From warrantless surveillance to warrantless physical searches?

We’ve all heard, of course, about the Bush administration’s warrantless-search program that included officials tapping phones and reviewing electronic communications without warrants. Moving the ball forward in a disturbing way, U.S. News published a very important story this week about an angle to warrantless searches that we hadn’t heard before: physical searches.

In the dark days after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, a small group of lawyers from the White House and the Justice Department began meeting to debate a number of novel legal strategies to help prevent another attack. Soon after, President Bush authorized the National Security Agency to begin conducting electronic eavesdropping on terrorism suspects in the United States, including American citizens, without court approval.

Meeting in the FBI’s state-of-the-art command center in the J. Edgar Hoover Building, the lawyers talked with senior FBI officials about using the same legal authority to conduct physical searches of homes and businesses of terrorism suspects — also without court approval, one current and one former government official tell U.S. News. “There was a fair amount of discussion at Justice on the warrantless physical search issue,” says a former senior FBI official. “Discussions about — if [the searches] happened — where would the information go, and would it taint cases.”

FBI Director Robert Mueller was alarmed by the proposal, the two officials said, and pushed back hard against it. “Mueller was personally very concerned,” one official says, “not only because of the blowback issue but also because of the legal and constitutional questions raised by warrantless physical searches.”

The article suggests the administration hasn’t searches homes and businesses in the United States without warrants — but that Bush officials believe they could do this whenever they want.

In fact, the reasoning is exactly the same as with wiretaps, with all the same mistakes and errors of fact and judgment.

In December, the New York Times disclosed the NSA’s warrantless electronic surveillance program, resulting in an angry reaction from President Bush. It has not previously been disclosed, however, that administration lawyers had cited the same legal authority to justify warrantless physical searches. But in a little-noticed white paper submitted by Attorney General Alberto Gonzales to Congress on January 19 justifying the legality of the NSA eavesdropping, Justice Department lawyers made a tacit case that President Bush also has the inherent authority to order such physical searches.

In order to fulfill his duties as commander in chief, the 42-page white paper says, “a consistent understanding has developed that the president has inherent constitutional authority to conduct warrantless searches and surveillance within the United States for foreign intelligence purposes.” The memo cites congressional testimony of Jamie Gorelick, a former deputy attorney general in the Clinton administration, in 1994 stating that the Justice Department “believes, and the case law supports, that the president has inherent authority to conduct warrantless physical searches for foreign intelligence purposes.”

The Gorelick myth has been debunked repeatedly, so I won’t belabor the point here. The bottom line remains the same — for the same reason the administration can’t tap your phone without a warrant, the administration also can’t conduct physical searches without a warrant, though the Bush gang believes differently.

Reading over the U.S. News piece, officials characterized this as a theoretical debate. A Justice Department spokesman said that DoJ lawyers have told Congress that the NSA program “described by the president does not involve physical searches.” On the other hand…

At least one defense attorney representing a subject of a terrorism investigation believes he was the target of warrantless clandestine searches. On Sept. 23, 2005 — nearly three months before the Times broke the NSA story — Thomas Nelson wrote to U.S. Attorney Karin Immergut in Oregon that in the previous nine months, “I and others have seen strong indications that my office and my home have been the target of clandestine searches.” In an interview, Nelson said he believes that the searches resulted from the fact that FBI agents accidentally gave his client classified documents and were trying to retrieve them. Nelson’s client is Soliman al-Buthe, codirector of a now defunct charity named al-Haramain, who was indicted in 2004 for illegally taking charitable donations out of the country. The feds also froze the charity’s assets, alleging ties to Osama bin Laden. The documents that were given to him, Nelson says, may prove that al-Buthe was the target of the NSA surveillance program.

The searches, if they occurred, were anything but deft. Late at night on two occasions, Nelson’s colleague Jonathan Norling noticed a heavyset, middle-aged, non-Hispanic white man claiming to be a member of an otherwise all-Hispanic cleaning crew, wearing an apron and a badge and toting a vacuum. But, says Norling, “it was clear the vacuum was not moving.” Three months later, the same man, waving a brillo pad, spent some time trying to open Nelson’s locked office door, Norling says. Nelson’s wife and son, meanwhile, repeatedly called their home security company asking why their alarm system seemed to keep malfunctioning. The company could find no fault with the system.

