Bush Threatens Veto of SAFE Act, Says Patriot Act Must Stand
NewsMax.com Wires
Thursday, Jan. 29, 2004
WASHINGTON The Bush administration issued a veto threat
Thursday against legislation introduced in Congress that would
scale back key parts of the anti-terrorism Patriot Act.
In a letter to Senate leaders, Attorney General John Ashcroft
said the changes contemplated by the Security and Freedom Ensured
Act, or SAFE, would "undermine our ongoing campaign to detect and
prevent catastrophic terrorist attacks."
If the bill reaches President Bush's desk in its current form,
Ashcroft said, "the president's senior advisers will recommend
that it be vetoed."
The threat comes a week after Bush, in his State of the Union
address, called for Congress to reauthorize the Patriot Act before
it expires in 2005. The law, passed shortly after the 2001 terror
attacks, expanded the government's wiretap and other surveillance
authority, removed barriers between FBI and CIA
information-sharing, and provided more tools for terror finance
investigations.
Civil liberties groups and some lawmakers, including
Republicans, believe the act goes too far and endangers the privacy
of innocent citizens.
The SAFE Act, which has not yet had a hearing in either the
House or Senate, was introduced last fall by Sens. Larry Craig,
R-Idaho; Dick Durbin, D-Ill.; and other lawmakers of both parties.
In a statement at the time, Craig said the bill was a
"measured" response to concerns that the Patriot Act threatens
civil liberties and privacy rights.
"This legislation intends to ensure the liberties of
law-abiding individuals are protected in our nation's fight against
terrorism, without in any way impeding that fight," Craig said.
The bill would modify so-called "sneak and peek" search
warrants that allow for delayed notification of the target of the
search. In addition, warrants for roving wiretaps used to monitor a
suspect's multiple cell phones would have to make sure the target
was present at the site being wiretapped before information could
be collected.
The legislation also would reinstate standards in place prior to
passage of the Patriot Act regarding library records by forcing the
FBI to show it has reason to believe the person involved is a
suspected terrorist or spy. In addition, the bill would impose
expiration dates on nationwide search warrants and other Patriot
Act provisions, providing for congressional review.
Ashcroft, who last year embarked on a national speaking tour in
support of the Patriot Act, said the legislation would "make it
even more difficult to mount an effective anti-terror campaign than
it was before the Patriot Act was passed."
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