News.com Mobile
for PDA or phone
Login: Forgot password? | Sign up

Patriot Act may be renewed without reforms

By Declan McCullagh
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
Published: December 7, 2005, 4:12 PM PST
Last modified: December 7, 2005, 4:36 PM PST

update A frenzy of last-minute negotiations over the Patriot Act, conducted behind closed doors as a Dec. 31 expiration date nears, has yielded a four-year renewal of the law and no substantial reforms.

Sen. Arlen Specter, the Pennsylvania Republican who has been a point person during this year's debate over the fate of the complex and controversial law, said Wednesday that he and his counterparts in the House of Representatives have agreed to a deal that could pave the way for reauthorization of the Patriot Act by next week.

After reaching an impasse with House Republicans who held out for a longer seven-year renewal, Specter said he asked President Bush to intervene. "The vice president helped out a little yesterday and after a lot of haggling, I signed the conference report at 9:00 p.m.," Specter said in a statement sent to CNET News.com. "They brought it to my house."

But a band of six Democratic and Republican senators--who lodged strong objections to the draft conference report prepared last month--is likely to block a vote unless their concerns about privacy and overly broad surveillance are addressed. Sen. Russ Feingold, a Wisconsin Democrat and member of the group, said through a spokesman on Wednesday that he had not reviewed the final text.

Patriot Act's e-surveillance

Only 16 sections of the massive law, enacted in October 2001, are set to expire on Dec. 31. Five deal with electronic surveillance and computer crime:

Sec. 202: Computer hacking is a "predicate offense" permitting police to seek certain types of wiretaps.

Sec. 203: Federal police can share information gleaned from a wiretap or Carnivore-like surveillance device with spy agencies. Previously, there was no explicit authorization for such data sharing.

Sec. 212: Internet providers and other communications providers can divulge information to police more readily. Specifically, customer records and other data may be legally handed over to police in an emergency.

Sec. 215: Secret court orders can be used to obtain records or "tangible items" from any person or business if the FBI claims a link to terrorism. The unlucky recipient of the secret order is gagged; disclosing its existence is punishable by a prison term.

Sec. 217: Computer service providers may eavesdrop on electronic trespassers legally. Police can be authorized to "listen in" on what's happening on the provider's network.

Of the 16 portions of the massive law that are set to expire, five deal with electronic surveillance and computer crime. Those permit secret court orders that the FBI can use to obtain business records; authorize more information sharing between Internet providers and police; and list computer hacking as an offense granting increased eavesdropping authority.

One important but unanswered question is how much support the group of six senators can muster among their colleagues. At a press conference last month, the group called for reforming portions of the Patriot Act that deal with library and other business record acquisitions, secret "National Security Letters" that have been used against Internet service providers, and delayed search warrants that permit police to secretly enter a home and notify the person weeks or months later.

Specter's office did not make the text of the final bill available. But according to interviews with staffers and lobbyists, not one of those three changes has been made.

Tim Edgar, a legislative counsel for the American Civil Liberties Union, said Specter's announcement was "designed to put a lot of pressure on the Senate to go along with an extremely flawed conference report. We'll see if they bite."

The group of six includes Democrats Richard Durbin of Illinois and Kenneth Salazar of Colorado; and Republicans Lisa Murkowski of Alaska; Larry Craig of Idaho; and John Sununu of New Hampshire. They backed a Patriot Act reform plan, called the Safe Act, that is still stuck in committee.

One person who likely will wield strong influence over whether Democratic senators side with the Bush administration or the group of six is Vermont Sen. Patrick Leahy, who spent Wednesday conferring with members of his party. "I'm anxiously awaiting an answer," Specter said. (Leahy's office said late in the day that no decision had been made.)

Bush has repeatedly called for a full renewal of the Patriot Act, regularly lacing speeches with phrases like: "Our law enforcement needs this vital legislation to protect our citizens." The White House is expected to increase the pressure on Republican senators not to defect to the group of six.

As a way to twist arms, House Republicans are expected to schedule a vote before Christmas, which would let them and the Bush administration characterize the Senate as obstructionist. A spokesman for the House Judiciary Committee said a floor vote had been anticipated for Thursday but has been delayed: "It won't be on the floor tomorrow. That was our hope earlier today, but it's not going to happen."

History of controversy
From the time a preliminary version was introduced in the Senate days after the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, the Patriot Act has been dogged by controversy.