Let’s say it’s “unclear” whether the Bush gang has engaged in these warrantless searches or not. But let’s also take a moment to consider the big picture here. As far as the Bush administration is concerned, it has the legal power and authority to listen to Americans’ phone calls, read Americans’ emails, and enter Americans’ homes — all without a warrant, all without judicial oversight, and all without congressional approval.

It’s a truly breathtaking position for which there is no defense.

For now it’s just people of Middle Eastern descent that are being targeted. FOR NOW.

Congress needs to step up and grow a set. Or at this rate, the legislative and judicial branches will be a distant memory by the end of the decade.

  • Greetings from TCFKAUSA.

    (The Country Formerly Known As the United States of America)

    Are we going to be telling our kids and grandkids about the days when there was a 4th amendment?

    How is it possible that I am even asking that question?

  • Aldridge Ames was an American Citizen working as a Russian spy. When he was arrested on espionage charges they turned on his computer and searched it without a warrant.

    The Republican Congress discovered this and screamed bloody murder. When it was pointed out to them by the ever so helpful administration that FISA did not cover physical searches, the Republican Congress immediately amended FISA with the administration’s support.

    What’s the difference between then and now?
    Then, the administration was Clinton’s.
    Now, the administration is Bush’s.

    And Gonzales is a f**king moron.

    Just ask him if he’d want President Rodham-Clinton to conduct warrantless searches of his house.

  • Handy amendments to the Bill of Rights, as proposed by the Republican Party, circa 2006:

    I. Congress shall make no law respecting any religion other than evangelical Christianity, which shall be the official religion. Congress shall make no law abridging freedom of speech, except as prohibits unpatriotic speech or other speech which, in the view of the President (or his proxies) gives aid and comfort to the enemy. People are free to assemble so long as they are pre-screened supporters of the Republican party, or waiting in line to spend money.

    II. All registered Republicans have a civic duty to carry concealed weapons. Big ones. Lots of ’em. And cop-killing ammo, too. Something that can pierce black helicopters.

    III. Soldiers can do whatever the hell the Commander in Chief says they can do, notwithstanding any other rights herein or the Geneva Convention.

    IV. The people have no right to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects. The Attorney General can go, hear, and see whatever he wants. But he wont admit to seeing the sex. Sex is icky.

    V. No person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise infamous crime. Around here, we just string ’em up without waiting for an answer. Unless you are an administration official, in which case infamous is all relative — your crime is never as infamous as one committed by a Clinton, even if we have to stretch and invoke Roger.

    VI. In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public execution.

    VII. In suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall exceed twenty dollars, the right of trial by jury shall be preserved. In white collar prosecutions where the controversy shall exceed twenty million dollars, no fact tried by a jury shall be used to convict the defendant. If you violate this, the President will just pardon Ken, er, the citizen anyway. So there.

    VIII. Eight? Eight? I forgot what Eight was for. . . (sorry. bad college flashback.)

    IX. The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage the absolute and unchecked power of the Commander in Chief, so long as he is Republican, which he always will be under the powers used herein.

    X. The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the states, are reserved to the Commander in Chief, or, as need be to keep the current Commander in Chief, to Diebold.

    You laugh now, but I’m standing by my prediction that this is part of Mehlman’s 2006 election scheme!

  • Sandra Day O’Connor’s speech the other day reminded us we really do have something to worry about.

  • There are at least two things wrong.

    First, they gave Thomas Nelson’s client classified information? This isn’t the first time this has happened in a terrorism investigation, but you’ve got to wonder if any of these morons knows how to handle classified materials. I know I feel safer when I read items like this.

    Second, just how hard is it to get a “sneak-and-peek search” warrant under the PATRIOT Act? We went down this road with the warrantless electronic surveillance. I can’t imagine it’s terribly difficult getting one of these warrants if you can demonstrate “reasonable” suspicion. The only difference here is that the Patriot Act requires you to ask the court for a warrant and the government must tell the suspect they conducted a search sometime after the fact.

    And, why go the warrantless route when Congress hands the administration the law enforcement “tools” you claim you so desperately need?

  • prm has a reat second point there, and one that should be used early and often in this discussion:

    “We gave Bush everything he asked for, and he still can’t deliver. Why can’t Bush win this fight without cheating the American People out of their civil liberties? Is he that weak?”

