra US 30 000 a year to INS employees 94 Access was given to the U S State Department and the INS to criminal background information contained in the National Crime Information Center s Interstate Identification Index NCIC III Wanted Persons File and any other files maintained by the National Crime Information Center to determine whether visa applicants and applicants could be admitted to the U S 95 The U S Department of State was required to form final regulations governing the procedures for taking fingerprints and the conditions with which the department was allowed to use this information 96 Additionally the National Institute of Standards and Technology NIST was ordered to develop a technology standard to verify the identity of persons applying for a United States visa 96 The reason was to make the standard the technology basis for a cross agency the cross platform electronic system used for conducting background checks confirming identities and ensuring that people have not received visas under different names 97 This report was released on November 13 2002 98 however according to NIST this was later determined that the fingerprint system used was not as accurate as current state of the art fingerprint systems and is approximately equivalent to commercial fingerprint systems available in 1998 99 This report was later superseded by section 303 a of the Enhanced Border Security and Visa Entry Reform Act of 2002 Under Subtitle B various definitions relating to terrorism were altered and expanded The INA was retroactively amended to disallow aliens who are part of or representatives of a foreign organization or any group who endorses acts of terrorism from entering the U S This restriction also included the family of such aliens 100 The definition of terrorist activity was strengthened to include actions involving the use of any dangerous device and not just explosives and firearms 100 To engage in terrorist activity is defined as committing inciting to commit or planning and preparing to undertake an act of terrorism Included in this definition is the gathering of intelligence information on potential terrorist targets the solicitation of funds for a terrorist organization or the solicitation of others to undertake acts of terrorism Those who provide knowing assistance to a person who is planning to perform such activities are defined as undertaking terrorist activities Such assistance includes affording material support including a safe house transportation communications funds transfer of funds or other material financial benefit false documentation or identification weapons including chemical biological or radiological weapons explosives or training to perform the terrorist act 100 The INA criteria for making a decision to designate an organization as a terrorist organization was amended to include the definition of a terrorist act 101 Though the amendments to these definitions are retroactive it does not mean that it can be applied to members who joined an organization but since left before it was designated to be a terrorist organization under 8 U S C 1189 by the Secretary of State 100 The Act amended the INA to add new provisions enforcing mandatory detention laws These apply to any alien who is engaged in terrorism or who is engaged in an activity that endangers U S national security It also applies to those who are inadmissible or who must be deported because it is certified they are attempting to enter to undertake illegal espionage are exporting goods technology or sensitive information illegally or are attempting to control or overthrow the government or have or will have engaged in terrorist activities 102 The Attorney General or the Attorney General s deputy may maintain custody of such aliens until they are removed from the U S unless it is no longer deemed they should be removed in which case they are released The alien can be detained for up to 90 days but can be held up to six months after it is deemed that they are a national security threat However the alien must be charged with a crime or removal proceedings start no longer than seven days after the alien s detention otherwise the alien will be released However such detentions must be reviewed every six months by the Attorney General who can then decide to revoke it unless prevented from doing so by law Every six months the alien may apply in writing for the certification to be reconsidered 102 Judicial review of any action or decision relating to this section including judicial review of the merits of a certification can be held under habeas corpus proceedings Such proceedings can be initiated by an application filed with the United States Supreme Court by any justice of the Supreme Court by any circuit judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit or by any district court otherwise having jurisdiction to entertain the application The final order is subject to appeal to the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit 102 Provisions were also made for a report to be required every six months of such decisions from the U S Attorney General to the Committee on the Judiciary of the House of Representatives and the Committee on the Judiciary of the Senate 102 A sense of Congress was given that the U S Secretary of State should expedite the full implementation of the integrated entry and exit data system for airports seaports and land border ports of entry specified in the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996 IIRIRA They also found that the U S Attorney General should immediately start the Integrated Entry and Exit Data System Task Force specified in section 3 of the Immigration and Naturalization Service Data Management Improvement Act of 2000 Congress wanted the primary focus of development of the entry exit data system was to be on the utilization of biometric technology and the development of tamper resistant documents readable at ports of entry They also wanted the system to be able to interface with existing law enforcement databases 103 The Attorney General was ordered to implement and expand the foreign student monitoring program that was established under section 641 a of the IIRIRA 104 which records the date and port of entry of each foreign student The program was expanded to include other approved educational institutions including air flight schools language training schools or vocational schools that are approved by the Attorney General in consultation with the Secretary of Education and the Secretary of State US 36 800 000 was appropriated for the Department of Justice to spend on implementing the program 105 The Secretary of State was ordered to audit and report back to Congress on the Visa waiver program specified under 8 U S C 1187 for each fiscal year until September 30 2007 The Secretary was also ordered to check for the implementation of precautionary measures to prevent the counterfeiting and theft of passports as well as ascertain that countries designated under the visa waiver program have established a program to develop tamper resistant passports 106 The Secretary was also ordered to report back to Congress on whether consulate shopping was a problem 107 The last subtitle which was introduced by Senators John Conyers and Patrick Leahy allows for the preservation of immigration benefits for victims of terrorism and the families of victims of terrorism 108 They recognized that some families through no fault of their own would either be ineligible for permanent residence in the United States because of being unable to make important deadlines because of the September 11 terrorist attacks or had become ineligible to apply for special immigration status because their loved one died in the attacks 109 Title V Removing obstacles to investigating terrorism edit Main article Title V of the Patriot Act Title V allows the U S Attorney General to pay rewards pursuant of advertisements for assistance to the Department of Justice to combat terrorism and prevent terrorist acts though amounts over US250 000 may not be made or offered without the personal approval of the Attorney General or President and once the award is approved the Attorney General must give written notice to the Chairman and ranking minority members of the Committee on Appropriations and the Judiciary of the Senate and of the House of Representatives 110 The State Department Basic Authorities Act of 1956 was amended to allow the U S State Department to offer rewards in consultation with the Attorney General for the full or significant dismantling of any terrorist organization 111 and to identify any key leaders of terrorist organizations 112 The U S Secretary of State was given authority to pay greater than US5 million if he so determines it would prevent terrorist actions against the United States and Canada 113 The DNA Analysis Backlog Elimination Act was amended to include terrorism or crimes of violence in the list of qualifying Federal offenses 114 Another perceived obstacle was to allow federal agencies to share information with federal law enforcement agencies Thus the act now allows federal officers who acquire information through electronic surveillance or physical searches to consult with federal law enforcement officers to coordinate efforts to investigate or protect against potential or actual attacks sabotage or international terrorism or clandestine intelligence activities by an intelligence service or network of a foreign power 115 U S Secret Service jurisdiction was extended to investigate computer fraud access device frauds false identification documents or devices or any fraudulent activities against U S financial institutions 116 The General Education Provisions Act was amended to allow the U S Attorney General or Assistant Attorney General to collect and retain educational records relevant to an authorized investigation or prosecution of an offense that is defined as a Federal crime of terrorism and which an educational agency or institution possesses The Attorney General or Assistant Attorney General must certify that there are specific and articulable facts giving reason to believe that the education records are likely to contain information that a Federal crime of terrorism may be being committed An education institution that produces education records in response to such a request is given legal immunity from any liability that rises from such a production of records 117 One of the most controversial aspects of the USA PATRIOT Act is in Title V and relates to National Security Letters NSLs An NSL is a form of administrative subpoena used by the FBI and reportedly by other U S government agencies including the CIA and the U S Department of Defense DoD It is a demand letter issued to a particular entity or organization to turn over various records and data pertaining to individuals They require no probable cause or judicial oversight and also contain a gag order preventing the recipient of the letter from disclosing that the letter was ever issued Title V allowed the use of NSLs to be made by a Special Agent in charge of a Bureau field office where previously only the director or the deputy assistant director of the FBI were able to certify such requests 118 This provision of the Act was challenged by the ACLU on behalf of an unknown party against the U S government on the grounds that NSLs violate the First and Fourth Amendments of the U S Constitution because there is no way to legally oppose an NSL subpoena in court and that it was unconstitutional not to allow a client to inform their Attorney as to the order because of the gag provision of the letters The court s judgement found in favour of the ACLU s case and they declared the law unconstitutional 119 Later the USA PATRIOT Act was reauthorized and amendments were made to specify a process of judicial review of NSLs and to allow the recipient of an NSL to disclose receipt of the letter to an attorney or others necessary to comply with or challenge the