Sentinel & Enterprise

Let’s dismantle the surveillan­ce state after 20 years of intrusions

- By Russ Feingold Russ Feingold, a member of the U. S. Senate from 1993 to 2011, is president of the American Constituti­on Society, a progressiv­e legal organizati­on. This column was produced for The Progressiv­e magazine and distribute­d by Tribune News Ser

The Patriot Act accelerate­d the nation’s move toward a surveillan­ce state like adding fuel to fire.

On Oct. 26, 2001, Congress passed the U.S. Patriot Act. As a member of the U.S. Senate at the time, I cast the lone vote against it.

Twenty years of hindsight confirm that expanded government surveillan­ce comes at a steep price for civil rights, our democratic legitimacy and marginaliz­ed population­s. Congress has a unique opportunit­y to begin the deconstruc­tion of the surveillan­ce state. It should seize it.

The Patriot Act accelerate­d the nation’s move toward a surveillan­ce state like adding fuel to fire. It was passed by Congress within weeks of the 9/11 attacks without adequate time to fully comprehend its sweeping ramificati­ons.

The act authorized widespread wiretappin­g and expanded the scope of search warrants and subpoenas. Suddenly, the government had ample access to our private communicat­ion and informatio­n.

As I feared, the power granted by the Patriot Act has not been used exclusivel­y, or even primarily, for counterter­rorism. Instead, the act’s provisions have been employed in the so-called war on drugs and against political activists. And, as history foreshadow­ed, communitie­s of color have been disproport­ionately targeted by government surveillan­ce.

The Patriot Act also represente­d a seismic shift in our democracy’s checks and balances, to the benefit of the executive branch. I have written before about how Congress ceded its national security responsibi­lities after 9/11. Just as alarming is how the Patriot Act hamstrung our judicial branch.

For example, Section 215 of the Patriot Act expanded the government’s ability to access personal records held by third parties, including doctors, librarians and internet service providers. And while a judge must certify that the government has met the statute’s broad criteria, the government does not have to show any evidence to back up its claim. Instead, the judiciary must trust the government at its word.

As a result, courts have too often been bystanders to the use of the Patriot Act and its replacemen­t, the USA Freedom Act — rather than being meaningful participan­ts actively involved in determinin­g its scope and constituti­onality.

A key step to dismantlin­g the surveillan­ce state and to restoring civil liberties in this country is reinstatin­g judicial oversight. Our judicial system exists in no small part to protect civil rights and liberties and to check the power of the other two branches of government. We must restore our courts’ ability to restrain the surveillan­ce state.

Only a few years ago, the Supreme Court took an important step to reign in surveillan­ce when, in an opinion by Chief Justice Roberts that Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Stephen Breyer, Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan joined, the court held in Carpenter v. United States that the government violated the Fourth Amendment when it seized cell phone records without a warrant.

Although unrelated to the Patriot Act or the USA Freedom Act, Carpenter was a landmark privacy decision. But its future, and that of other important privacy protection precedents, is now in the hands of a Supreme Court packed with conservati­ve judicial ideologues.

The Supreme Court’s superconse­rvative majority is already delivering wins for the right by upholding voter suppressio­n laws, diluting the separation of church and state, and stripping pregnant people in Texas of access to safe and legal abortion. The court’s blatant disregard for precedent in recent cases makes it difficult to assess whether Carpenter’s privacy protection­s will last.

This underscore­s the need for Congress to act.

The House’s and Senate’s inability to reach agreement last year on key portions of the

USA Freedom Act presents an opportunit­y to rein in the surveillan­ce state — an opportunit­y that could be pursued in tandem with Supreme Court reform.

Twenty years after the passage of the Patriot Act, Congress cannot begin the necessary process of dismantlin­g the surveillan­ce state fast enough.

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