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Patriot Act Extension Signed By Obama

Patriot Act

First Posted: 05/27/11 12:55 AM ET Updated: 05/27/11 09:31 AM ET

JIM ABRAMS, Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Minutes before a midnight deadline, President Barack Obama signed into law a four-year extension of post-Sept. 11 powers to search records and conduct roving wiretaps in pursuit of terrorists.

"It's an important tool for us to continue dealing with an ongoing terrorist threat," Obama said Friday after a meeting with French President Nicolas Sarkozy.

With Obama in France, the White House said the president used an autopen machine that holds a pen and signs his actual signature. It is only used with proper authorization of the president.

Congress sent the bill to the president with only hours to go on Thursday before the provisions expired at midnight. Votes taken in rapid succession in the Senate and House came after lawmakers rejected attempts to temper the law enforcement powers to ensure that individual liberties are not abused.

The Senate voted 72-23 for the legislation to renew three terrorism-fighting authorities. The House passed the measure 250-153 on an evening vote.

A short-term expiration would not have interrupted ongoing operations but would have barred the government from seeking warrants for new investigations.

Story continues below

Congress bumped up against the deadline mainly because of the stubborn resistance from a single senator, Republican freshman Rand Paul of Kentucky, who saw the terrorist-hunting powers as an abuse of privacy rights. Paul held up the final vote for several days while he demanded a chance to change the bill to diminish the government's ability to monitor individual actions.

The measure would add four years to the legal life of roving wiretaps, authorized for a person rather than a communications line or device; court-ordered searches of business records; and surveillance of non-American "lone wolf" suspects without confirmed ties to terrorist groups.

The roving wiretaps and access to business records are small parts of the USA Patriot Act enacted after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. But unlike most of the act, which is permanent law, those provisions must be renewed periodically because of concerns that they could be used to violate privacy rights. The same applies to the "lone wolf" provision, which was part of a 2004 intelligence law.

Paul argued that in the rush to meet the terrorist threat in 2001 Congress enacted a Patriot Act that tramples on individual liberties. He had some backing from liberal Democrats and civil liberties groups who have long contended the law gives the government authority to spy on innocent citizens.

Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., said he voted for the act in 2001 "while ground zero was still burning." But "I soon realized it gave too much power to government without enough judicial and congressional oversight."

Sen. Mark Udall, D-Colo., said the provision on collecting business records can expose law-abiding citizens to government scrutiny. "If we cannot limit investigations to terrorism or other nefarious activities, where do they end?" he asked.

"The Patriot Act has been used improperly again and again by law enforcement to invade Americans' privacy and violate their constitutional rights," said Laura W. Murphy, director of the ACLU Washington legislative office.

Still, coming just a month after intelligence and military forces tracked down and killed Osama bin Laden, there was little appetite for tampering with the terrorism-fighting tools. These tools, said Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, "have kept us safe for nearly a decade and Americans today should be relieved and reassured to know that these programs will continue."

Intelligence officials have denied improper use of surveillance tools, and this week both FBI Director Robert Mueller and Director of National Intelligence James Clapper sent letters to congressional leaders warning of serious national security consequences if the provisions were allowed to lapse.

The Obama administration says that without the three authorities the FBI might not be able to obtain information on terrorist plotting inside the U.S. and that a terrorist who communicates using different cell phones and email accounts could escape timely surveillance.

"When the clock strikes midnight tomorrow, we would be giving terrorists the opportunity to plot attacks against our country, undetected," Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said on the Senate floor Wednesday. In unusually personal criticism of a fellow senator, he warned that Paul, by blocking swift passage of the bill, "is threatening to take away the best tools we have for stopping them."

The nation itself is divided over the Patriot Act, as reflected in a Pew Research Center poll last February, before the killing of bin Laden, that found that 34 percent felt the law "goes too far and poses a threat to civil liberties. Some 42 percent considered it "a necessary tool that helps the government find terrorists." That was a slight turnaround from 2004 when 39 percent thought it went too far and 33 percent said it was necessary.

Paul, after complaining that Reid's remarks were "personally insulting," asked whether the nation "should have some rules that say before they come into your house, before they go into your banking records, that a judge should be asked for permission, that there should be judicial review? Do we want a lawless land?"

Paul agreed to let the bill go forward after he was given a vote on two amendments to rein in government surveillance powers. Both were soundly defeated. The more controversial, an amendment that would have restricted powers to obtain gun records in terrorist investigations, was defeated 85-10 after lawmakers received a letter from the National Rifle Association stating that it was not taking a position on the measure.

According to a senior Justice Department national security official testifying to Congress last March, the government has sought roving wiretap authority in about 20 cases a year between 2001 and 2010 and has sought warrants for business records less than 40 times a year, on average. The government has yet to use the lone wolf authority.

But the ACLU also points out that court approvals for business record access jumped from 21 in 2009 to 96 last year, and the organization contends the Patriot Act has blurred the line between investigations of actual terrorists and those not suspected of doing anything wrong.

Two Democratic critics of the Patriot Act, Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon and Udall of Colorado, on Thursday extracted a promise from Senate Intelligence Committee chairman Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., that she would hold hearings with intelligence and law enforcement officials on how the law is being carried out.