order 120 However in 2007 the U S District Court struck down even the reauthorized NSLs because the gag power was unconstitutional as courts could still not engage in a meaningful judicial review of these gags On August 28 2015 Judge Victor Marrero of the federal district court in Manhattan ruled the gag order of Nicholas Merrill was unjustified In his decision Judge Marrero described the FBI s position as extreme and overly broad affirming that courts cannot consistent with the First Amendment simply accept the Government s assertions that disclosure would implicate and create a risk He also found that the FBI s gag order on Mr Merrill implicates serious issues both with respect to the First Amendment and accountability of the government to the people 121 Initially the ruling was released in redaction by Judge Marrero The FBI was given 90 days to pursue any other alternative course of action but elected not to do so Upon release of the unredacted ruling on November 30 2015 it was revealed for the first time the extent to which the FBI s NSL accompanied by a gag order sought to collect information Through the court documents it was revealed for the first time that through an NSL the FBI believes it can legally obtain information including an individual s complete web browsing history the IP addresses of everyone a person has corresponded with and all the records of all online purchases within the last 180 days The FBI also claims via the extension of an NSL it can obtain cell site location information In the landmark case of Nicholas Merrill the FBI in specific sought to seek the following information on an account DSL account information radius log subscriber name and related subscriber information account number date the account opened or closed addresses associated with the account subscriber day evening telephone numbers screen names or other on line names associated with the account order forms records relating to merchandise orders shipping information for the last 180 days all billing related to the account internet service provider ISP all email addresses associated with the account internet protocol address assigned to the account all website information registered to the account uniform resource locator address assigned to the account any other information which you consider to be an electronic communication transactional record This was the first time it was revealed the extent to which an NSL under the Patriot Act could request communication information 122 123 Title VI Victims and families of victims of terrorism edit Main article Title VI of the Patriot Act Title VI amended the Victims of Crime Act of 1984 VOCA to change how the U S Victims of Crime Fund was managed and funded improving the speedy provision of aid to families of public safety officers by expedited payments to officers or the families of officers injured or killed in the line of duty Payments must be made no later than 30 days later 124 The Assistant Attorney General was given expanded authority under Section 614 of the USA PATRIOT Act to make grants to any organization that administers any Office of Justice Programs which includes the Public Safety Officers Benefits Program 125 Further changes to the Victims of Crime Fund increased the amount of money in the Fund and changed the way that funds were distributed 126 The amount available for grants made through the Crime Victim Fund to eligible crime victim compensation programs were increased from 40 percent to 60 percent of the total in the Fund A program can provide compensation to U S citizens who were adversely affected overseas Means testing was also waived for those who apply for compensation 127 Under VOCA the director may make an annual grant from the Crime Victims Fund to support crime victim assistance programs An amendment was made to VOCA to include offers of assistance to crime victims in the District of Columbia the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico the United States Virgin Islands and any other U S territory 128 VOCA also provides for compensation and assistance to victims of terrorism or mass violence 129 This was amended to allow the director to make supplemental grants to States for eligible crime victim compensation and assistance programs and to victim service organizations public agencies including Federal State or local governments and non governmental organizations that provide assistance to victims of crime The funds could be used to provide emergency relief including crisis response efforts assistance compensation training and technical assistance for investigations and prosecutions of terrorism 130 Title VII Increased information sharing for critical infrastructure protection edit Main article Title VII of the Patriot Act Title VII has one section The purpose of this title is to increase the ability of U S law enforcement to counter terrorist activity that crosses jurisdictional boundaries It does this by amending the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968 to include terrorism as a criminal activity Title VIII Terrorism criminal law edit Main article Title VIII of the Patriot Act Title VIII alters the definitions of terrorism and establishes or re defines rules with which to deal with it It redefined the term domestic terrorism to broadly include mass destruction as well as assassination or kidnapping as a terrorist activity The definition also encompasses activities that are dangerous to human life that are a violation of the criminal laws of the United States or of any State and are intended to intimidate or coerce a civilian population influence the policy of a government by intimidation or coercion or are undertaken to affect the conduct of a government by mass destruction assassination or kidnapping while in the jurisdiction of the United States 131 Terrorism is also included in the definition of racketeering 132 Terms relating to cyber terrorism are also redefined including the term protected computer damage conviction person and loss 133 New penalties were created to convict those who attack mass transportation systems If the offender committed such an attack while no passenger was on board they are fined and imprisoned for a maximum of 20 years However if the activity was undertaken while the mass transportation vehicle or ferry was carrying a passenger at the time of the offense or the offense resulted in the death of any person then the punishment is a fine and life imprisonment 134 The title amends the biological weapons statute to define the use of a biological agent toxin or delivery system as a weapon other than when it is used for prophylactic protective bona fide research or other peaceful purposes Penalties for anyone who cannot prove reasonably that they are using a biological agent toxin or delivery system for these purposes are 10 years imprisonment a fine or both 135 A number of measures were introduced in an attempt to prevent and penalize activities that are deemed to support terrorism It was made a crime to harbor or conceal terrorists and those who do are subject to a fine or imprisonment of up to 10 years or both 136 U S forfeiture law was also amended to allow authorities to seize all foreign and domestic assets from any group or individual that is caught planning to commit acts of terrorism against the U S or U S citizens Assets may also be seized if they have been acquired or maintained by an individual or organization for the purposes of further terrorist activities 137 One section of the Act section 805 prohibited material support for terrorists and in particular included expert advice or assistance 138 In 2004 after the Humanitarian Law Project filed a civil action against the U S government a Federal District Court struck this down as unconstitutionally vague 139 but in 2010 the Supreme Court upheld it 140 Congress later improved the law by defining the definitions of the material support or resources training and expert advise or resources 141 Cyberterrorism was dealt with in various ways Penalties apply to those who either damage or gain unauthorized access to a protected computer and then commit a number of offenses These offenses include causing a person to lose an aggregate amount greater than US 5 000 as well as adversely affecting someone s medical examination diagnosis or treatment It also encompasses actions that cause a person to be injured a threat to public health or safety or damage to a governmental computer that is used as a tool to administer justice national defense or national security Also prohibited was extortion undertaken via a protected computer The penalty for attempting to damage protected computers through the use of viruses or other software mechanism was set to imprisonment for up to 10 years while the penalty for unauthorized access and subsequent damage to a protected computer was increased to more than five years imprisonment However should the offense occur a second time the penalty increases up to 20 years imprisonment 142 The act also specified the development and support of cybersecurity forensic capabilities It directs the Attorney General to establish regional computer forensic laboratories that have the capability of performing forensic examinations of intercepted computer evidence relating to criminal activity and cyberterrorism and that have the capability of training and educating Federal State and local law enforcement personnel and prosecutors in computer crime and to facilitate and promote the sharing of Federal law enforcement expertise and information about the investigation analysis and prosecution of computer related crime with State and local law enforcement personnel and prosecutors including the use of multijurisdictional task forces The sum of 50 000 000 was authorized for establishing such labs 143 Title IX Improved intelligence edit Main article Title IX of the Patriot Act Title IX amends the National Security Act of 1947 to require the Director of Central Intelligence DCI to establish requirements and priorities for foreign intelligence collected under FISA and to provide assistance to the U S Attorney General to ensure that information derived from electronic surveillance or physical searches is disseminated for efficient and effective foreign intelligence purposes 144 With the exception of information that might jeopardize an ongoing law enforcement investigation it was made a requirement that the Attorney General or the head of any other department or agency of the Federal Government with law enforcement responsibilities disclose to the director any foreign intelligence acquired by the U S Department of Justice The U S Attorney General and Director of Central Intelligence both were directed to develop procedures for the Attorney General to follow in order to inform the director in a timely manner of any intention of investigating criminal activity of a foreign intelligence source or potential foreign intelligence source based on the intelligence tip off of a member of the intelligence community The Attorney General was also directed to develop procedures on how to best administer these matters 145 International terrorist activities were made to fall within the scope of foreign intelligence under the National Security Act 146 A number of reports were commissioned relating to various intelligence related government centers One was commissioned into the best way of setting up the National Virtual Translation Center with the goal of developing automated translation facilities to assist with the timely and accurate translation of foreign intelligence information for elements of the U S intelligence community 147 The USA PATRIOT Act required this to be provided on February 1 2002 however the report entitled Director of Central Intelligence Report on the National Virtual Translation Center A Concept Plan to Enhance the Intelligence Community s Foreign Language Capabilities April 29 2002 was received more than two months late which