Has the FBI failed in a Bush-blessed, attempted power-grab?
With several key provisions of the controversial Patriot Act set to
expire later this year, Congress has been working for months on
legislation that would extend and perhaps restrict those provisions.
Most of the debate has concerned whether the Patriot Act went too
far and has focused on the measure's Section 215, which allows the FBI
to obtain library records and other "tangible things" in a terrorism or
national security investigation by obtaining a warrant from the
super-secret Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) court.
But the FBI, with the presumed approval of the White House, has
been pushing for power that would go beyond that of the controversial
Section 215. In particular, the bureau has wanted the new Patriot Act
measure to award it the right to issue administrative subpoenas. With
an administrative subpoena, an FBI agent could--without going to a
court or a grand jury--demand that a person or institution hand over
any record on another person or organization: financial papers, health
records, library records, e-mails and more. The order would be subject
to judicial review only if the recipient--say, an Internet service
provider--opposed the order. Administrative subpoenas would give the
FBI greater power than Section 215 and national security letters. (With
a national security letter, the FBI can, without bothering a court,
obtain a limited set of information--certain financial documents,
credit reports and Internet-use records. But a federal court last year
declared national security letters unconstitutional. The Bush
Administration has filed an appeal.) Moreover, as Kate Martin, director
of the Center for National Security Studies, notes, "The FBI wants this
administrative subpoena power forever"--that is, with no sunset
provision. Beating back the FBI's demand for this authority would be a
victory for the civil liberties community. And so far, the FBI has been
losing.
Opposition to FBI administrative subpoenas has united civil
libertarians of the left and right. Nancy Libin, staff counsel at the
Center for Democracy and Technology, notes that administrative subpoena
power is "really kind of scary. The FBI would have the right to
approach any business or person and say, 'Hand over whatever we want,'
and a gag order would be attached. You can't challenge the subpoena.
You can't talk about it. If an FBI agent wants a grand jury subpoena,
he has to go through a prosecutor. It's not just an agent issuing a
subpoena. Administrative subpoenas would make Section 215 moot." Paul
Rosenzweig, a senior legal fellow at the Heritage Foundation and a
prominent champion of the original Patriot Act, says, "I don't like
administrative subpoenas. Judges have to be involved. A law that
permits the uninhibited exercise of executive authority is bad." And
Suzanne Spalding, former assistant general counsel at the CIA, argues
that "removing courts is a mistake."
In its search for administrative subpoena authority, the FBI turned
to the Senate Intelligence Committee. In May, as the committee was
considering legislation to reauthorize parts of the Patriot Act,
Valerie Caproni, the FBI's general counsel, testified before it,
claiming that the bureau desperately needs administrative subpoenas for
its terrorism investigations: "We cannot wait to disrupt terrorist acts
or to prosecute terrorist crimes after they occur. To stay a step ahead
of the terrorists, investigators need tools allowing them to obtain
relevant information as quickly as possible." She noted that regulatory
agencies that probe healthcare fraud and child abuse can issue
administrative subpoenas. But as Democratic members of the Intelligence
Committee pointed out in a subsequent report, Caproni, upon being
questioned, "could not document significant past or current instances
when national security investigations faltered or were hindered due to
lack of an administrative subpoena authority."
The Democrats also noted that the administrative subpoena power
available to other agencies is far more limited than what the FBI has
been seeking. And when the Democrats proposed providing administrative
subpoena power to the FBI for "emergency use," Republicans on the
committee, apparently fronting for the FBI, voted against it. Emergency
authority was not good enough; the FBI wanted full and everyday use of
this wide-ranging power.
Why has the FBI been hellbent on administrative subpoena authority?
Rosenzweig says he suspects it is a case of bureaucratic "gimme, gimme,
gimme." Robert Litt, a former federal prosecutor and past senior
Justice Department official, notes that the FBI "hates having to go
through the Department of Justice to get information. But going to an
assistant US Attorney to get a subpoena is hardly that burdensome."
Litt says the FBI's current drive for administrative subpoena
authority is part of a years-long effort to expand the bureau's power
that predates September 11, 2001. After 9/11 the Bush Administration
proposed antiterrorism legislation that included a provision that would
allow the FBI to issue administrative subpoenas. But Congress resisted
and stuck to the notion that the FBI's authority to obtain records
ought to be subject to judicial review. Congress did relax pre-existing
restrictions, giving birth to the infamous Section 215. "None of us who
participated in drafting Section 215 thought it would become so
controversial, given that we retained FISA court procedures," says
Beryl Howell, who at the time was general counsel for the
Democratic-controlled Senate Judiciary Committee. "Originally the FBI
wanted administrative subpoenas so they would not have to go to court
to get third-party records, so they could bypass courts and
prosecutors. Section 215 was a disappointment for the FBI."
