Mon, 15 Sep 2003 - Associated Press
Anti-Terrorism Laws Now Being Used Against Common Criminals
Philadelphia - In the two years since law enforcement
agencies gained fresh powers to help them track down and punish
terrorists, police and prosecutors have increasingly turned the
force of the new laws not on al-Qaida cells but on people charged
with common crimes.
The Justice Department said it has used authority given to
it by the USA Patriot Act to crack down on currency smugglers
and seize money hidden overseas by alleged bookies, con artists
and drug dealers.
Federal prosecutors used the act in June to file a charge
of "terrorism using a weapon of mass destruction" against
a California man after a pipe bomb exploded in his lap, wounding
him as he sat in his car.
A North Carolina county prosecutor charged a man accused of
running a methamphetamine lab with breaking a new state law barring
the manufacture of chemical weapons. If convicted, Martin Dwayne
Miller could get 12 years to life in prison for a crime that
usually brings about six months.
Prosecutor Jerry Wilson says he isn't abusing the law, which
defines chemical weapons of mass destruction as "any substance
that is designed or has the capability to cause death or serious
injury" and contains toxic chemicals.
Civil liberties and legal defense groups are bothered by the
string of cases, and say the government soon will be routinely
using harsh anti-terrorism laws against run-of-the-mill lawbreakers.
"Within six months of passing the Patriot Act, the Justice
Department was conducting seminars on how to stretch the new
wiretapping provisions to extend them beyond terror cases,"
said Dan Dodson, a spokesman for the National Association of
Criminal Defense Attorneys. "They say they want the Patriot
Act to fight terrorism, then, within six months, they are teaching
their people how to use it on ordinary citizens."
Prosecutors aren't apologizing.
Attorney General John Ashcroft completed a 16-city tour this
week defending the Patriot Act as key to preventing a second
catastrophic terrorist attack. Federal prosecutors have brought
more than 250 criminal charges under the law, with more than
130 convictions or guilty pleas.
The law, passed two months after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks,
erased many restrictions that had barred the government from
spying on its citizens, granting agents new powers to use wiretaps,
conduct electronic and computer eavesdropping and access private
financial data.
Stefan Cassella, deputy chief for legal policy for the Justice
Department's asset forfeiture and money laundering section, said
that while the Patriot Act's primary focus was on terrorism,
lawmakers were aware it contained provisions that had been on
prosecutors' wish lists for years and would be used in a wide
variety of cases.
In one case prosecuted this year, investigators used a provision
of the Patriot Act to recover $4.5 million from a group of telemarketers
accused of tricking elderly U.S. citizens into thinking they
had won the Canadian lottery. Prosecutors said the defendants
told victims they would receive their prize as soon as they paid
thousands of dollars in income tax on their winnings.
Before the anti-terrorism act, U.S. officials would have had
to use international treaties and appeal for help from foreign
governments to retrieve the cash, deposited in banks in Jordan
and Israel. Now, they simply seized it from assets held by those
banks in the United States.
"These are appropriate uses of the statute," Cassella
said. "If we can use the statute to get money back for victims,
we are going to do it."
The complaint that anti-terrorism legislation is being used
to go after people who aren't terrorists is just the latest in
a string of criticisms.
More than 150 local governments have passed resolutions opposing
the law as an overly broad threat to constitutional rights.
Critics also say the government has gone too far in charging
three U.S. citizens as enemy combatants, a power presidents wield
during wartime that is not part of the Patriot Act. The government
can detain such individuals indefinitely without allowing them
access to a lawyer.
And Muslim and civil liberties groups have criticized the
government's decision to force thousands of mostly Middle Eastern
men to risk deportation by registering with immigration authorities.
"The record is clear," said Ralph Neas, president
of the liberal People for the American Way Foundation. "Ashcroft
and the Justice Department have gone too far."
Some of the restrictions on government surveillance that were
erased by the Patriot Act had been enacted after past abuses
- including efforts by the FBI to spy on civil rights leaders
and anti-war demonstrators during the Cold War. Tim Lynch, director
of the Project on Criminal Justice at the Cato Institute, a libertarian
think tank, said it isn't farfetched to believe that the government
might overstep its bounds again.
"I don't think that those are frivolous fears,"
Lynch said. "We've already heard stories of local police
chiefs creating files on people who have protested the [Iraq]
war. ... The government is constantly trying to expand its jurisdictions,
and it needs to be watched very, very closely."
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