the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence reported was a delay which in addition to contravening the explicit words of the statute deprived the Committee of timely and valuable input into its efforts to craft this legislation 148 Another report was commissioned on the feasibility and desirability of reconfiguring the Foreign Terrorist Asset Tracking Center and the Office of Foreign Assets Control of the Department of the Treasury 149 It was due by February 1 2002 however it was never written The Senate Select Committee on Intelligence later complained that t he Director of Central Intelligence and the Secretary of the Treasury failed to provide a report this time in direct contravention of a section of the USA PATRIOT Act and they further directed that the statutorily directed report be completed immediately and that it should include a section describing the circumstances which led to the Director s failure to comply with lawful reporting requirements 150 Other measures allowed certain reports on intelligence and intelligence related matters to be deferred until at least February 1 2002 if the official involved certified that preparation and submission on February 1 2002 would impede the work of officers or employees engaged in counterterrorism activities Any such deferral required congressional notification before it was authorized 151 The Attorney General was charged with training officials in identifying and utilizing foreign intelligence information properly in the course of their duties The government officials include those in the Federal Government who do not normally encounter or disseminate foreign intelligence in the performance of their duties and State and local government officials who encounter or potentially may encounter in the course of a terrorist event foreign intelligence in the performance of their duties 152 A sense of Congress was expressed that officers and employees of the intelligence community should be encouraged to make every effort to establish and maintain intelligence relationships with any person entity or group while they conduct lawful intelligence activities 146 Title X Miscellaneous edit Main article Title X of the Patriot Act Title X created or altered a number of miscellaneous laws that did not fit into any other section of the USA PATRIOT Act Hazmat licenses were limited to drivers who pass background checks and who can demonstrate they can handle the materials 153 The Inspector General of the Department of Justice was directed to appoint an official to monitor review and report back to Congress all allegations of civil rights abuses against the DoJ 154 It amended the definition of electronic surveillance to exclude the interception of communications done through or from a protected computer where the owner allows the interception or is lawfully involved in an investigation 155 Money laundering cases may now be brought in the district where the money laundering was committed or where a money laundering transfer started from 156 Aliens who committed money laundering were also prohibited from entering the U S 157 Grants were provided to first responders to assist them in responding to and preventing terrorism 158 US 5 000 000 was authorized to be provided to the Drug Enforcement Administration DEA to train police in South and East Asia 159 The Attorney General was directed to commission a study on the feasibility of using biometric identifiers to identify people as they attempt to enter the United States and which would be connected to the FBI s database to flag suspected criminals 160 Another study was also commissioned to determine the feasibility of providing airlines names of suspected terrorists before they boarded flights 161 The Department of Defense was given temporary authority to use their funding for private contracts for security purposes 162 The last title also created a new Act called the Crimes Against Charitable Americans Act 163 which amended the Telemarketing and Consumer Fraud and Abuse Prevention Act to require telemarketers who call on behalf of charities to disclose the purpose and other information including the name and mailing address of the charity the telemarketer is representing 164 It also increased the penalties from one year s imprisonment to five years imprisonment for those committing fraud by impersonating a Red Cross member 165 Section expirations edit FIXME LEGEND NEEDED Status Section Title Expiration date PA 201 Authority to intercept wire oral and electronic communications relating to terrorism and others 2006 03 10 PA 202 Authority to intercept wire oral and electronic communications relating to computer fraud and abuse offenses 2006 03 10 PA 203 b Authority to share electronic wire and oral interception information 2006 03 10 PA 204 Clarification of intelligence exceptions from limitations on interception and disclosure of wire oral and electronic communications 2006 03 10 PA 20650 USC 1805 c 2 B Roving surveillance authority under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978 2019 12 15 PA 207 Duration of FISA surveillance of non United States persons who are agents of a foreign power 2006 03 10 PA 209 Seizure of voice mail messages pursuant to warrants 2006 03 10 PA 212 Emergency disclosure of electronic communications to protect life and limb 2006 03 10 PA 214 Pen register and trap and trace authority under FISA 2006 03 10 PA 21550 USC 1861 Access to records and other items under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act 2015 06 01 PA 217 Interception of computer trespasser communications 2006 03 10 PA 218 Foreign intelligence information 2006 03 10 PA 220 Nationwide service of search warrants for electronic evidence 2006 03 10 PA 223 Civil liability for certain unauthorized disclosures 2006 03 10 PA 225 Immunity for compliance with FISA wiretap 2006 03 10 IRTPA 600150 USC 1801 b 1 C Lone wolf provision 2019 12 15Controversy editSee also Controversial invocations of the Patriot Act The USA PATRIOT Act has generated a great deal of controversy since its enactment Opponents of the Act have been quite vocal in asserting that it was passed opportunistically after the September 11 attacks believing that there would have been little debate They view the Act as one that was hurried through the Senate with little change before it was passed senators Patrick Leahy D VT and Russ Feingold D WI proposed amendments to modify the final revision 166 167 168 The sheer magnitude of the Act itself was noted by Michael Moore in his controversial film Fahrenheit 9 11 In one of the scenes of the movie he records Congressperson Jim McDermott D WA alleging that no Senator had read the bill 169 and John Conyers Jr D MI as saying We don t read most of the bills Do you really know what that would entail if we read every bill that we passed Congressperson Conyers answers his own question saying that if they did read every bill it would slow down the legislative process 170 As a dramatic device Moore then hired an ice cream van and drove around Washington D C with a loudspeaker reading out the Act to puzzled passers by including a few senators 171 Moore was not the only commentator to notice that not many people had read the Act When Dahlia Lithwick and Julia Turne for Slate asked How bad is PATRIOT anyway they decided that it was hard to tell and stated The ACLU in a new fact sheet challenging the DOJ Web site wants you to believe that the act threatens our most basic civil liberties Ashcroft and his roadies call the changes in law modest and incremental Since almost nobody has read the legislation much of what we think we know about it comes third hand and spun Both advocates and opponents are guilty of fear mongering and distortion in some instances 172 One prime example of how the Patriot Act has stirred controversy is the case of Susan Lindauer Lindauer is a former Congressional staffer and antiwar activist who was charged under the Patriot Act with acting as an unregistered agent of a foreign government then ruled by a court mentally unfit to stand trial Lindauer has emphatically denied both on many occasions saying that she in fact had been a CIA agent serving as a link between the U S and Iraqi governments In 2010 she wrote a book called Extreme Prejudice The Terrifying Story of the Patriot Act and the Cover Ups of 9 11 and Iraq to that effect 173 self published source The charges were dropped in 2009 Another example of controversy in the Patriot Act is the 2012 court case United States v Antoine Jones A nightclub owner was linked to a drug trafficking stash house via a law enforcement GPS tracking device attached to his car It was placed there without a warrant which caused a serious conviction obstacle for federal prosecutors in court The case eventually reached the U S Supreme Court where the conviction was overturned The court found that increased monitoring of suspects caused by such legislation like the Patriot Act violated the defendant s constitutional rights citation needed The Electronic Privacy Information Center EPIC has criticized the law as unconstitutional especially when the private communications of law abiding American citizens might be intercepted incidentally 174 while the Electronic Frontier Foundation held that the lower standard applied to wiretaps gives the FBI a blank check to violate the communications privacy of countless innocent Americans 42 Others do not find the roving wiretap legislation to be as concerning Professor David D Cole of the Georgetown University Law Center a critic of many of the provisions of the Act found that though they come at a cost to privacy are a sensible measure 175 while Paul Rosenzweig a Senior Legal Research Fellow in the Center for Legal and Judicial Studies at The Heritage Foundation argues that roving wiretaps are just a response to rapidly changing communication technology that is not necessarily fixed to a specific location or device 176 The Act also allows access to voicemail through a search warrant rather than through a title III wiretap order 177 James Dempsey of the CDT believes that it unnecessarily overlooks the importance of notice under the Fourth Amendment and under a Title III wiretap 178 and the EFF criticizes the provision s lack of notice However the EFF s criticism is more extensive they believe that the amendment is in possible violation of the Fourth Amendment to the U S Constitution because previously if the FBI listened to voicemail illegally it could not use the messages in evidence against the defendant 179 Others disagree with these assessments Legal Scholar Orin Kerr believes that the ECPA adopted a rather strange rule to regulate voicemail stored with service providers because under ECPA if the government knew that there was one copy of an unopened private message in a person s bedroom and another copy on their remotely stored voicemail it was illegal for the FBI to simply obtain the voicemail the law actually compelled the police to invade the home and rifle through people s bedrooms so as not to disturb the more private voicemail In Professor Kerr s opinion this made little sense and the amendment that was made by the USA PATRIOT Act was reasonable and sensible 180 181 The Patriot Act s expansion of court jurisdiction to allow the nationwide service of search warrants proved controversial for the EFF 182 They believe that agencies will be able to shop for judges that have demonstrated a strong bias toward law enforcement with regard to search warrants using only those judges least likely to say no even if the warrant doesn t satisfy the strict requirements of the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution 183 and that it reduces the likelihood that smaller ISPs or phone companies will try to protect the privacy of their clients by challenging the warrant in court their reasoning is that a small San Francisco ISP served with such a warrant is unlikely to have the resources to appear before the New York court that issued it 183 