There’s a Secret Patriot
Act, Senator Says
By
Spencer
Ackerman
05.25.11
You think you understand how the Patriot Act
allows the government to spy on its citizens. Sen. Ron Wyden says it’s worse
than you know.
Congress is set to
reauthorize three controversial provisions of the surveillance law as early as
Thursday. Wyden (D-Oregon) says that powers they grant the government on their
face, the government applies a far broader legal interpretation — an
interpretation that the government has conveniently classified, so it cannot be
publicly assessed or challenged. But one prominent Patriot-watcher asserts that
the secret interpretation empowers the government to deploy ”dragnets” for
massive amounts of information on private citizens; the government portrays its
data-collection efforts much differently.
“We’re getting to a gap
between what the public thinks the law says and what the American government
secretly thinks the law says,” Wyden told Danger Room in an interview in his
Senate office. “When you’ve got that kind of a gap, you’re going to have a
problem on your hands.”
What exactly does Wyden mean by that? As a
member of the intelligence committee, he laments that he can’t precisely
explain without disclosing classified information. But one component of the
Patriot Act in particular gives him immense pause: the so-called “business-records
provision,” which empowers the FBI to get businesses, medical offices,
banks and other organizations to turn over any “tangible things” it deems
relevant to a security investigation.
“It is fair to say that
the business-records provision is a part of the Patriot Act that I am extremely
interested in reforming,” Wyden says. “I know a fair amount about how it’s
interpreted, and I am going to keep pushing, as I have, to get more information
about how the Patriot Act is being interpreted declassified. I think the public
has a right to public debate about it.”
That’s why Wyden and his colleague Sen. Mark
Udall offered an amendment
on Tuesday to the Patriot Act reauthorization.
The amendment, first reported by Marcy
Wheeler, blasts the administration for “secretly
reinterpret[ing] public laws and statutes.” It would compel the Attorney
General to “publicly disclose the United States Government’s official
interpretation of the USA Patriot Act.” And, intriguingly, it refers to
“intelligence-collection authorities” embedded in the Patriot Act that the
administration briefed the Senate about in February.
Wyden says he “can’t answer” any specific
questions about how the government thinks it can use the Patriot Act. That
would risk revealing classified information — something Wyden considers an
abuse of government secrecy. He believes the techniques themselves should stay
secret, but the rationale for using their legal use under Patriot ought to be
disclosed.
“I draw a sharp line
between the secret interpretation of the law, which I believe is a growing
problem, and protecting operations and methods in the intelligence area, which
have to be protected,” he says.
Surveillance under the business-records
provisions has recently spiked. The Justice Department’s official disclosure on
its use of the Patriot Act, delivered to Congress in April, reported that the
government asked the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court for approval to
collect business records 96 times in 2010
— up from just 21
requests the year before. The court didn’t reject a single request. But it
“modified” those requests 43 times, indicating to some Patriot-watchers that a
broadening of the provision is underway.
“The FISA Court is a
pretty permissive body, so that suggests something novel or particularly
aggressive, not just in volume, but in the nature of the request,” says
Michelle Richardson, the ACLU’s resident Patriot Act lobbyist. “No one has
tipped their hand on this in the slightest. But we’ve come to the conclusion
that this is some kind of bulk collection. It wouldn’t be surprising to me if
it’s some kind of internet or communication-records dragnet.” (Full disclosure:
My fiancée works for the ACLU.)
The FBI deferred comment on any secret
interpretation of the Patriot Act to the Justice Department. The Justice
Department said it wouldn’t have any comment beyond a bit of March
congressional testimony from its top national security official, Todd Hinnen,
who presented the type of material collected as far more individualized and
specific: “driver’s
license records, hotel records, car-rental records, apartment-leasing
records, credit card records, and the like.”
But that’s not what Udall sees. He warned in
a Tuesday statement about the government’s “unfettered” access to bulk citizen
data, like “a cellphone company’s phone records.” In a Senate floor speech on
Tuesday, Udall urged Congress to restrict the Patriot Act’s business-records
seizures to “terrorism
investigations” — something the ostensible counterterrorism measure has
never required in its nearly 10-year existence.
Indeed, Hinnen allowed himself an out in his
March testimony, saying that the business-record provision “also” enabled
“important and highly sensitive intelligence-collection operations” to take
place. Wheeler speculates those operations include “using geolocation data from
cellphones to collect information on the whereabouts of Americans” — something
our sister blog Threat Level has reported on extensively.
It’s worth noting that Wyden is pushing a
bill providing greater
privacy protections for geolocation info.
For now, Wyden’s
considering his options ahead of the Patriot Act vote on Thursday. He wants to
compel as much disclosure as he can on the secret interpretation, arguing that
a shadow broadening of the Patriot Act sets a dangerous precedent.
“I’m talking about
instances where the government is relying on secret interpretations of what the
law says without telling the public what those interpretations are,” Wyden
says, “and the reliance on secret interpretations of the law is growing.”