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The
Washington Post
April 20, 2003
Local Officials
Rise Up to Defy The Patriot Act
By Evelyn Nieves
ARCATA,
Calif. -- This North Coast city may look sweet -- old, low-to-the-ground buildings,
town square with a bronze statue of William McKinley, ambling pickup trucks
-- but it acts like a radical.
Arcata was one of the first cities to pass resolutions against global warming
and a unilateral war in Iraq. Last month, it joined the rising chorus of municipalities
to pass a resolution urging local law enforcement officials and others contacted
by federal officials to refuse requests under the Patriot Act that they believe
violate an individual's civil rights under the Constitution. Then, the city
went a step further.
This little city (pop.: 16,000) has become the first in the nation to pass
an ordinance that outlaws voluntary compliance with the Patriot Act. "I
call this a nonviolent, preemptive attack," said David Meserve, the freshman
City Council member who drafted the ordinance with the help of the Arcata
city attorney, city manager and police chief.
The Arcata ordinance may be the first, but it may not be the last. Across
the country, citizens have been forming Bill of Rights defense committees
to fight what they consider the most egregious curbs on liberties contained
in the Patriot Act. The 342-page act, passed by Congress one month after the
Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, with little input from a public still in
shock, has been most publicly criticized by librarians and bookstore owners
for the provisions that force them to secretly hand over information about
a patron's reading and Internet habits. But citizens groups are becoming increasingly
organized and forceful in rebuking the Patriot Act and the Homeland Security
Act for giving the federal government too much power, especially since a draft
of the Justice Department's proposed sequel to the Patriot Act (dubbed Patriot
II) was publicly leaked in January.
Both the Patriot Act and the Homeland Security Act, which created the Cabinet-level
department, follow the Constitution, says Justice Department spokesman Mark
Corallo. Federal law trumps local law in any case, which would mean Arcata
would be in for a fight -- a fight it wants -- if the feds did make a Patriot
Act request. LaRae Quy, a spokeswoman for the San Francisco FBI office, whose
jurisdiction includes Arcata, said that the agency has no plans to use the
Patriot Act in Arcata any time soon, but added that people misunderstood it.
Although some people feel their privacy rights are being infringed upon, she
said, the agency still has to show "probable cause for any actions we
take."
But to date, 89 cities have passed resolutions condemning the Patriot Act,
with at least a dozen more in the works and a statewide resolution against
the act close to being passed in Hawaii.
"We want the local police to do what they were meant to do -- protect
their citizens," said Nancy Talanian, co-director of the Bill of Rights
Defense Committee in Florence, Mass., which gives advice to citizens groups
on how to draft their own resolution.
Although cities across the country passed antiwar resolutions before the attack
on Iraq with little notice from the administration, Talanian said that the
anti-Patriot Act resolutions are "not quite as symbolic" as those
that passed against the war.
"Normally, the president and Congress don't pay that much attention when
it comes to waging war," she said. "But in the case of the Patriot
Act, the federal government can't really tell municipalities that you have
to do the work that the INS or the FBI wants you to do. The city can say,
'No, I'm sorry. We hire our police to protect our citizens and we don't want
our citizens pulled aside and thrown in jail without probable cause.' "
In Hawaii, home to many Japanese Americans who vividly recall the Japanese
internments during World War II, Democratic state Rep. Roy Takumi introduced
a resolution on the Patriot Act as a way to raise debate, he said. Although
the resolution may be seen as symbolic, he said, "states have every right
to consider the concerns of the federal government and voice our opinions.
If a number of states begin to pass similar resolutions, then it raises the
bar for Congress, making them realize our concerns. I hope to see what we've
done here plays a role in mobilizing people to take action." Lawmakers
and lobbyists on both ends of the political spectrum are beginning to sound
more alarms about the antiterrorism act, which gave the government unprecedented
powers to spy on citizens. Rep. Bernard Sanders (I-Vt.) has introduced a bill,
the "Freedom to Read Protection Act" (H.R. 1157), that would restore
the privacy protections for library book borrowers and bookstore purchases.
The bill has 73 co-sponsors.
Earlier this month, Rep. F. James Sensenbrenner Jr. (R-Wis.), the chairman
of the House Judiciary Committee, and Rep. John Conyers Jr. (Mich.), the ranking
Democrat, asked the Justice Department for more information on the government's
use of the Patriot Act to track terrorists, questioning what "tangible
things" the government can subpoena in investigations of U.S. citizens.
Sensenbrenner and Conyers sent an 18-page letter to Attorney General John
D. Ashcroft, challenging the department's increased use of "national
security letters" requiring businesses to hand over electronic records
on finances, telephone calls, e-mails and other personal data.
They questioned the guidelines under which investigators can subpoena private
books, records, papers, documents and other items; asked whether the investigations
targeted only people identified as agents of a foreign power; and asked the
attorney general to "identify the specific authority relied on for issuing
these letters."
The Justice Department said it is working on the request. But citizens groups,
worried about a timid Congress, are not waiting for their elected officials
to act before launching a campaign against the proposed sequel to the Patriot
Act, the "Domestic Security Enhancement Act." The Idaho Green Party
has begun the Paul Revere Project to stop Patriot Act II before it can be
passed.
The proposed addendum to the Patriot Act, which the Justice Department has
insisted is only a draft of ideas, would enlarge many of the controversial
provisions in the first Patriot Act. It would give the government authority
to wiretap an individual and collect a person's DNA without court orders,
detain people in secret and revoke citizenship, among other powers.
The proposed sequel to the act has galvanized communities in a bottom-up,
grass-roots way, Talanian said. "Before a community votes on resolutions,
they engage in forums and petitioning to show the town council they want this.
After, communities band together and do things like visit the offices of their
entire congressional delegations and say our communities have these concerns
and now we are asking you to help." In Arcata, where forums drew little
debate, the new law is an unqualified hit. It passed by a vote of 4 to 1,
but has what looks like near-unanimous approval from residents.
Meserve, a weather-worn builder and contractor in his fifties who wears a
ponytail and flannel shirts, hasn't felt so popular since he won his council
seat running on the platform, "The Federal Government Has Gone Stark,
Raving Mad."
"The ordinance went through so easily that we were surprised," he
said. "We started going up to people asking what they thought. They thought,
'great.' It's our citywide form of nonviolent disobedience."
The fine for breaking the new law, which goes into effect May 2, is $57. It
applies only to the top nine managers of the city, telling them they have
to refer any Patriot Act request to the City Council.
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