From the Land of the Liberty Bell: Investigate the NSA
by
Andy Hoover, Legislative Director, ACLU of PA
Here in Pennsylvania, we have a full-time legislature, so as
the lobbyist for the Pennsylvania affiliate of the ACLU, I have plenty of
opportunities for face time with state legislators and staff. Since June, I’ve
been hearing a similar refrain repeatedly: NSA surveillance is a major problem.
We deal with a lot of state-level surveillance legislation, and I’ve joked with
legislators and staff that Edward Snowden has made my job a lot easier.
Last week, the Pennsylvania House of Representatives
formalized that concern by passing a resolution to protest the NSA’s sweeping
surveillance activities and to call on Congress to create a special committee
to investigate and to recommend revisions to the USA PATRIOT Act and for
reforms at the NSA and the FBI. The vote on House
Resolution 456 wasn’t even close.
As an observer of civil liberties trends in the Pennsylvania
General Assembly, I was not surprised by this overwhelming bipartisan vote. Our
state House has made it clear on repeated occasions that it is serious about
privacy. In October of 2012, the House defeated legislation to require DNA
collection from people who have been arrested but not convicted of a crime. Two
weeks ago, the House passed an amendment to require prosecutors to obtain a
search warrant before they can access data from a prescription drug monitoring
program. Both of these victories for civil liberties happened despite the
objections of the Office of the Attorney General and the Pennsylvania District
Attorneys Association.
The Pennsylvania House has good reason to worry. Since June,
disclosure after disclosure has revealed that the NSA is vacuuming up the call
records of nearly all Americans and is filtering through the contents of our
international communications. The disclosures haven’t stopped though, and with
each disclosure more and more Americans are saying “Stop watching us.”
Our state House made a strong statement in passing HR 456.
We hope that Sens. Bob Casey, Jr. and
Pat Toomey and the rest of Pennsylvania’s congressional delegation get the
message clearly and support the USA
FREEDOM Act introduced by Rep. Jim Sensenbrenner (R-Wis.)
and Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) this week. Among
other things, the
bill
rightly ends the indiscriminate collection of American call records, as well as
prohibits the bulk collection of any other records, and requires a court order
before the government can search through its databases containing the
international communications of Americans.
Pennsylvanians won’t stand for an overly-intrusive
government that pokes its nose in our daily lives.
Labels: NSA, privacy, state legislature