Unanimous Nod For Wiretap Bill

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From: feustel@netcom.com (David Feustel)
Subject: Re: Wiretap passes! (Digital telephony bill and privacy)
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                           Unanimous Nod For Wiretap Bill
       
                            [from Technology & Liberty]
                                [By Clark Matthews ]
                        [in The Spotlight November 7th, 1994]

The so-called Wiretap Access Bill, S. 2375, passed at 10:30 PM. on
Friday, October 7th,1994, with "the unanimous consent" of the U.S.
Senate. It is likely to be signed by President Clinton by the time you
read this. Two days previously, on October 5th, the U.S. House of
Representatives passed the identical bill, H.R. 4922, by an overwhelming
margin. There was no floor debate on the bill in either house. There
was no reading of the bill. In fact, the final Senate vote happened so
quickly that observers watching C-SPAN actually missed it.
Nevertheless, a Senate vote unanimously passing the "Wiretap Access
Bill" is recorded as having occurred at 10:30 PM, October 7,1994.

MANUFACTURING 'CONSENT'

FBI Director Louis Freeh personally visited every U.S. senator to lobby
for the bill. I've even heard reports that Janet Reno accompanied Freeh
for some of these little chats. Nevertheless, several senators
positioned themselves to stop the vote on the bill, notably Howard
Metzenbaum (D-Ohio), Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.) and Patrick Leahy
(D-Vt.). All of them placed "holds" on the bill in the days before the
final vote. These "holds" permitted any of them to prevent a vote and
stop the bill in its tracks. But none of them did. Each of these
senators received a personal visit from FBI Director Louis Freeh in
the days before the senate recessed for the fall elections. and none
of them exercised their right to stop the bill. So there were no
objections at 10:30 pm on Friday, October 7th, only "unanimous
consent." No one in the Senate voted for the Wiretap Accesa Bill (or
against it). No one left any fmgerprints.  Ask your senators and
they'll tell you no one's responsible. We shall see.  In the end, this
unstoppable bill slithered silently onto the books in the contemptible
tradition of the 16th Amendment, the Federal Reserve Act and many other
landmark frauds and fixes that have dearly cost our country's liberty,
treasury and sovereignty. Late at night and out of sight, no one was
responsible for passing the bill. And no one is to blame. A few days
after this grubby victory, FBI Director Louis Freeh spoke at the annual
A1 Smith dinner in New York City. Flush with his success with the
Wiretap bill-and with the amazing silence of key congressmen and
senators after Freeh's personal visits-Clinton's FBI director compared
himself favorably with J. Edgar Hoover. The audience gave up a big
laugh for America's "reinvented" Hoover sans perfume, ponies, peignoirs
and roommate Clyde, of course.

DIGITAL TYRANNY

The Wiretap Access Bill, as critics call it, was uroposed by the FBI and
Janet Reno's Justice Department as the "Digital Telephony and Privacy
Improvement Act" of 1994. The bill took its language from the
computerized features of automatic, remote-controlled surveillance and
eavesdropping equipment that is now being built into America's new
telephone networks to spy on citizens. Freeh's and Reno's "Privacy
Improvement Act" had nothing whatever to do with improving people's
privacy. Instead, it aimed at eliminating people's privacy by
effectively converting citizens' telephones into remote-activated
listening devices and call-tracing systems. The Wiretap Access Bill
simply legalizes these surveillance devices that are already in use in
large parts of our country. It also forces taxpayers to pay $500
million for them.  The Wiretap Access Bill effectively eliminates the
bothersome Constitutional requirement that the FBI obtain court
authorization to tap your phone or bug your house through your
telephones. That's because your local telephone company can't tell what
the devices are doing and, therefore, can't know whether the
surveillance is legal or not.

AUTOMATIC GESTAPO

You see, the new equipment is remote-activated and it's designed to be
installed on the telephone network (not in phone company offices). It
gathers much of the same information about your calls that your phone
company does-but the FBI (or whoever) clearly doesn't want your tele-
phone company to know what information it's gathering. Or how much it's
gathering. So the devices run "encrypted" to conceal what they're doing
from telco employees, some of whom might become alarmed by the extent of
federal surveillance or start asking troublesome questions
about court orders and warrants. Even if your friends at the phone
company were interested in safeguarding your rights, they will
probably soon discover the same fundamental truth learned by citizens
in places like the Soviet Union and Nazi Germany: It's not a good idea
to ask questions about court orders when it comes to secret police
surveillance operations. The question of court orders for surveillance
is further subverted by the bill's requirement that your local phone
company provide instantaneous, contemporaneous wiretapping capabilities
to the FBI. It seems our rapidly "reinvented" government wants instant
gratification-it has no time for trivialities like presenting court
orders. The monitoring equipment doesn't ask for a warrant before
tapping your calls or bugging your office (or your bedroom). Someone
thousands of miles away simply presses a few keys and the equipment just
does it. They can always find a court order somewhere if they need one.
Either way, no one will know what they're up to. For that matter, the
equipment can do this for whomever has the "key codes" that turn on one
of these devices. It doesn't even have to be the FBI.

'BLACKMAIL CENTRAL'

A few weeks ago I lapsed into histrionics on these pages on the subject
of our country's new Wiretap Access Law. At the time, I asked
rhetorically what kind of Congress, judges, courts and journalists we
could egpect if Bill Clinton's administration succeeded in legalizing
this frightful, untraceable surveillance equipment.  In my opinion,
this equipment poses a clear danger of transforming federal
law-enforcement agencies into Blackmail Central. Or worse. I wouldn't
be the least surprised to learn it has happened already-after all, these
devices were designed years ago and widely installed and tested in 1992,
according to reports. So I ask again now, how will we shield congress,
the courts and our citizens from politically motivated blackmail and
retribution now that we tagpayers are paying for undetectable,
automatic federal surveillance as the law of the land? Why, we'll have
a contemptible, craven and silent bunch like we had this year, of
course. When your senator comes around looking for your vote this fall,
remember the "unanimous consent" that passed the Wiretap Access Bill.
Why not ask him or her why they liked the bill, S. 2375, so much? If
they don't remember why, ask them if Louis Freeh is as funny in person
as he was at the A1 Smith dinner.


--
Dave Feustel N9MYI Internet:<feustel@netcom.com> 
219-483-1857 Compuserve:<73532,1747>

Every American citizen is involved in an abusive relationship.
Liberals are codependents in that relationship (with the U.S.
Government, in case you didn't figure it out).

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