Delayed Notice Search Warrants: A Vital and Time-Honored Tool
for Fighting Crime
Field Report on the PATRIOT Act
The Department of Justice's first priority is to prevent
future terrorist attacks. Since its passage following the
September 11, 2001 attacks, the Patriot Act has played a key
part - and often the leading role - in a number of successful
operations to protect innocent Americans from the deadly plans
of terrorists dedicated to destroying America and our way of
life. While the results have been important, in passing the
Patriot Act, Congress provided for only modest, incremental
changes in the law. Congress simply took existing legal
principles and retrofitted them to preserve the lives and
liberty of the American people from the challenges posed by a
global terrorist network.
The USA PATRIOT Act:
Preserving Life and Liberty
(Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate
Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism)
Congress enacted the Patriot Act by
overwhelming, bipartisan margins, arming law enforcement with
new tools to detect and prevent terrorism: The USA Patriot
Act was passed nearly unanimously by the Senate 98-1, and 357-66
in the House, with the support of members from across the
political spectrum.
The Act Improves Our Counter-Terrorism
Efforts in Several Significant Ways:
1. The Patriot Act allows investigators to use the
tools that were already available to investigate organized crime
and drug trafficking. Many of the tools the Act provides
to law enforcement to fight terrorism have been used for decades
to fight organized crime and drug dealers, and have been
reviewed and approved by the courts. As Sen. Joe Biden (D-DE)
explained during the floor debate about the Act, "the FBI could
get a wiretap to investigate the mafia, but they could not get
one to investigate terrorists. To put it bluntly, that was
crazy! What's good for the mob should be good for terrorists."
(Cong. Rec., 10/25/01)
- Allows law enforcement to use surveillance against
more crimes of terror. Before the
Patriot Act, courts could permit law enforcement to conduct
electronic surveillance to investigate many ordinary,
non-terrorism crimes, such as drug crimes, mail fraud, and
passport fraud. Agents also could obtain wiretaps to
investigate some, but not all, of the crimes that terrorists
often commit. The Act enabled investigators to gather
information when looking into the full range of
terrorism-related crimes, including: chemical-weapons
offenses, the use of weapons of mass destruction, killing
Americans abroad, and terrorism financing.
- Allows federal agents to follow sophisticated
terrorists trained to evade detection. For years, law
enforcement has been able to use "roving wiretaps" to
investigate ordinary crimes, including drug offenses and
racketeering. A roving wiretap can be authorized by a
federal judge to apply to a particular suspect, rather than
a particular phone or communications device. Because
international terrorists are sophisticated and trained to
thwart surveillance by rapidly changing locations and
communication devices such as cell phones, the Act
authorized agents to seek court permission to use the same
techniques in national security investigations to track
terrorists.
- Allows law enforcement to conduct investigations
without tipping off terrorists. In some cases if
criminals are tipped off too early to an investigation, they
might flee, destroy evidence, intimidate or kill witnesses,
cut off contact with associates, or take other action to
evade arrest. Therefore, federal courts in narrow
circumstances long have allowed law enforcement to delay for
a limited time when the subject is told that a
judicially-approved search warrant has been executed. Notice
is always provided, but the reasonable delay gives law
enforcement time to identify the criminal's associates,
eliminate immediate threats to our communities, and
coordinate the arrests of multiple individuals without
tipping them off beforehand. These delayed notification
search warrants have been used for decades, have proven
crucial in drug and organized crime cases, and have been
upheld by courts as fully constitutional.
- Allows federal agents to ask a court for an order to
obtain business records in national security terrorism
cases. Examining business records often provides the key
that investigators are looking for to solve a wide range of
crimes. Investigators might seek select records from
hardware stores or chemical plants, for example, to find out
who bought materials to make a bomb, or bank records to see
who's sending money to terrorists. Law enforcement
authorities have always been able to obtain business records
in criminal cases through grand jury subpoenas, and continue
to do so in national security cases where appropriate. These
records were sought in criminal cases such as the
investigation of the Zodiac gunman, where police suspected
the gunman was inspired by a Scottish occult poet, and
wanted to learn who had checked the poet's books out of the
library. In national security cases where use of the grand
jury process was not appropriate, investigators previously
had limited tools at their disposal to obtain certain
business records. Under the Patriot Act, the government can
now ask a federal court (the Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Court), if needed to aid an investigation, to
order production of the same type of records available
through grand jury subpoenas. This federal court, however,
can issue these orders only after the government
demonstrates the records concerned are sought for an
authorized investigation to obtain foreign intelligence
information not concerning a U.S. person or to protect
against international terrorism or clandestine intelligence
activities, provided that such investigation of a U.S.
person is not conducted solely on the basis of activities
protected by the First Amendment.