They believe that this is bad because only the communications provider will be able to challenge the warrant as only they will know about it many warrants are issued ex parte which means that the target of the order is not present when the order is issued 183 For a time the USA PATRIOT Act allowed for agents to undertake sneak and peek searches 37 Critics such as EPIC and the ACLU strongly criticized the law for violating the Fourth Amendment 184 with the ACLU going so far as to release an advertisement condemning it and calling for it to be repealed 185 186 In 2004 FBI agents used this provision to search and secretly examine the home of Brandon Mayfield who was wrongfully jailed for two weeks on suspicion of involvement in the Madrid train bombings While the U S Government did publicly apologize to Mayfield and his family 187 Mayfield took it further through the courts On September 26 2007 Judge Ann Aiken found the law was in fact unconstitutional as the search was an unreasonable imposition on Mayfield and thus violated the Fourth Amendment 38 39 Laws governing the material support of terrorism proved contentious It was criticized by the EFF for infringement of freedom of association The EFF argues that had this law been enacted during Apartheid U S citizens would not have been able to support the African National Congress ANC as the EFF believes the ANC would have been classed as a terrorist organization They also used the example of a humanitarian social worker being unable to train Hamas members how to care for civilian children orphaned in the conflict between Israelis and Palestinians a lawyer being unable to teach IRA members about international law and peace workers being unable to offer training in effective peace negotiations or how to petition the United Nations regarding human rights abuses 188 Another group the Humanitarian Law Project also objected to the provision prohibiting expert advise and assistance to terrorists and filed a suit against the U S government to have it declared unconstitutional In 2004 a Federal District Court struck the provision down as unconstitutionally vague 139 but in 2010 the Supreme Court reversed that decision 140 Perhaps one of the biggest controversies involved the use of National Security Letters NSLs by the FBI Because they allow the FBI to search telephone email and financial records without a court order they were criticized by many parties including the American Civil Liberties Union Although FBI officials have a series of internal checks and balances that must be met before the issue of an NSL Federal Judge Victor Marrero ruled the NSL provisions unconstitutional 189 190 191 192 In November 2005 BusinessWeek reported that the FBI had issued tens of thousands of NSLs and had obtained one million financial credit employment and in some cases health records from the customers of targeted Las Vegas businesses Selected businesses included casinos storage warehouses and car rental agencies An anonymous Justice official claimed that such requests were permitted under section 505 of the USA PATRIOT Act and despite the volume of requests insisted We are not inclined to ask courts to endorse fishing expeditions 193 Before this was revealed however the ACLU challenged the constitutionality of NSLs in court In April 2004 they filed suit against the government on behalf of an unknown internet service provider who had been issued an NSL for reasons unknown In ACLU v DoJ the ACLU argued that the NSL violated the First and Fourth Amendments of the U S Constitution because the USA PATRIOT Act failed to spell out any legal process whereby a telephone or Internet company could try to oppose an NSL subpoena in court The court agreed and found that because the recipient of the subpoena could not challenge it in court it was unconstitutional 119 Congress later tried to remedy this in a reauthorization Act but because they did not remove the non disclosure provision a Federal court again found NSLs to be unconstitutional because they prevented courts from engaging in meaningful judicial review 190 194 195 nbsp A warrant canary posted in a Craftsbury Vermont library in 2005 The FBI has not been here watch very closely for removal of this sign Announcing the receipt of a national security letter would violate the associated gag order while removing the sign would not Another provision of the USA PATRIOT Act has caused a great deal of consternation among librarians Section 215 allows the FBI to apply for an order to produce materials that assist in an investigation undertaken to protect against international terrorism or clandestine intelligence activities Among the tangible things that could be targeted it includes books records papers documents and other items 43 Supporters of the provision point out that these records are held by third parties and therefore are exempt from a citizen s reasonable expectations of privacy and also maintain that the FBI has not abused the provision 196 As proof then Attorney General John Ashcroft released information in 2003 that showed that section 215 orders had never been used 197 However the American Library Association strongly objected to the provision believing that library records are fundamentally different from ordinary business records and that the provision would have a chilling effect on free speech The association became so concerned that it adopted a resolution condemning the USA PATRIOT Act and urging members to defend free speech and protect patrons privacy 198 The association urged librarians to seek legal advice before complying with a search order and advised its members to keep records only for as long as was legally required 199 Consequently reports started filtering in that librarians were shredding records to avoid having to comply with such orders 200 201 202 In 2005 Library Connection a nonprofit consortium of 27 libraries in Connecticut known as the Connecticut Four worked with the ACLU to lift a gag order for library records challenging the government s power under Section 505 to silence four citizens who wished to contribute to public debate on the PATRIOT Act This case became known as Doe v Gonzales In May 2006 the government finally gave up its legal battle to maintain the gag order In a summary of the actions of the Connecticut Four and their challenge to the USA PATRIOT Act Jones 2009 223 notes Librarians need to understand their country s legal balance between the protection of freedom of expression and the protection of national security Many librarians believe that the interests of national security important as they are have become an excuse for chilling the freedom to read 203 Another controversial aspect of the USA PATRIOT Act is the immigration provisions that allow for the indefinite detention of any alien who the Attorney General believes may cause a terrorist act 102 Before the USA PATRIOT Act was passed Anita Ramasastry an associate professor of law and a director of the Shidler Center for Law Commerce amp Technology at the University of Washington School of Law in Seattle Washington accused the Act of depriving basic rights for immigrants to America including legal permanent residents She warned that Indefinite detention upon secret evidence which the USA PATRIOT Act allows sounds more like Taliban justice than ours Our claim that we are attempting to build an international coalition against terrorism will be severely undermined if we pass legislation allowing even citizens of our allies to be incarcerated without basic U S guarantees of fairness and justice 204 Many other parties have also been strongly critical of the provision Russell Feingold in a Senate floor statement claimed that the provision falls short of meeting even basic constitutional standards of due process and fairness as it continues to allow the Attorney General to detain persons based on mere suspicion 205 The University of California passed a resolution condemning among other things the indefinite detention provisions of the Act 206 while the ACLU has accused the Act of giving the Attorney General unprecedented new power to determine the fate of immigrants Worse if the foreigner does not have a country that will accept them they can be detained indefinitely without trial 207 Another controversial aspect of the USA PATRIOT Act is its effect on the privacy of Canadians living in the province of British Columbia B C British Columbia s privacy commissioner raises concerns that the USA PATRIOT Act will allow the United States government to access Canadians private information such as personal medical records that are outsourced to American companies Although the government of B C has taken measures to prevent United States authorities from obtaining information the widespread powers of the USA PATRIOT Act could overcome legislation that is passed in Canada 208 B C Privacy Commissioner David Loukidelis stated in a report on the consequences of the USA PATRIOT Act once information is sent across borders it s difficult if not impossible to control 209 In an effort to maintain their privacy British Columbia placed amendments on the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act FOIPPA which was enacted as law on October 21 2004 These amendments aim to place more firm limitations on storing accessing and disclosing of B C public sector data by service providers 210 These laws only pertain to public sector data and do not cover trans border or private sector data in Canada The public sector establishments include an estimated 2 000 government ministries hospitals boards of health universities and colleges school boards municipal governments and certain Crown corporations and agencies 210 In response to these laws many companies are now specifically opting to host their sensitive data outside the United States 211 Legal action has been taken in Nova Scotia to protect the province from the USA PATRIOT Act s data collecting methods On November 15 2007 the government of Nova Scotia passed legislation aimed to protect Nova Scotians personal information from being brought forward by the USA PATRIOT Act The act was entitled The new Personal Information International Disclosure Protection Act The goal of the act is to establish requirements to protect personal information from being revealed as well as punishments for failing to do so Justice Minister Murray Scott stated This legislation will help ensure that Nova Scotians personal information will be protected The act outlines the responsibilities of public bodies municipalities and service providers and the consequences if these responsibilities are not fulfilled 181 212 In the 1980s the Bank of Nova Scotia was the center of an early pre Internet data access case that led to the disclosure of banking records 213 After suspected abuses of the USA PATRIOT Act were brought to light in June 2013 with articles about collection of American call records by the NSA and the PRISM program see 2013 mass surveillance disclosures Representative Jim Sensenbrenner Republican of Wisconsin who introduced the Patriot Act in 2001 said that the National Security Agency overstepped its bounds 214 He released a statement saying While I believe the Patriot Act appropriately balanced national security concerns and civil rights I have always worried about potential abuses He added Seizing phone records of millions of innocent people is excessive and un American 214 215 Sami Al Arian edit Sami Al Arian was a Palestinian American tenured computer engineering professor at the University of South Florida who also actively promoted dialogue between the West and the Middle East especially about the plight of Palestinians He was indicted in February 2003 on 17 counts under the Patriot Act A jury acquitted him on 8 counts and deadlocked on the remaining 9 counts He later struck a plea bargain and admitted to one of the remaining charges in exchange for being released and deported by April 2007 However instead of being released he was