    Hit them right in the bloated gut.

  • I think the questions ought to be:
    Exactly what limits does Bush have on his power?

    He saying he can violate the clear language of the 4th amendment. And the clear statutute of FISA.

    He thinks he can hold US citizens without a charge or a trial or access to consel (Padilla) (5th and 6th amendments)

    Can he violate the 1st amendment and shut down newspapers?

    Can he station troops or federal agents in people’s homes?

  • I’ve been thinking for awhile, the administration’s legal “reasoning” would have no reason to stop at wiretaps involving one foreign national. They would be equally applicable in theory to warrantless physical searches or warrantless searches of purely domestic communication. After all, the reasoning boils down to “If the president claims it’s for national security reasons, that trumps all other laws or constitutional language”.

    So this is the sound of another shoe dropping. I highly doubt it will be the last.

  • Bush is vying to be the first Dictator-in-Chief of the United States of America without any effective checks and balances from his Republican
    cohorts in Congress. These cohorts seem to give him a blank check to do anything he wants regardless of lack of justification. Where’s the “morals” they seem to espouse to others? That’s scary for the future of our once much-prized democracy.

  • Gridlock, why do you assume that only Swarthy Tairsts are being targeted? I’d be willing to lay money that the administration was monitoring the Kerry campaign and the DNC.

  • Just ask him if he’d want President Rodham-Clinton to conduct warrantless searches of his house.

    There will never be another Democratic president.

    A party — the Republicans — don’t change the rules in such a way that when they eventually return to the minority, those rules will come back to bite them in the ass unless they’re very, very sure they will never return to the minority agaisn.

  • The Republican Congress is, of course, so dirty with scandal that Bush probably just has to say: “Do as I want, or I’ll rat you out to the media and let your mange-infested hides swing in the wind.”

  • The Confidence Man — I have heard the rumor about the Kerry campaign being monitored on several blogs but haven’t been able to actually figure out the source.

    Can you help me out on this one? This tinfoil hatter wants to know.

  • Hey, guys… The enlightened leadership in Chicago has already declared that warrantless searches are just fine in traffic stops – especially if the searchee declines to be searched.

  • It’s a truly breathtaking position for which there is no defense.

    It will be truly breathtaking how many will come to their defense.

    A party — the Republicans — don’t change the rules in such a way that when they eventually return to the minority, those rules will come back to bite them in the ass unless they’re very, very sure they will never return to the minority again.

    There are two ways we can look at this: 1) If they are as competent at holding power as their are at everything else they do, we have a chance. 2) There “incompetence” was exactly as planned, and we should be forgetting about silly things like “elections”, because there is a far far darker game than governmental power being played.

  • Welcome to the new America. Let’s play a fun little game this week and use the current reasoning to fashion a new set of executive powers. Then let’s set the long war in motion, and see how things progress. I wonder which rights we now possess are solid enough to withstand the terror tactics that the administration is using against them. I bet almost none. The long war is just the slow march to tyranny and dictatorship. The amazing thing is that the strides have been so great in such a short period of time. It took hundreds of years to fight for our rights, gain them, preserve them, and expand upon them. Now in less than 5 years they are being peeled back one by one. Lovely.

  • What is being said here is that the constitution is in safe hands. In a pigs eye that is. Didn’t any of them take an oath to uphold and defend the constitution? Soliciting others to violate their oath is conspiricy isn’t it?

    I get it. They get their morals from a hoax, the Bible. This news is beginning to show in the rhetoric of the Republicans. Some are calling “former” religious conservatives Democrats in wolf’s clothing.

    The story of the discovery and the information proving the Bible is a hoax is on the internet at http://www.hoax-buster.org This is destined to change the face of politics in America and lead to a restatement of the principles the nation was founded upon.

    Maybe there is a God after all. She just isn’t in the Bible and had nothing to do with writing or inspiring it. Try the “Declaration of Independence” where you’ll find Nature’s God, Layd Liberty. With the news the Bible has been debunked She’s smiling for the first time in a long time.

    We need some leadership that doesn’t have it’s head stuck in Gospen truths that are really lies and calls on false Gods, “the Ammighty” for help. Almighty Gods get people into messes like, well take Iraq for example. Almighty God says “love thy neighbor” while Nature’s God says “respect thy neighbor’s rights.”