Wyden says that while there are numerous interpretations of how the Patriot Act works, the official government interpretation of the law remains classified. "A significant gap has developed now between what the public thinks the law says and what the government secretly claims it says," Wyden said.

Former ACLU head discusses The Patriot Act

___

Associated Press writers Laurie Kellman and Pete Yost contributed to this report.

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JIM ABRAMS, Associated Press WASHINGTON — Minutes before a midnight deadline, President Barack Obama signed into law a four-year extension of post-Sept. 11 powers to search records and conduct ro...
JIM ABRAMS, Associated Press WASHINGTON — Minutes before a midnight deadline, President Barack Obama signed into law a four-year extension of post-Sept. 11 powers to search records and conduct ro...
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
Steamboater
Hope & some change don't get change.
22 minutes ago (4:59 AM)
"Still, coming just a month after intelligen­ce and military forces tracked down and killed Osama bin Laden, there was little appetite for tampering with the terrorism-­fighting tools."---­----------­----------­----------­----------­----------­----------­----------­---------- Dead or alive, bin Laden got exactly what he wanted.
10:55 AM on 6/06/2011
republican­s should looooove this man! he continues to extend the bush admin's policies more than he originates his own.
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mightyhead
Living in the imperial overstretch
08:49 AM on 6/02/2011
Sheriff Andy Taylor for president:

http://www­.brasschec­ktv.com/pa­ge/1122.ht­ml
07:21 PM on 6/01/2011
Amazing how the Dems look the other way when Obama signs this....an­d blast Repubs who sign this. I say Control/AL­T/Delete in 2012.
11:08 AM on 6/01/2011
How could anyone not sign something called the patriot act.......­.......
12:14 AM on 6/01/2011
Shame on our government­!
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68Namvet
Sioux, French, German, Jew, American mutt
01:13 PM on 5/31/2011
As most people fail to realize is that what we think of the Patriot Act is based upon zero knowledge of the Patriot Act. Simply put, the Patriot Act controls secret investigat­ions. The government­, however, has a private understand­ing of the law. This interpreta­tion has been classified­. So the meaning of a law about secrets is hidden because the government­'s view of the law is itself a secret.
05:33 AM on 5/31/2011
What a nightmare. Ramming this renewal through is another in a long list of reprehensi­ble actions that are in direct contrast to what Obama promised if he was elected.

The so called 'Patriot AcT'- 1
mjc
Represent opinions as honestly as possible.
11:15 AM on 5/30/2011
Never thought I would agree with a tea party leader...R­and Paul...abo­ut the privacy rights of Americans but I surely do. As the former leader of the ACLU said in the video, the idea that you can't have good security if you have too much freedom, too much transparen­cy, is abominable­. This Congress and this country's leadership reminds me a great deal of the McCarthy era in the 1950s. Yes, the United States is under threat, not of terrorists but of the reactionar­ies who prefer a police state to a democratic state. Maybe that is why Congress had so much empathy for Bibi Netanyahu when he addressed Congress on the President'­s revelation of the 1967 ceasefire lines...wi­th adjustment­s in his good speech on the Middle East.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AndyWright68
09:01 AM on 5/30/2011
Those in power only know how to fight to protect their power, fight for more power and fight all those who challenge their power. Giving up power is never a considerat­ion. And if they are going to help you they need you to allow them to have power over you, give up your rights, move further from freedom and closer to dependency on the state. Your obedience, money and patriotism are needed so those who crave power over you can succeed in their sick pursuit of power.

After all, these wealthy, smooth talking politician­s care sooo much about the people that they have taxed their unborn. This is the only way they can have their wars, incarcerat­e millions of nonviolent people and indoctrina­te the children.

The patriot act is just another example of how they will never give up any power. You may hate the patriot act but if you became president you would sign it also. Power corrupts.
07:45 AM on 5/30/2011
theres a fine line between extreme patriotism and facsism
12:07 AM on 5/30/2011
For all the lib's and Obama's particular­ly huffing and puffing about Iraq , Git'mo , Water boarding that led us to bin Laden and foiled at least one domestic attack , bestowing civil rights upon illegal combatants not granted by either the Constituti­on nor Internatio­nal Law or Agreements , the cost of combat deployment­s and a list of other demagoguer­y too numerous to list here Obama does exactly what Bush and Cheney said he would . Stay the Course ! Not only stay the course ,but get us involved in another war zone to compensate for his failed weak foreign policy . Increase our commitment in Afghanista­n and set the Israeli Peace Process back decades .
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Waterphoneman
artist, musician, inventor & mouth from the south
11:10 PM on 5/29/2011
I am so against the Patriot Act that it is difficult for me to express what great displeasur­e your (President Obama) signing it has meant to me. George Bush I can understand as he was a right wing nut but you I counted on and you have let me down by going along with what all your cronies have told you is the right way, which it isn't. Shame for what you have done.
09:23 PM on 5/29/2011
Between TOTUS and now iPOTUS (Pink Pen of the United States), why do we need this President again?