held under house arrest in Northern Virginia from 2008 until 2014 when federal prosecutors filed a motion to dismiss charges against him 216 He was deported to Turkey on February 4 2015 217 Reauthorizations editThe USA PATRIOT Act was reauthorized by three bills The first the USA PATRIOT and Terrorism Prevention Reauthorization Act of 2005 was passed by Congress in July 2005 This bill reauthorized some but not all provisions of the original USA PATRIOT Act as well as the newer Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004 It created new provisions relating to the death penalty for terrorists 218 enhancing security at seaports 219 new measures to combat the financing of terrorism 220 new powers for the Secret Service 221 anti methamphetamine initiatives 222 and a number of other miscellaneous provisions The second reauthorization act the USA PATRIOT Act Additional Reauthorizing Amendments Act of 2006 amended the first and was passed in February 2006 The first act reauthorized all but two Title II provisions Two sections were changed to sunset on December 31 2009 section 206 the roving wiretap provision and section 215 which allowed access to business records under FISA Section 215 was amended further to give greater judicial oversight and review Such orders were also restricted to be authorized by only the FBI Director the FBI Deputy Director or the Executive Assistant Director for National Security and minimization procedures were specified to limit the dissemination and collection of such information Section 215 also had a gag provision which was changed to allow the defendant to contact their attorney 223 However the change meant that the defendant was also required to tell the FBI who they were disclosing the order to this requirement was removed by the USA PATRIOT Act Additional Reauthorizing Amendments Act 224 On Saturday February 27 2010 President Barack Obama signed into law legislation that would temporarily extend for one year three controversial provisions of the Patriot Act that had been set to expire 225 226 227 228 Authorize court approved roving wiretaps that permit surveillance on multiple phones Allow court approved seizure of records and property in anti terrorism operations Permit surveillance against a so called lone wolf a non U S citizen engaged in terrorism who may not be part of a recognized terrorist group 229 In a vote on February 8 2011 the House of Representatives considered a further extension of the Act through the end of 2011 230 House leadership moved the extension bill under suspension of the rules which is intended for noncontroversial legislation and requires two thirds majority to pass 230 After the vote the extension bill did not pass 277 members voted in favor which was less than the 290 votes needed to pass the bill under suspension of the rules 230 Without an extension the Act was set to expire on February 28 2011 However it eventually passed 275 144 231 The FISA Sunsets Extension Act of 2011 was signed into law February 25 2011 On May 26 2011 President Barack Obama used an Autopen to sign the PATRIOT Sunsets Extension Act of 2011 a four year extension of three key provisions in the USA PATRIOT Act while he was in France 11 roving wiretaps searches of business records the library records provision and conducting surveillance of lone wolves individuals suspected of terrorist related activities not linked to terrorist groups 12 Republican leaders 232 questioned if the use of the Autopen met the constitutional requirements for signing a bill into law 233 As NSL provisions of the USA PATRIOT Act had been struck by the courts 119 the reauthorization Act amended the law in an attempt to make them lawful It provided for judicial review and the legal right of a recipient to challenge the validity of the letter The reauthorization act still allowed NSLs to be closed and all evidence to be presented in camera and ex parte 234 Gag provisions were maintained but were not automatic They only occurred when the deputy assistant director of the FBI or a special agent in charge in a bureau field office certified that disclosure would result in a danger to the national security of the United States interference with a criminal counterterrorism or counterintelligence investigation interference with diplomatic relations or danger to the life or physical safety of any person 235 However should there be no non disclosure order the defendant can disclose the fact of the NSL to anyone who can render them assistance in carrying out the letter or to an attorney for legal advice Again however the recipient was ordered to inform the FBI of such a disclosure 235 Because of the concern over the chilling effects of such a requirement the Additional Reauthorization Amendments Act removed the requirement to inform the FBI that the recipient spoke about the NSL to their Attorney 236 Later the Additional Reauthorization Amendments Act excluded libraries from receiving NSLs except where they provide electronic communications services 237 The reauthorization Act also ordered the Attorney General submit a report semi annually to the House and Senate Judiciary Committees the House and Senate Intelligence Committees and the House Committee on Financial Services and the Senate Committee on Banking Housing and Urban Affairs on all NSL request made under the Fair Credit Reporting Act 238 Changes were made to the roving wiretap provisions of the USA PATRIOT Act Applications and orders for such wiretaps must describe the specific target of the electronic surveillance if the identity of the target is not known If the nature and location of each of the facilities or places targeted for surveillance is not known then after 10 days the agency must provide notice to the court The notice must include the nature and location of each new facility or place at which the electronic surveillance was directed It must also describe the facts and circumstances relied upon by the applicant to justify the applicant s belief that each new surveillance place or facility under surveillance is or was being used by the target of the surveillance The applicant must also provide a statement detailing any proposed minimization procedures that differ from those contained in the original application or order that may be necessitated by a change in the facility or place at which the electronic surveillance is directed Applicants must detail the total number of electronic surveillances that have been or are being conducted under the authority of the order 239 Section 213 of the USA PATRIOT Act was modified Previously it stated that delayed notifications would be made to recipients of sneak and peek searches in a reasonable period This was seen as unreasonable as it was undefined and could potentially be used indefinitely Thus the reauthorization act changed this to a period not exceeding 30 days after the date of the execution of the search warrant Courts were given the opportunity to extend this period if they were provided good cause to do so Section 213 states that delayed notifications could be issued if there is reasonable cause to believe that providing immediate notification of the execution of the warrant may have an adverse result This was criticized particularly by the ACLU for allowing potential abuse by law enforcement agencies 240 and was later amended to prevent a delayed notification if the adverse results consist only of unduly delaying a trial 241 In September 2007 an Oregon US District Court struck down the Sneak and Peak provisions of the USA PATRIOT ACT 242 but in December 2009 the Ninth Circuit overturned this decision 243 The reauthorization act also legislates increased congressional oversight for emergency disclosures by communication providers undertaken under section 212 of the USA PATRIOT Act 244 The duration of FISA surveillance and physical search orders were increased Surveillance performed against lone wolf terrorists under section 207 of the USA PATRIOT Act were increased to 120 days for an initial order while pen registers and trap and trace device extensions under FISA were increased from 90 days to a year The reauthorization act also increased congressional oversight requiring a semi annual report into physical searches and the use of pen registers and trap and trace devices under FISA 245 The lone wolf terrorist provision Section 207 was a sunset provision that also was to have expired however this was enhanced by the Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004 The reauthorization act extended the expiration date to December 31 2009 246 The amendment to material support law done in the Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act 141 was also made permanent 247 The definition of terrorism was further expanded to include receiving military type training from a foreign terrorist organization and narcoterrorism 248 Other provisions of the reauthorization act was to merge the law outlawing train wrecking 18 U S C 992 and the law outlawing attacks on mass transportation systems 18 U S C 1993 into a new section of Title 18 of the U S Code 18 U S C 1992 and also to criminalize the act of planning a terrorist attack against a mass transport system 249 250 Forfeiture law was further changed and now assets within U S jurisdiction will be seized for illegally trafficking in nuclear chemical biological or radiological weapons technology or material if such offense is punishable under foreign law by death or imprisonment for a term exceeding one year Alternatively this applies if similar punishment would be so punishable if committed within the U S 251 A sense of Congress was further expressed that victims of terrorism should be entitled to the forfeited assets of terrorists 252 The Trump administration delivered a letter to Congress in August 2019 urging them to make permanent three surveillance provisions of the Patriot Act The provisions included section 215 which enables domestic call record collection as well as the collection of other types of business records 253 In November 2019 the House approved a three month extension of the Patriot Act which would have expired on December 15 2019 It was included as part of a bigger stop gap spending bill aimed at preventing government shutdown which was approved by a vote of 231 192 The vote was mostly along party lines with Democrats voting in favor and Republicans voting against Republican opposition was largely due to the bill s failure to include 5 billion for border security 254 Ten Democrats voted against the bill This group included a number of progressive Democrats who urged their colleagues to oppose the bill over the measure to extend surveillance 255 Representative Justin Amash Independent submitted an amendment to remove the Patriot Act provisions but it was defeated by the House Rules committee 256 On March 10 2020 Jerry Nadler proposed a bill to reauthorize the Patriot Act and it was then approved by the majority of US House of Representatives after 152 Democrats joined the GOP in supporting the extension 18 The surveillance powers of the Patriot Act needed renewal by March 15 2020 16 and after it expired the U S Senate approved an amended version of the bill 17 After President Donald Trump threatened to veto the bill the House of Representatives issued an indefinite postponement of the vote to pass the Senate version of the bill as of December 2020 update the Patriot Act remains expired 257 258 See also edit nbsp United States portal nbsp politics portalCentral Intelligence Agency Civil Contingencies Act 2004 Combat Zones That See Data mining Domestic Security Enhancement Act of 2003 Federal Bureau of Investigation Foreign Terrorist Organizations Guardian database Information Awareness Office Investigatory Powers Act 2016 Ohio Patriot Act Patriot Act II USA Freedom Act Anti terrorism Crime and Security Act 2001 A similar act passed in the United Kingdom at around the same timeReferences edit Pub L Tooltip Public Law United States 107 56 