Bob Barr
The 2013 Edward Snowden leaks revealed for the first time the frightening extent to which post-9/11 national security powers had been expanded – and abused – in the decade thereafter. But it was not until the FBI’s partisan crusade against the Trump electoral victory, did we have a clear and vivid picture of the degree to which those powers could be abused in the hands of bitter and unaccountable intelligence officials. American citizens would finally come to realize that if it could happen to the President of the United States, it could happen to anyone.
Ironically,
it is because of this hubris deep inside America’s intelligence
community that we are now closer than ever to reforming at least some of
the abuses of the USA PATRIOT Act. With certain provisions of the
Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) set to expire on Sunday –
most notably the much-abused Section 215 -- hope for restoration of at
least some of America’s civil liberties is on the horizon (but not
guaranteed).
Sens. Rand Paul (R-KY) and Mike Lee (R-UT) once again are
leading the fight to bring these expansive government surveillance
powers back into line with the Fourth Amendment. It is unclear what will
transpire over the next few days as party leaders seek to cobble
together a majority of votes on one of the three possible outcomes; but
also, to ensure the basic intelligence law remains on the books.
The
first is full reauthorization. And, if Rep. Adam Schiff and other
surveillance hawks in Congress on both sides of the aisle have their
way -- with the full support of the Intelligence Community -- it will be
without any proposed amendments that weaken the powers that were
deployed against the Trump campaign and Administration. Already Schiff
has attempted to bully-away attempts to reform Section 215, including
those by fellow Democrat Rep. Zoe Lofgren.
The second possibility is the other side of the coin; true meaningful
reform to FISA that dramatically curtails domestic – not foreign --
spying powers. FreedomWorks has a great rundown of what such reforms might look like,
including once and for all eliminating the terrible Call Detail Records
(CDR) program that has been abused repeatedly. FreedomWorks’ proposal
also would require a warrant for US citizens targeted by FISA orders and
would take away the FBI’s FISA reporting exemptions.
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