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'Warrantless' searches not unprecedented
Washington Times/Charles Hurt | December 22 2005
Comment: Yes, the government has always spied on us. Tell us something we don't know. Just because Clinton did it doesn't mean it's OK for Bush to do it too.
Previous administrations, as well as the court that oversees national security cases, agreed with President Bush's position that a president legally may authorize searches without warrants in pursuit of foreign intelligence.
"The Department of Justice believes -- and the case law supports -- that the president has inherent authority to conduct warrantless physical searches for foreign intelligence purposes and that the president may, as he has done, delegate this authority to the attorney general," Clinton Deputy Attorney General Jamie S. Gorelick said in 1994 testimony before the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence.
That same authority, she added, pertains to electronic surveillance such as wiretaps.
More recently, the U.S. Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court -- the secretive judicial system that handles classified intelligence cases -- wrote in a declassified opinion that the court has long held "that the President did have inherent authority to conduct warrantless searches to obtain foreign intelligence information."
Such warrantless searches have been at
the center of a political fight in Washington after the New York Times reported
Friday that the Bush administration had a program to intercept communications
between al Qaeda suspects and persons in this country, a story whose publication
coincided with the congressional debate over reauthorizing the USA Patriot
Act.
In a 2002 opinion about the constitutionality of the Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Act (FISA) and the USA Patriot Act, the court wrote: "We
take for granted that the President does have that authority and, assuming
that is so, FISA could not encroach on the President's constitutional power."
Indeed, previous administrations have used that same authority.
One of the most famous examples of warrantless searches in recent years was the investigation of CIA official Aldrich H. Ames, who ultimately pleaded guilty to spying for the former Soviet Union. That case was largely built upon secret searches of Ames' home and office in 1993, conducted without federal warrants.
In 1994, President Clinton expanded the
use of warrantless searches to entirely domestic situations with no foreign
intelligence value whatsoever. In a radio address promoting a crime-fighting
bill, Mr. Clinton discussed a new policy to conduct warrantless searches
in highly violent public housing projects.
Previous administrations also asserted the authority of the president to
conduct searches in the interest of national security.
In 1978, for instance, Attorney General
Griffin B. Bell testified before a federal judge about warrantless searches
he and President Carter had authorized against two men suspected of spying
on behalf of the Vietnam government.
That same year, Congress approved and Mr. Carter signed FISA, which created
the secret court and required federal agents to get approval to conduct
electronic surveillance in most foreign intelligence cases.
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