text PDF 1 a 115 Stat 272 272 Mascaro Lisa May 27 2011 Patriot Act provisions extended just in time The Los Angeles Times Retrieved August 30 2021 Kelly Erin Senate approves USA Freedom Act USA Today Retrieved August 31 2021 Savage Charlie March 27 2020 House Departs Without Vote to Extend Expired F B I Spy Tools The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved August 31 2021 Bill Summary amp Status 107th Congress 2001 2002 H R 3162 Major Congressional Actions thomas loc gov Retrieved August 11 2012 FINAL VOTE RESULTS FOR ROLL CALL 398 clerk house gov October 24 2001 Retrieved August 11 2012 U S Senate Roll Call Votes 107th Congress 1st Session www senate gov October 25 2001 Retrieved August 11 2012 Wheatley William Robbins Joseph Hunter Lance Y Ginn Martha Humphries March 2020 Terrorism s effect on Europe s centre and far right parties European Political Science 19 1 100 121 doi 10 1057 s41304 019 00210 8 ISSN 1680 4333 S2CID 256557728 The White House President George W Bush The White House October 26 2001 Retrieved January 25 2016 Safe Act Co Sponsors say PATRIOT Act Conference Report Unacceptable Washington Times November 5 2005 a b Obama Signs Last Minute Patriot Act Extension Fox News May 27 2011 Retrieved May 27 2011 a b Mascaro Lisa May 27 2011 Congress votes in time to extend key Patriot Act provisions Los Angeles Times Retrieved May 27 2011 Parts Of Patriot Act Expire Even As Senate Moves On Bill Limiting Surveillance a b c Kelly Erin June 2 2015 Senate approves USA Freedom Act USA Today Retrieved June 3 2015 Adler Bell Sam November 20 2019 Why the Hell Did Democrats Just Extend the Patriot Act The New Republic a b Coronavirus Spending Bill Could be Used to Cement Spying Powers Surveillance Critics in Congress Warned February 27 2020 a b FISA Update National Review March 18 2020 a b 152 House Democrats Join GOP to Reauthorize Abusive Government Surveillance Powers Savage Charlie March 27 2020 House Departs Without Vote to Extend Expired F B I Spy Tools The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 12 2020 Crocker India McKinney and Andrew April 16 2020 Yes Section 215 Expired Now What Electronic Frontier Foundation Retrieved April 25 2020 2001 Congressional Record Vol 147 Page S9368 September 11 2001 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title X Sec 1002 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title II Sec 218 Andrew C McCarthy Why Section 218 Should be Retained Retrieved January 23 2006 The Patriot Debates USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title II Sec 214 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title II Sec 207 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title II Sec 203 a b USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title II Sec 216 Analysis of Specific USA PATRIOT Act Provisions Pen Registers the Internet and Carnivore Archived October 15 2007 at the Wayback Machine Electronic Privacy Information Center Accessed December 4 2005 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title II Sec 219 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title II Sec 204 amp 209 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title II Sec 217 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title II Sec 211 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title II Sec 210 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title II Sec 212 Field Guidance on New Authorities Redacted Federal Bureau of Investigation hosted by the Electronic Privacy Information Center Retrieved September 24 2007 a b USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title II Sec 213 a b Singel Ryan September 26 2007 Court Strikes Down 2 Key Patriot Act Provisions Wired a b Keller Susan Jo September 27 2007 Judge Rules Provisions in Patriot Act to Be Illegal The New York Times United States Department of Justice The USA PATRIOT Act Preserving Life and Liberty pg 2 Retrieved September 24 2007 Archived March 9 2009 at the Wayback Machine James Dempsey Why Section 206 Should be Modified Archived January 13 2007 at the Wayback Machine undated accessed January 7 2006 a b Let the Sun Set on PATRIOT Section 206 Electronic Frontier Foundation Archived from the original on June 5 2006 Retrieved December 21 2011 a b USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title II Sec 215 Phillips Heather A May 17 2006 Phillips Heather A Libraries and National Security Law An Examination of the USA Patriot Act Progressive Librarian Vol 25 Summer 2005 Papers ssrn com SSRN 901266 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help American Library Association Resolution on the USA PATRIOT Act and Libraries enacted June 29 2005 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title II Sec 208 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title II Sec 221 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title II Sec 205 O Harrow Jr Robert October 27 2002 Six Weeks in Autumn The Washington Post p W06 Retrieved July 11 2008 dead link USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title II Sec 224 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title III Subtitle A Sec 311 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title III Subtitle A Sec 314 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title III Subtitle A Sec 317 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title III Subtitle A Sec 312 313 319 amp 325 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title III Subtitle A Sec 327 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title III Subtitle A Sec 313 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title III Subtitle A Sec 312 a b USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title III Subtitle A Sec 319 Amended 31 U S C 5318 k 3 C iii USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title III Subtitle A Sec 325 Amendment made to 18 U S C 1956 c 7 B ii for some reason an extra parenthesis was inserted into 18 U S C 1956 c 7 B iii according to Cornell University this was probably mistakenly added by law makers Illegal export of controlled munitions is defined in the United States Munitions List which is part of the Arms Export Control Act 22 U S C 2778 See 18 U S C 922 l and 18 U S C 925 d Defined in 15 CFR 730 774 a b USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title III Subtitle A Sec 315 Defined in 18 U S C 541 Defined in 18 U S C 1030 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title III Subtitle A Sec 320 Amended 18 U S C 981 A 1 B a b USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title III Subtitle A Sec 323 Amended 28 U S C 2467 Pursuant to 18 U S C 983 j 28 U S C 2467 d 3 A USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title III Subtitle A Sec 328 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title III Subtitle A Sec 330 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title III Subtitle B Sec 356 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title III Subtitle B Sec 365 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title III Subtitle B Sec 359 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title III Subtitle B Sec 352 354 amp 365 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title III Subtitle B Sec 361 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title III Subtitle B Sec 362 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title III Subtitle B Sec 352 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title III Subtitle B Sec 354 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title III Subtitle B Sec 353 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title III Subtitle B Sec 364 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title III Subtitle B Sec 360 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title III Subtitle C Sec 371 So defined in 31 U S C 5313 31 U S C 5316 and 31 U S C 5324 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title III Subtitle C Sec 372 Amended 31 U S C 5317 c USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title III Subtitle C Sec 371 Amended 18 U S C 1960 The Patriot Act Justice Department Claims Success National Public Radio July 20 2005 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title III Subtitle C Sec 374 Amended 18 U S C 1960 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title III Subtitle C Sec 376 Amended 18 U S C 1956 c 7 D USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title III Subtitle C Sec 377 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title IV Subtitle A Sec 401 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title IV Subtitle A Sec 402 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title IV Subtitle A Sec 404 Amended the Department of Justice Appropriations Act 2001 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title IV Subtitle A Sec 403 Amends 8 U S C 1105 a b USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title IV Sec 403 Final regulations are specified in 22 CFR 40 5 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title IV Subtitle A Sec 405 National Institute of Standards and Technology November 14 2002 Use of Technology Standards and Interoperable Databases With Machine Readable Tamper Resistant Travel Documents permanent dead link Appendix A NIST Image Group s Fingerprint Research Archived December 26 2007 at the Wayback Machine see the section NIST Patriot Act Work accessed June 28 2006 a b c d USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title IV Subtitle B Sec 411 As specified in section 140 d 2 of the Foreign Relations Authorization Act Fiscal Years 1988 and 1989 see 22 U S C 2656f d 2 a b c d e USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title IV Subtitle B Sec 412 A new section was created by the Act 8 U S C 1226a USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title IV Subtitle B Sec 414 8 U S C 1372 a USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title IV Subtitle B Sec 416 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title IV Subtitle B Sec 417 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title IV Subtitle B Sec 418 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title IV Subtitle C Office of Patrick Leahy USA PATRIOT Act Section by section analysis Archived February 13 2010 at the Wayback Machine USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title V Sec 501 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title V Sec 502 Amended 22 U S C 2708 b 5 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title V Sec 502 Amended 22 U S C 2708 b 6 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title V Sec 502 Amended 22 U S C 2708 e 1 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title V Sec 503 Amended 42 U S C 14135a d 2 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title V Sec 504 Amended 50 U S C 1825 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title V Sec 506 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title V Sec 507 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title V Sec 505 Amended 18 U S C 2709 b Section 1114 a 5 A of the Right to Financial Privacy Act of 1978 12 U S C 3414 a 5 A and Section 624 of the Fair Credit Reporting Act 15 U S C 1681u a b c Doe v Ashcroft 334 F Supp 2d 471 S D N Y 2004 source Archived December 18 2004 at the Wayback Machine USA PATRIOT and Terrorism Prevention Reauthorization Act of 2005 U S H R 3199 Public Law 109 177 Title I Sec 115 amp 116 Gag Order PDF Isp yale edu p 32 Archived from the original PDF on December 2 2017 Retrieved June 24 2017 Nicholas Merrill v Loretta E Lynch PDF Isp yale edu Archived from the original PDF on December 2 2017 Retrieved June 24 2017 Mr Nicholas Merrill Attachment PDF Isp yale edu p 3 Archived from the original PDF on May 19 2017 Retrieved June 24 2017 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title VI Subtitle A Sec 611 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title VI Subtitle A Sec 614 