2. The Patriot Act facilitated information sharing and
cooperation among government agencies so that they can better
"connect the dots." The Act removed the major legal
barriers that prevented the law enforcement, intelligence, and
national defense communities from talking and coordinating their
work to protect the American people and our national security.
The government's prevention efforts should not be restricted by
boxes on an organizational chart. Now police officers, FBI
agents, federal prosecutors and intelligence officials can
protect our communities by "connecting the dots" to uncover
terrorist plots before they are completed. As Sen. John Edwards
(D-N.C.) said about the Patriot Act, "we simply cannot prevail
in the battle against terrorism if the right hand of our
government has no idea what the left hand is doing" (Press
release, 10/26/01)
- Prosecutors and investigators used information shared
pursuant to section 218 in investigating the defendants in
the so-called “Virginia Jihad” case. This prosecution
involved members of the Dar al-Arqam Islamic Center, who
trained for jihad in Northern Virginia by participating in
paintball and paramilitary training, including eight
individuals who traveled to terrorist training camps in
Pakistan or Afghanistan between 1999 and 2001. These
individuals are associates of a violent Islamic extremist
group known as Lashkar-e-Taiba (LET), which operates in
Pakistan and Kashmir, and that has ties to the al Qaeda
terrorist network. As the result of an investigation that
included the use of information obtained through FISA,
prosecutors were able to bring charges against these
individuals. Six of the defendants have pleaded guilty, and
three were convicted in March 2004 of charges including
conspiracy to levy war against the United States and
conspiracy to provide material support to the Taliban. These
nine defendants received sentences ranging from a prison
term of four years to life imprisonment.
3. The Patriot Act updated the law to reflect new
technologies and new threats. The Act brought the law up
to date with current technology, so we no longer have to fight a
digital-age battle with antique weapons-legal authorities
leftover from the era of rotary telephones. When investigating
the murder of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl,
for example, law enforcement used one of the Act's new
authorities to use high-tech means to identify and locate some
of the killers.
- Allows law enforcement officials to obtain a search
warrant anywhere a terrorist-related activity occurred.
Before the Patriot Act, law enforcement personnel were
required to obtain a search warrant in the district where
they intended to conduct a search. However, modern terrorism
investigations often span a number of districts, and
officers therefore had to obtain multiple warrants in
multiple jurisdictions, creating unnecessary delays. The Act
provides that warrants can be obtained in any district in
which terrorism-related activities occurred, regardless of
where they will be executed. This provision does not change
the standards governing the availability of a search
warrant, but streamlines the search-warrant process.
- Allows victims of computer hacking to request law
enforcement assistance in monitoring the "trespassers" on
their computers. This change made the law
technology-neutral; it placed electronic trespassers on the
same footing as physical trespassers. Now, hacking victims
can seek law enforcement assistance to combat hackers, just
as burglary victims have been able to invite officers into
their homes to catch burglars.
4. The Patriot Act increased the penalties for those
who commit terrorist crimes. Americans are threatened as
much by the terrorist who pays for a bomb as by the one who
pushes the button. That's why the Patriot Act imposed tough new
penalties on those who commit and support terrorist operations,
both at home and abroad. In particular, the Act:
- Prohibits the harboring of terrorists. The Act
created a new offense that prohibits knowingly harboring
persons who have committed or are about to commit a variety
of terrorist offenses, such as: destruction of aircraft; use
of nuclear, chemical, or biological weapons; use of weapons
of mass destruction; bombing of government property;
sabotage of nuclear facilities; and aircraft piracy.
- Enhanced the inadequate maximum penalties for various
crimes likely to be committed by terrorists: including
arson, destruction of energy facilities, material support to
terrorists and terrorist organizations, and destruction of
national-defense materials.
- Enhanced a number of conspiracy penalties,
including for arson, killings in federal facilities,
attacking communications systems, material support to
terrorists, sabotage of nuclear facilities, and interference
with flight crew members. Under previous law, many terrorism
statutes did not specifically prohibit engaging in
conspiracies to commit the underlying offenses. In such
cases, the government could only bring prosecutions under
the general federal conspiracy provision, which carries a
maximum penalty of only five years in prison.
- Punishes terrorist attacks on mass transit systems.
- Punishes bioterrorists.
- Eliminates the statutes of limitations for certain
terrorism crimes and lengthens them for other terrorist
crimes.
The government's success in preventing another catastrophic
attack on the American homeland since September 11, 2001, would
have been much more difficult, if not impossible, without the
USA Patriot Act. The authorities Congress provided have
substantially enhanced our ability to prevent, investigate, and
prosecute acts of terror. |