The FBI lost the battle in 2001 but did not forget about the issue.
In June the Republican-controlled Intelligence Committee, led by
chairman Pat Roberts, approved Patriot Act legislation that granted the
FBI administrative subpoena authority. Under this bill it would be a
crime in some instances for the recipient of such a subpoena to tell
anyone that he or she had received one. Democratic members of the
committee complained that such a gag order "could prevent the recipient
of an FBI administrative subpoena from exercising First Amendment
rights to protest government action, including by bringing abuses to
the attention of members of Congress or Inspectors General."
By winning over the Senate Intelligence Committee, the FBI had only
managed to clear a low hurdle. "The intelligence committees on the Hill
are generally viewed as being held hostage by the agencies they
oversee, but the judiciary committees are not," says one former senior
Capitol Hill staffer. "Judiciary committee members tend to be more
familiar with law enforcement and civil liberties issues and sometimes
more skeptical of additional authority. It's par for the course for the
FBI to go to the intelligence committees, which say yes, and then it's
the judiciary committees' job to say no or to work out a compromise.
Usually this happens behind closed doors, with staff aides on the
different committees holding informal discussions. But not this year."
As the Senate Intelligence Committee was doing the FBI's bidding,
the House and Senate Judiciary Committees--which also have jurisdiction
over the reauthorization of the Patriot Act--signaled that they were
cool to idea of administrative subpoena authority. The Republican
chairmen of the committees--Representative James Sensenbrenner Jr. and
Senator Arlen Specter--both opposed the proposal. They were not swayed
by the FBI argument that it has extensive powers to obtain evidence
when conducting criminal investigations and should be able to do the
same in terrorism and national security cases. "The problem," says
Howell, "is that in a criminal investigation there are procedures built
in to counterbalance any FBI overreaching. A subpoenaed party can
complain to a judge. Grand jury investigations proceed under court
supervision. These safety valves do not exist in national security
investigations, which tend to be broader investigations than criminal
investigations. That's why members of Congress--Republicans and
Democrats--have been skeptical of granting the FBI this power." And as
Kate Martin points out, if the FBI is investigating suspected
terrorists as part of a criminal investigation, it can use all the
available criminal tools. A Senate aide who worked on this matter adds,
"Given all the concerns regarding Section 215 and the sensitivity of
third-party records, people recognized that if you take judges out of
the equation--which is what an administrative subpoena does--that would
be a step back."
Sensenbrenner, a conservative Republican, and Specter, a moderate
Republican, ended up crafting different versions of the new Patriot Act
legislation. The bill produced by Sensenbrenner's committee (and
approved by the full House) preserved the controversial parts of the
Patriot Act and extended these measures for ten years. The bill written
by Specter's committee (and OK'd by the Senate) applied several new
restrictions to these provisions and gave them four more years of life.
But both pieces of legislation left out administrative subpoena
authority. (The Senate Intelligence Committee's Patriot Act legislation
was essentially shoved aside.) Next, the two measures will go to a
House-Senate conference, where Specter, Sensenbrenner and other
senators and representatives will attempt to produce a compromise bill
acceptable to both houses. This might offer the FBI one more shot at
obtaining administrative subpoena authority, but Congressional aides
say it's unlikely the bureau can overcome opposition from the chairmen
of the judiciary committees.
But before the House approved its Patriot Act update,
Representative Jeff Flake, a Republican, passed a little-noticed
amendment that would bolster national security letters. This amendment,
according to civil liberties advocates, could eventually become a
backdoor for administrative subpoena authority. "The only difference
between Flake's amendment and Roberts's administrative subpoena
proposal," says Kate Martin, "is that Roberts would permit the seizure
of every kind of record and thing, and the Flake amendment only
involves those categories of records covered by the existing national
security letters. If the Flake amendment gets passed in the final
version of this legislation, the FBI will simply try to expand its
coverage to everything else."
While civil liberties advocates appear to have thwarted the FBI on
outright administrative subpoena authority, the bureau has not declared
this case closed. The latest tussle is just another round in a battle
that is expected to continue. "It's hard to see stopping something bad
as a win," says an aide for a Democratic senator who opposed the
administrative subpoena proposal. "But we're going to have to come back
again and again to keep stopping it." Indeed, in late July--after the
House and Senate had produced versions of the Patriot Act legislation
without administrative subpoena authority--FBI director Robert Mueller
was still urging Congress to hand the FBI such power. "The FBI is
always persistent," says Beryl Howell. "They don't give up."
© Copyright 2005 The Nation
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