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title VI Subtitle B Sec 621 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title VI Subtitle B Sec 622 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title VI Subtitle B Sec 623 Amended 42 U S C 10603 b 1 42 U S C 10603b USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title VI Subtitle B Sec 624 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title VIII Sec 802 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title VIII Sec 813 Amended 18 U S C 1961 1 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title VIII Sec 814 Amended 18 U S C 1030 e USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title VIII Sec 801 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title VIII Sec 817 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title VIII Sec 803 Created 18 U S C 2339 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title VIII Sec 806 Amends 18 U S C 981 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title VIII Section 805 a 2 B a b Humanitarian Law Project et al v John Ashcroft Findlaw a b Adam Liptak Court Affirms Ban on Aiding Groups Tied to Terror The New York Times June 21 2010 a b Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act U S S 2845 Public Law 108 458 Title VI Subtitle F Sec 6603 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title VIII Sec 814 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title VIII Sec 816 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title IX Sec 901 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title IX Sec 905 a b USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title IX Sec 903 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title IX Sec 906 Senate Report 107 149 Archived August 25 2013 at the Wayback Machine To authorize appropriations for Fiscal Year 2003 for Intelligence and Intelligence related activities of the United States Government the Community Management Account and the Central Intelligence Agency Retirement Disability System and for other purposes see the section National Virtual Translation Center USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title IX Sec 907 Senate Report 107 149 Archived August 25 2013 at the Wayback Machine To authorize appropriations for Fiscal Year 2003 for Intelligence and Intelligence related activities of the United States Government the Community Management Account and the Central Intelligence Agency Retirement Disability System and for other purposes see the section Foreign Terrorist Asset Tracking Center USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title IX Sec 904 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title IX Sec 908 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title X Sec 1012 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title X Sec 1001 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title X Sec 1003 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title X Sec 1004 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title X Sec 1006 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title X Sec 1005 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title X Sec 1007 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title X Sec 1008 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title X Sec 1009 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title X Sec 1010 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title X Sec 1011 a USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title X Sec 1011 b USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title X Sec 1011 c 2001 Congressional Record Vol 147 Page S10991 October 25 2001 History of the Patriot Act Electronic Privacy Information Center Archived from the original on July 10 2008 Retrieved July 11 2008 Though the Act made significant amendments to over 15 important statutes it was introduced with great haste and passed with little debate and without a House Senate or conference report As a result it lacks background legislative history that often retrospectively provides necessary statutory interpretation EFF Analysis Of The Provisions Of The USA PATRIOT Act That Relate To Online Activities Electronic Frontier Foundation October 31 2001 Archived from the original on October 12 2007 Retrieved October 12 2007 it seems clear that the vast majority of the sections included were not carefully studied by Congress nor was sufficient time taken to debate it or to hear testimony from experts outside of law enforcement in the fields where it makes major changes Michael Moore Fahrenheit 9 11 documentary Timestamp 01 01 39 01 01 47 Michael Moore Fahrenheit 9 11 documentary Timestamp 01 02 02 01 02 15 Michael Moore Fahrenheit 9 11 documentary Timestamp 01 02 35 01 02 43 Lithwick Dahlia Turner Julia September 8 2003 A Guide to the Patriot Act Part 1 Jurisprudence Slate Lindauer Susan Extreme Prejudice Retrieved December 1 2010 Analysis of Specific USA PATRIOT Act Provisions Expanded Dissemination of Information Obtained in Criminal Investigations Analysis Electronic Privacy Information Center Archived from the original on July 10 2008 Retrieved July 11 2008 Cole David The Patriot Act Violates Our Civil Liberties Is the Patriot Act Unconstitutional Microsoft Encarta Archived from the original on May 6 2006 Rosenzweig Paul Terrorism is not just a crime Patriot Debates American Bar Association Archived from the original on December 7 2008 Retrieved October 15 2007 USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title II Sec 209 James X Dempsey Why Sections 209 212 and 220 Should be Modified Archived December 6 2008 at the Wayback Machine undated Retrieved October 15 2007 EFF Let the Sun Set on PATRIOT Section 209 Seizure of VoiceMail Messages Pursuant to Warrants Archived September 29 2007 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved December 29 2005 Orin Kerr Why Sections 209 212 and 220 Should be Modified Archived December 6 2008 at the Wayback Machine undated Retrieved October 12 2007 a b One prime example of a controversy of the Patriot Act is shown in the recent court case United States v Antoine Jones A nightclub owner was linked to a drug trafficking stash house via a law enforcement GPS tracking device attached to his car It was placed there without a warrant which caused a serious conviction obstacle for federal prosecutors in court Through the years the case has risen to the United States Supreme Court where the conviction was overturned in favor of the defendant The court found that increased monitoring of suspects caused by such legislation like the Patriot Act directly put the suspects Constitutional rights in jeopardy USA PATRIOT Act U S H R 3162 Public Law 107 56 Title II Sec 220 a b c EFF Let the Sun Set on PATRIOT Section 220 Nationwide Service of Search Warrants for Electronic Evidence Archived December 11 2006 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved October 12 2007 Analysis of Specific USA PATRIOT Act Provisions Authority to Conduct Secret Searches Sneak and Peek Archived October 15 2007 at the Wayback Machine Electronic Privacy Information Center Accessed December 5 2005 Uncle Sam Asks What the hell is going on here in New ACLU Print and Radio Advertisements Press release American Civil Liberties Union September 10 2003 ACLU Ad On Sneak and Peek Searches Overblown FactCheck org September 21 2004 Archived from the original on July 14 2007 Apology Note from the United States Government The Washington Post November 29 2006 EFF Let the Sun Set on PATRIOT Section 201 Authority to Intercept Wire Oral and Electronic Communications Relating to Terrorism and Section 805 Material Support for Terrorism Archived October 9 2007 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved October 12 2007 National Security Letters American Civil Liberties Union September 2007 Archived from the original on October 18 2007 Retrieved October 13 2007 a b Federal Court Strikes Down National Security Letter Provision of Patriot Act Press release American Civil Liberties Union September 6 2007 Archived from the original on November 6 2007 NEW YORK A federal court today struck down the amended Patriot Act s National Security Letter NSL provision The law has permitted the FBI to issue NSLs demanding private information about people within the United States without court approval and to gag those who receive NSLs from discussing them The court found that the gag power was unconstitutional and that because the statute prevented courts from engaging in meaningful judicial review of gags it violated the First Amendment and the principle of separation of powers Let the Sun Set on PATRIOT Section 505 National Security Letters NSLs Electronic Frontier Foundation Archived from the original on October 12 2007 Retrieved October 13 2007 EPIC National Security Letters NSLs Electronic Privacy Information Center Retrieved July 11 2008 Dunham Richard S November 10 2005 The Patriot Act Business Balks BusinessWeek Archived from the original on November 24 2005 Retrieved July 11 2008 Eggen Dan September 7 2007 Judge Invalidates Patriot Act Provisions The Washington Post p A01 Neumeister Larry September 7 2007 Judge Strikes Down Part of Patriot Act The Guardian London Archived from the original on January 27 2008 C McCarthy Andrew Why Sections 214 and 215 Should be Retained American Bar Association Archived from the original on October 12 2008 Retrieved July 11 2008 No Patriot Check Out At Libraries CBS News September 18 2003 Archived from the original on November 4 2013 Retrieved April 16 2020 Resolution on the USA Patriot Act and Related Measures That Infringe on the Rights of Library Users American Library Association January 29 2003 Archived from the original on February 12 2004 Kasindorf Martin December 16 2003 FBI s reading list worries librarians USA Today Retrieved July 11 2008 Murphy Dean E April 7 2003 Some Librarians Use Shredder to Show Opposition to New F B I Powers The New York Times Retrieved August 2 2022 Libraries Rally Against USA Patriot Act Politics Fox News Channel May 7 2003 Archived from the original on May 11 2008 Retrieved July 11 2008 Graham Judith April 3 2003 Libraries warning patrons Federal government may be spying on you Chicago Tribune Jones Barbara M 2009 Librarians Shushed No More The USA Patriot Act the Connecticut Four and Professional Ethics Newsletter on Intellectual Freedom 58 no 6 195 221 223 Ramasastry Anita October 5 2001 Indefinite detention based on suspicion How The Patriot Act Will Disrupt Many Lawful Immigrants Lives FindLaw Retrieved July 11 2008 Feingold Russell October 25 2001 Statement Of U S Senator Russ Feingold On The Anti Terrorism Bill From The Senate Floor Archived from the original on July 8 2008 Retrieved July 11 2008 Resolution Passed at the May 6 2004 Special Meeting of the Berkeley Division of the Academic Senate PDF University of California Archived from the original PDF on June 25 2008 Retrieved July 11 2008 Surveillance Under the USA PATRIOT Act gt Non surveillance provisions American Civil Liberties Union April 3 2003 Retrieved July 11 2008 Patriot Act will prevail over B C privacy legislation October 29 2004 Archived from the original on November 14 2004 Retrieved March 6 2008 USA Patriot Act comes under fire in B C report CBC News October 30 2004 Retrieved March 6 2008 a b British Columbia Responds to USA Patriot Act with Tough New Rules on How Service Providers Manage Public Sector Data November 11 2004 Archived from the original on May 6 2006 Retrieved March 6 2008 Hosting Sensitive Data Canada Maybe the Answer Internet Industry Watch November 25 2010 Archived from the original on February 21 2011 Retrieved December 7 2010 Protection of Privacy Legislation Proclaimed November 15 2006 Retrieved March 6 2008 Schultheis Ned 2015 Warrants in the Clouds How Extraterritorial Application of the Stored Communications Act Threatens the United States Cloud Storage Industry Brooklyn Journal of Corporate