When the final vote was held the following month, members of Congress were required to vote on the bill without a lot of time to read it. The measure "has been debated in the most undemocratic way possible, and it is not worthy of this institution," Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., said at the time. Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, added later: "Almost all significant legislation since 9/11 has been rushed through in a tone of urgency with reference to the tragedy."

Even though the Patriot Act was approved by overwhelming majorities in both chambers of Congress, some legislators voted for it with the understanding that key portions would be revisited in 2005. Early this year, the Senate and the House of Representatives began a series of hearings on the law.

 30 comments
Post a comment

TalkBack

The US did plenty of business with the Nazis

Newsdotcom Commenter   Dec 9, 2005, 5:40 PM PST

It's true

Jim Hassinger   Dec 8, 2005, 2:26 PM PST

Enforcers of Government are the Problem

Kitty antonik Wakfer   Dec 8, 2005, 12:59 PM PST

Talking point to scare your GOP Rep

Ben Masel   Dec 8, 2005, 8:11 AM PST

Defense of liberty

John Meyer   Dec 8, 2005, 8:06 AM PST

Patriot Act necessary to hide incompetence...

Francois Stiglitz   Dec 8, 2005, 8:01 AM PST

The Communist Act you mean

William Morris   Dec 8, 2005, 7:48 AM PST

Can you say King George?

Ito R   Dec 8, 2005, 7:47 AM PST

It's the peoples Government.

Matthew Good   Dec 8, 2005, 7:45 AM PST

why innovate? they will steal anything you make....

Jeremy Hansen   Dec 7, 2005, 11:27 PM PST

The laws of perception!

Ian Deal   Dec 7, 2005, 8:52 PM PST

Congressional Cowards

Donald Newcombe jr   Dec 7, 2005, 7:55 PM PST

Patriot My A...

Randy Clamons   Dec 7, 2005, 4:59 PM PST

advertisement

Did you know?

Select a tab below to set your default view.

Scan the 15 newest and most read stories on News.com right now. Learn more

Updated: 9:21 PM PST
View as:
Unpatched Firefox 1.5 exploit made public Power could cost more than servers, Google warns Creative wants to make Apple pay Sober code cracked Sony says PS3 still on track for spring launch Sony fixes security hole in CDs, again Police blotter: Nude 'profile' yields Yahoo suit How tech billionaires live Intel calls MIT's $100 laptop a 'gadget' Consumers snap up LCD monitors eBay halts auction of Excel flaw Intel to battle rootkits Viacom nearing deal to acquire DreamWorks BellSouth, 8x8 launch VoIP service Cheers for Yahoo's move to a community-driven Web
Legend:
Older
Newer
Larger boxes indicate hotter stories.

Daily spotlight

Video: A video slam-dunk

Here's a look at the tech behind those TV and online highlights of pro basketball games, in a narrated video produced by the NBA and Silicon Graphics Inc.

Photos: Gizmos made in Japan

Japan is still a leader in product design and innovation. Here are some new and notable gadgets.

Video: "The power to organize" online

Meetup.com founder and CEO Scott Heiferman says Meetup is spreading beyond America. The service, Heiferman says, is helping "make the world a friendlier place."

Innovations battle natural calamities

Scientists hope integrating cutting-edge technology projects will help predict and mitigate natural disasters.

Debating Wikipedia's open-source label

High Impact The online encyclopedia is a broadly communal effort, but it's not run the same way as open-source software.

Police blotter: Nude 'profile' yields Yahoo suit

Woman says ex-boyfriend posted nude photos and her phone number in a Yahoo Personals profile. She sued for $3 million.

High-tech animation in indies' grasp

Competing with digital toon powerhouses like Pixar isn't easy. But cheaper tech, outsourcing are making it possible.

Ogre to slay? Outsource it to China

Affluent online gamers are paying workers at Chinese game-playing factories to play games' early rounds for them.

Video: The incredible, shrinking glaciers

This NASA-produced video is a dramatic and colorful look at our planet from high above, and the changes that are taking place.

Image: AOL searches for the stars

TMZ.com, AOL's new online magazine promises inside scoops on Hollywood's hottest stars.

Clock's ticking on new Sober onslaught

Mass-mailing worm is programmed to download new instructions in January, which could indicate a new outbreak.

Photos: New animal discovered in Borneo

A creature that looks like a cross between a cat and a fox is photographed in the rainforest.

CNET.com
Copyright ©2005 CNET Networks, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Privacy Policy | About CNET Networks | Jobs | Terms of Use