From the Los Angeles Times
The invasion of America
Creeping intrusions against our privacy
rights are an assault on the Constitution.
By Andrew P. Napolitano
February 18, 2008
When President Nixon was in his pre-Watergate heyday, he ordered the
FBI and the CIA to electronically monitor the private behavior of his
domestic political adversaries. Shortly after Nixon resigned,
investigators discovered hundreds of reports of break-ins and secret
electronic surveillance. None of it was authorized by warrants, and
thus all of it was illegal. But it had been conducted pursuant to the
president's orders. Nixon's defense was, "When the president does it,
that means that it is not illegal."
He
made that infamous statement in a TV interview years after he left
office, but the attitude espoused was obviously one he embraced while
in the White House. He, like his present-day successor, rejected the
truism that the 4th Amendment of the Constitution, which prohibits the
government from conducting electronic surveillance of anyone without a
search warrant issued by a judge based on probable cause of a crime,
restrains the president.
In response to the abuses during the
Nixon administration, Congress enacted the Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Act, or FISA, in 1978. The law provides that no electronic
surveillance may occur by anyone in the government at any time under
any circumstances for any reason other than in accordance with law, and
no such surveillance may occur within the U.S. of an American other
than in accordance with the 4th Amendment.
The 4th Amendment
was written in response to the Colonial experience whereby British
soldiers wrote their own search warrants, thus literally authorizing
themselves to enter the private property of colonists.
The
amendment has been uniformly interpreted by the courts to require a
warrant by a judge; and judges can only issue search warrants after
government agents, under oath, have convinced the judges that it is
more likely than not that the things to be seized are evidence of
crimes. This standard of proof is called probable cause of crime. It is
one of only two instances in which the founders wrote a rule of
criminal procedure into the Constitution itself, surely so that no
Congress, president or court could tamper with it.
FISA also
created the bizarre, constitutionally questionable procedure in which
federal agents could appear in front of a secret court and, instead of
presenting probable cause of a crime in order to obtain a search
warrant, would only need to present probable cause that the target of
the warrant was an agent of a foreign government. The foreign
government could be friendly or it could wish us ill, but no illegal or
even anti-American behavior need be shown. Subsequent amendments to
this statute removed the "agency" requirement and demanded only that
the target be a person physically present in the U.S. who was not born
here and is not an American citizen, whether working for a foreign
government or not.
The FISA statute itself significantly --
and, in my opinion, unconstitutionally -- lowered the 4th Amendment bar
from probable cause of "crime"to probable cause of "status."
However, in order to protect the 4th Amendment rights of the targets of
spying, the statute erected a so-called wall between gathering evidence
and using evidence. The government cannot constitutionally prosecute
someone unless it has evidence against him that was obtained pursuant
to probable cause of a crime, a standard not met by a FISA warrant.
Congress
changed all that. The Patriot Act passed after 9/11 and its later
version not only destroyed the wall between investigation and
prosecution,they mandated that investigators who obtained evidence of
criminal activity pursuant to FISA warrants share that evidence with
prosecutors. They also instructed federal judges that the evidence thus
shared is admissible under the Constitution against a defendant in a
criminal case. Congress forgot that it cannot tell federal judges what
evidence is admissible because judges, not politicians, decide what a
jury hears.
Then the Bush administration and Congress went even
further. The administration wanted, and Congress has begrudgingly given
it, the authority to conduct electronic surveillance of foreigners and
Americans without even a FISA warrant -- without any warrant
whatsoever. The so-called Protect America Act of 2007, which expired at
the end of last week, gave the government carte blanche to spy on
foreign persons outside the U.S., even if Americans in the United
States with whom they may be communicating are spied on -- illegally --
in the process. Director of National Intelligence J. Michael McConnell
told the House Judiciary Committee last year that hundreds of
unsuspecting Americans' conversations and e-mails are spied on annually
as a consequence of the warrantless surveillance of foreigners outside
the United States.
So where does all this leave us? Even
though, since 1978, the government has gotten more than 99% of its FISA
applications approved, the administration wants to do away with FISA
altogether if at least one of the people whose conversations or e-mails
it wishes to monitor is not in the U.S. and is not an American.
Those
who believe the Constitution means what it says should tremble at every
effort to weaken any of its protections. The Constitution protects all
"persons" and all "people" implicated by government behavior. So the
government should be required, as it was until FISA, to obtain a 4th
Amendment warrant to conduct surveillance of anyone, American or not,
in the U.S. or not.
If we lower constitutional protections for foreigners and their
American correspondents, for whom will we lower them next?
Andrew
P. Napolitano, a New Jersey Superior Court judge from 1987 to 1995, is
the senior judicial analyst at the Fox News Channel. His latest book is
"A Nation of Sheep."
Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times