Financial amp Commercial Law 9 2 14 a b President Obama s Dragnet The New York Times June 6 2013 Retrieved June 7 2013 Author of Patriot Act FBI s FISA Order is Abuse of Patriot Act June 6 2013 Archived from the original on June 10 2013 Retrieved June 7 2013 Josh Gerstein Feds drop Sami Al Arian prosecution Politico com June 27 2014 Jodie Tillman Ex USF professor Sami al Arian deported to Turkey Tampabay com February 5 2015 USA PATRIOT and Terrorism Prevention Reauthorization Act of 2005 U S H R 3199 Public Law 109 177 Title II Terrorist Death Penalty Enhancement USA PATRIOT and Terrorism Prevention Reauthorization Act of 2005 U S H R 3199 Public Law 109 177 Title III Reducing Crime and Terrorism at America s Seaports USA PATRIOT and Terrorism Prevention Reauthorization Act of 2005 U S H R 3199 Public Law 109 177 Title IV Combating Terrorism Financing USA PATRIOT and Terrorism Prevention Reauthorization Act of 2005 U S H R 3199 Public Law 109 177 Title VI Secret Service USA PATRIOT and Terrorism Prevention Reauthorization Act of 2005 U S H R 3199 Public Law 109 177 Title VII Combating Methamphetamine Epidemic Act of 2005 USA PATRIOT and Terrorism Prevention Reauthorization Act of 2005 U S H R 3199 Public Law 109 177 Title I Sec 106 USA PATRIOT and Terrorism Prevention Reauthorization Act of 2005 U S S 2271 Public Law 109 178 Sec 3 The reauthorization of the Patriot Act Feb 2010 http www csmonitor com USA Politics 2010 0301 Obama signs Patriot Act extension without reforms Obama signs one year extension of Patriot Act Entertainment Archives Archived from the original on November 21 2010 Retrieved November 23 2010 Democratic Underground Obama signs Patriot Act http www democraticunderground com discuss duboard php az view all amp address 102x4287047 H R 514 112th Congress 2011 2012 FISA Sunsets Extension Act of 2011 Congress gov February 25 2011 Retrieved December 22 2018 Sections of the Patriot act that will remain as of Feb 2010 http www foxnews com politics 2010 02 27 obama signs year extension patriot act Archived November 1 2015 at the Wayback Machine a b c Breshahan Jake Cogan Marin February 8 2011 Rank and file take down Patriot Act in House Politico actions Thomas loc gov February 25 2011 Archived from the original on August 25 2013 Retrieved May 16 2012 Letter to Obama PDF CBS News June 17 2011 Retrieved November 4 2012 Republicans protest Obama signing bill with autopen USA Today June 17 2011 USA PATRIOT and Terrorism Prevention Reauthorization Act of 2005 U S H R 3199 Public Law 109 177 Title I Sec 115 a b USA PATRIOT and Terrorism Prevention Reauthorization Act of 2005 U S H R 3199 Public Law 109 177 Title I Sec 116 USA PATRIOT and Terrorism Prevention Reauthorization Act of 2005 U S S 2271 Public Law 109 178 Sec 4 USA PATRIOT and Terrorism Prevention Reauthorization Act of 2005 U S S 2271 Public Law 109 178 Sec 5 USA PATRIOT and Terrorism Prevention Reauthorization Act of 2005 U S H R 3199 Public Law 109 177 Title I Sec 118 USA PATRIOT and Terrorism Prevention Reauthorization Act of 2005 U S H R 3199 Public Law 109 177 Title I Sec 108 American Civil Liberties Union ACLU Letter to Congress Urging A No Vote On the USA PATRIOT Improvement and Reauthorization Act Conference Report December 12 2005 accessed on October 6 2007 USA PATRIOT and Terrorism Prevention Reauthorization Act of 2005 U S H R 3199 Public Law 109 177 Title I Sec 114 Singel Ryan September 26 2007 Court Strikes Down 2 Key Patriot Act Provisions Threat Level Wired Retrieved May 16 2012 Full text of the Ninth Circuit s decision uscourts gov PDF uscourts gov USA PATRIOT and Terrorism Prevention Reauthorization Act of 2005 U S H R 3199 Public Law 109 177 Title I Sec 107 USA PATRIOT and Terrorism Prevention Reauthorization Act of 2005 U S H R 3199 Public Law 109 177 Title I Sec 109 USA PATRIOT and Terrorism Prevention Reauthorization Act of 2005 U S H R 3199 Public Law 109 177 Title I Sec 105 USA PATRIOT and Terrorism Prevention Reauthorization Act of 2005 U S H R 3199 Public Law 109 177 Title I Sec 104 USA PATRIOT and Terrorism Prevention Reauthorization Act of 2005 U S H R 3199 Public Law 109 177 Title I Sec 112 Yeah Brian T Doyle Charles December 21 2006 USA PATRIOT Improvement and Reauthorization Act of 2005 A Legal Analysis PDF Congressional Research Service 24 Retrieved July 11 2008 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help USA PATRIOT and Terrorism Prevention Reauthorization Act of 2005 U S H R 3199 Public Law 109 177 Title I Sec 110 USA PATRIOT and Terrorism Prevention Reauthorization Act of 2005 U S H R 3199 Public Law 109 177 Title I Sec 111 USA PATRIOT and Terrorism Prevention Reauthorization Act of 2005 U S H R 3199 Public Law 109 177 Title I Sec 127 Savage Charlie August 15 2019 Trump Administration Asks Congress to Reauthorize N S A s Deactivated Call Records Program The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved February 7 2020 Grey Barry November 21 2019 Patriot Act extension concealed in funding bill passed by House Democrats www wsws org Retrieved February 7 2020 Birnbaum Emily November 19 2019 Progressives oppose spending stopgap measure over surveillance authority extension The Hill Retrieved February 7 2020 Adler Bell Sam November 20 2019 Why the Hell Did Democrats Just Extend the Patriot Act The New Republic ISSN 0028 6583 Retrieved November 25 2019 Nicholas Fearn May 29 2020 Patriot Act surveillance powers left unrenewed after Trump threatens veto Tom s Guide Retrieved June 28 2020 Section 215 Expired Electronic Frontier Foundation December 29 2020 Warrentless GPS Tracking Supreme Court Databases 15 1 2012 n pag Galileo Web May 2 2012 Further reading editLaw review articles edit Chesney Robert M The Sleeper Scenario Terrorism Support Laws and the Demands of Prevention Harvard Journal on Legislation 2005 Gouvin Eric J 2003 Bringing Out the Big Guns The USA PATRIOT Act Money Laundering and the War on Terrorism Baylor Law Review 55 955 Archived from the original on September 7 2004 Kerr Orin Digital Evidence and the New Criminal Procedure Columbia Law Review 2005 Lecours Alain P USA Patriot Act Extraterritorial Effects of the USA Patriot Act Privacy Rights of Non American Citizens Mojuye Benjamin What Banks Need to Know About the PATRIOT Act 124 Banking L J 258 258 2007 Slovove Daniel J Fourth Amendment Codification and Professor Kerr s Misguided Call for Judicial Deference Fordham Law Review 74 2005 Van Bergen Jennifer In the Absence of Democracy The Designation and Material Support Provisions of the Anti Terrorism Laws Cardozo Pub Law Policy amp Ethics Journal 2 2003 107 Wong Kam C Implementing the USA PATRIOT Act A Case Study of the Student and Exchange Visitor Information System SEVIS Brigham Young University Education and Law Journal 2 2006 Wong Kam C The making of the USA PATRIOT Act I Legislative Process and Dynamics International Journal of the Sociology of Law 34 3 2006 179 219 Wong Kam C The making of the USA PATRIOT ACT II Public Sentiments Legislative Climate Political Gamesmanship Media Patriotism International Journal of the Sociology of Law 34 2 2006 105 140 Wong Kam C USA PATRIOT Act and a Policy of Alienation Michigan Journal of Minority Rights 1 2006 1 44 Wong Kam C USA PATRIOT Act Some Unanswered Questions International Journal of the Sociology of Law 43 1 2006 1 41 Books edit Brasch Walter America s Unpatriotic Acts The Federal Government s Violation of Constitutional and Civil Rights Peter Lang Publishing 2005 ISBN 0 8204 7608 0 A long list of civil rights abuse claims by the Bush Administration inside the United States and other countries Cole Dave and James X Dempsey Terrorism and the Constitution Sacrificing Civil Liberties in the Name of National Security 2nd ed New York W W Norton amp Co 2002 ISBN 1 56584 782 2 Full discussion of prior legislative history of the Act going back more than ten years Etzioni Amitai How Patriotic is the Patriot Act Freedom Versus Security in the Age of Terrorism Archived October 19 2018 at the Wayback Machine New York NY Routledge 2004 ISBN 0 415 95047 3 Harvey Robert and Helene Volat De l exception a la regle USA PATRIOT Act DE L EXCEPTION A LA REGLE USA PATRIOT ACT Robert Harvey et Helene Volat Paris Lignes 2006 215 p Herman Susan N Taking Liberties The War on Terror and the Erosion of American Democracy Oxford University Press 2011 ISBN 978 0 19 978254 3 Mailman Stanley Jeralyn Merritt Theresa M B Van Vliet and Stephen Yale Loehr Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism USA Patriot Act Act of 2001 An Analysis Newark NJ and San Francisco CA Matthew Bender amp Co Inc a member of the LexisNexis Group 2002 Rel 1 3 02 Pub 1271 An expert analysis of the significant changes in the new USA Patriot Act of 2001 which track s the legislation by section explaining both the changes and their potential impact with respect to enhanced surveillance procedures money laundering and financial crimes protecting the border investigation of terrorism information sharing among federal and state authorities enhanced criminal laws and penalties for terrorism offenses and more Michaels C William No Greater Threat America Since September 11 and the Rise of the National Security State Algora Publishing Completely Updated for 2005 ISBN 0 87586 155 5 Covers all ten titles of the USA PATRIOT Act Includes review and analysis of Homeland Security Act PATRIOT Act II Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act Supreme Court decisions National Strategy documents 9 11 Commission recommendations and various ongoing developments nationally and internationally in the war on terrorism Phelan James Clancy PATRIOT ACT Hachette ISBN 978 0 7336 2283 0 2007 Van Bergen Jennifer The Twilight of Democracy The Bush Plan for America Common Courage Press 2004 ISBN 1 56751 292 5 A constitutional analysis for the general public of the USA PATRIOT Act and other administrative measures with the first half of the book spent on principles of democracy and constitutional law Wheeler Theodore In Our Other Lives New York Little A 2020 A fiction exploration of the effect an NSA FBI investigation has on the family of a young man who has gone missing in Pakistan ISBN 978 1542016513 Wong Kam C The Impact of USA Patriot Act on American Society An Evidence Based Assessment N Y Nova Press 2007 In print Wong Kam C The Making of USA Patriot Act Legislation Implementation Impact Beijing China Law Press 2007 In print External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article USA PATRIOT Act USA PATRIOT Act as amended PDF details in the GPO Statute Compilations collection USA PATRIOT Act as enacted details in the US Statutes at Large USA PATRIOT ACT on Congress gov USA PATRIOT Improvement and Reauthorization Act of 2005 on Congress govSupportive views edit The USA PATRIOT Act Preserving Life and Liberty by the Department of Justice The Patriot Act and Related Provisions The Heritage Foundation s Research Lowry Rich August 28 2003 Patriot Hysteria The Zacarias Moussaoui Protection Act National Review Archived from the original on August 29 2003 The Patriot Act Reauthorized JURISTCritical views edit PATRIOT Games Terrorism Law and Executive Power JURIST American Library Association s resolution on the PATRIOT Act Sneak and Peek Search Warrants Analysis of the USA PATRIOT Act PEN American Center Archived from the original on March 1 2005 League of Women Voters Resources on the USA PATRIOT Act and Individual LibertiesOther edit National Security and Freedom Archived December 7 2009 at the Wayback Machine A series of short readings exploring historical and current issues of national security from Constitutional Rights Foundation Patriot Act news and resources JURIST Phillips Heather A Libraries and National Security Law An Examination of the USA Patriot Act Progressive Librarian Vol 25 Summer 2005 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Patriot Act amp oldid 1206737924, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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