  • This story, besides being chilling, also demolishes one speculative argument that some (eg Kevin Drum) have bandied about as a possible justification for the warrantless eavesdropping program: that there’s some new technology out there that makes the conventional approach to authorising searches (show cause, get a warrant to tap a specific phone number, do the tap) unworkable. Say, a program that can instantly scan a thousand suspect phone numbers for suspicious words or phrases, or something.

    Well, now it turns out that they were conducting warrantless physical searches as well. No high-tech hyper-ueber-search protocol there, just old-fashioned government-sponsored breaking and entering. And there’s no new technology that I know of that allows the cops to search a thousand suspicious houses simultaneously for bomb-making equipment.

    In other words, the whole warrantless search program – electronic, physical, strip, whatever – was just another brutal abuse of power conducted by cynical crypto-fascists. The most extreme, conspiratorial interpretation of Bush admin behaviour proves to be the most accurate one, yet again. How utterly predictable and depressing.

  • Perhaps this is the main issue

    U.S. Monitored Muslim Sites Across Nation for Radiation

    By Spencer S. Hsu and Michael Alison Chandler
    Washington Post Staff Writers
    Saturday, December 24, 2005; A06

    Clandestine FBI and Energy Department teams have monitored private property in the United States for signs of radiation without warrants, U.S. officials said yesterday.

    Officials said the monitoring, which intensified after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, did not require warrants or court orders because it took place from publicly accessible areas or from parking lots or driveways leading to private facilities, which the FBI believes do not carry privacy protections.

    According to a report yesterday by U.S. News & World Report, government teams were sent to more than 100 Muslim sites in the Washington area, including mosques, homes, businesses and warehouses, plus similar sites in Chicago, Detroit, Las Vegas, New York and Seattle.

    The magazine, citing unnamed sources who knew about the secret program, said investigators sometimes went onto property under surveillance without a warrant, and some participants were threatened with firing after questioning the legality of the activity.

    At its peak, three vehicles monitored 120 sites a day in and around Washington, nearly all of them Muslim targets identified by the FBI, the report said. The magazine said checks were made daily for about 10 months starting in 2002 and resumed during high threat periods.

    Justice Department spokesman Brian Roehrkasse said the FBI does not target any group based on ethnicity, political or religious belief. “When intelligence information suggests that there may be a threat to public safety, particularly involving weapons of mass destruction, FBI investigators will go wherever the intelligence information takes them, acting within the framework of the law,” he said.

    Department spokesman John Nowacki said the government “is concerned with the growing body of reporting that al Qaeda has an intention to obtain and use chemical or radiological materials in an attack against Americans, and with this in mind, the FBI, as part of an interagency team, conducts passive operation in publicly accessible areas to determine the presence of nuclear materials in the area, in a manner that protects U.S. constitutional rights.”

    The Supreme Court ruled 5 to 4 in 2001 that warrants are required for police to use devices that search through walls for criminal activity, striking down the use of a heat sensor that led to marijuana charges against an Oregon man.

    “The message they are sending through these kinds of actions is that being Muslim is sufficient evidence to warrant scrutiny,” said Ibrahim Hooper, spokesman for the Council on American-Islamic Relations.

    Imam Johari Abdul-Malik, director of outreach for Al Hijrah Islamic Center in Falls Church, called the surveillance another example of unwarranted activity — “both unwarranted from the standpoint of spying on Muslims who are only trying to observe their rituals and unwarranted in terms of not having proper judicial review.”

    “I don’t understand what good this sort of surveillance is doing,” said Mukit Hossain, trustee of the All Dulles Area Muslims Society in Sterling. “What we are doing is harassing the immigrants and citizens and we haven’t found one that is a terrorist.”

    He said this kind of surveillance fuels “anti-Muslim feelings in America and a public relations problem for America in Muslim countries.”

  • And Gonzales is a f**king moron.

    Just ask him if he’d want President Rodham-Clinton to conduct warrantless searches of his house.

    Lance,

    If Hillary ran on that, I’d vote for her in a heartbeat–but that’s the only way she’ll get my vote! So far the only person to stand up against this, and therefore the only person worthy of the Democratic nomination, is Sen. Feingold.

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