[Libs-Or] USA Patriot Act
Suzanne Sager
bvss at pdx.edu
Mon Oct 5 11:17:42 PDT 2009
FYI,
The Executive Board of the Oregon Library Association (OLA)unanimously
and enthusiastically adopted the following Resolution on the 2009
Reauthorization of the USA Patriot Act at our meeting on October 2, 2009.
Suzanne L. Sager
Oregon ALA Chapter Councilor
*Resolution on 2009 reauthorization of the USA Patriot Act*
Whereas, the Oregon Library Association is committed to encouraging free
and open inquiry by preserving the privacy rights of library users,
library employees, and persons living in the United States; and
Whereas, the Oregon Library Association opposes governmental actions
that suppress or chill free and open inquiry and has called for the USA
PATRIOT Act
<http://www.ala.org/ala/deletedcontent.cfm?am_cms=%2ftemplate%2ecfm%3fsection%3difissues%26amp%3btemplate%3d%2fcontentmanagement%2fcontentdisplay%2ecfm%26amp%3bcontentid%3d76879&pub_loc=http%3a%2f%2fwww%2eala%2eorg%2fala%2foif%2fifissues%2fusapatriotact%2ehtm> to
be amended to restore fundamental constitutional rights and safeguards
that protect the civil liberties of library users, library employees,
and U.S. persons; and
Whereas, Section 215 of the USA PATRIOT Act allows the FBI to secretly
request and obtain library records for large numbers of individuals
without reason to believe they are involved in illegal activity; and
Whereas, Section 505 of the USA PATRIOT Act permits the FBI to obtain
records from libraries by using National Security Letters (NSL) without
prior judicial oversight; and
Whereas, Section 215 automatically requires and Section 505 permits the
FBI to impose a nondisclosure or "gag" order on the recipients, thereby
prohibiting the reporting of abuse of government authority and
abrogating the recipients' First Amendment rights; and
Whereas, FBI Director Robert S. Mueller III testified before the Senate
Judiciary Committee on March 25, 2009, that the FBI had used Section 215
of the USA PATRIOT Act 223 times between 2004 and 2007^1 , and the
Office of the Inspector General (OIG) of the Department of Justice
reported in March 2008 that the FBI had made 192,499 National Security
Letter requests from 2003 through 2006^2 ; and
Whereas, the OIG reported in March 2008 that "the FISA Court twice
refused to authorize Section 215 orders based on concerns that the
investigation was premised on protected First Amendment activity, and
the FBI subsequently issued NSLs to obtain information" without
reviewing the underlying investigation to be sure it did not violate the
statute's First Amendment caveat^3 ; and
Whereas, members of Congress have introduced legislation to restore
privacy rights and address the concerns of the Oregon Library
Association such as: The Freedom to Read Protection Act (H.R. 1157 in
the 108th Congress), the National Security Letters Reform Act (S. 2088
in the 110th Congress and H.R. 1800), The USA PATRIOT Act Sunset
Extension Act (S. 1692) and the Judicious Use of Surveillance Tools in
Counterterrorism Efforts (JUSTICE) Act (S.1686); now therefore be it
Resolved that the Oregon Library Association:
1. Opposes initiatives on the part of the United States government to
constrain the free expression of ideas or to inhibit the use of libraries;
2. Urges Congress to repeal the USA PATRIOT Act's expanded National
Security Letter Section 505 and Section 215 authorities that allow the
FBI to demand information about people who are not targets of an
investigation and to reinstate standards limiting the use of these
authorities to obtain information only about terrorism suspects and
agents of foreign powers.
3. Urges Congress to allow nondisclosure or "gag" orders of limited
scope and duration only when necessary to protect national security and
only upon the authority of a court, and ensure that targets of such
orders have a meaningful right to challenge them before a fair and
neutral arbiter.
4. Urges Congress to intensify its oversight of the use of the USA
PATRIOT Act as well as other government surveillance and investigations
that limit the privacy rights of library users, library employees, and
U.S. persons; and
5. Communicates this resolution to Oregon's Congressional Delegation,
the Oregon Legislature; and
6. Urges its members, Oregon librarians, Oregon library trustees, and
all library advocates to ask Congress to restore crucial safeguards
protecting civil liberties.
Sources
1. Robert S. Mueller. (March 25, 2009). "Oversight of the Federal
Bureau of Investigation," /Hearing of the Senate Judiciary Committee/.
Accessed through LexisNexis Congressional database.
2. Office of the Inspector General, U.S. Department of Justice. (March
2008). /A Review of the FBI's Use of National Security Letters:
Assessment of Corrective Actions and Examination of NSL Usage in 2006/,
p. 110. Available at http://www.usdoj.gov/oig/special/s0803b/final.pdf
3. Office of the Inspector General, U.S. Department of Justice. (March
2008). /A Review of the FBI's Use of Section 215 Orders for Business
Records in 2006, /p. 73. Available at
http://www.usdoj.gov/oig/special/s0803a/final.pdf
--
Portland State University logo
Suzanne L. Sager
Library East, Cataloging
Portland State University
503-725-8169
503-725-5799
sagers at pdx.edu
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