
















|
February 17, 2004: Book, library groups launch Patriot Act petition campaign |
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE For more information, contact: Larry Siems, (212) 334-1660, ext. 105, lsiems@pen.org
New York, NY, February 17, 2004—Groups representing booksellers, librarians and writers today launched a nationwide effort to obtain one million signatures in support of legislation to amend Section 215 of the USA PATRIOT Act. The groups hope to persuade Congress to restore safeguards for the privacy of bookstore and library records that were eliminated by the Act.
The Campaign for Reader Privacy—sponsored by the American Booksellers Association, the American Library Association and PEN American Center—will gather signatures in bookstores, libraries and on a new Web site, www.readerprivacy.org. Over the last year, Republicans, Democrats and Independents have joined to sponsor a number of bills to amend Section 215 of the PATRIOT Act, including the Freedom to Read Protection Act (H.R.1157) and the Security and Freedom Ensured (SAFE) Act, S. 1709.
"Booksellers are deeply concerned about the chilling effect of Section 215 and President Bush's stated intent to seek blanket reauthorization of the PATRIOT Act," said ABA Chief Operating Officer Oren Teicher.
Section 215 of the PATRIOT Act amended the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) to give the FBI vastly expanded authority to search business records, including the records of bookstores and libraries: the FBI may request the records secretly; it is not required to prove that there is "probable cause" to believe the person whose records are being sought has committed a crime; and the bookseller or librarian who receives an order is prohibited from revealing it to anyone except those whose help is needed to produce the records.
"This isn't about stripping law enforcement of the power to investigate terrorism. It's about restoring confidence that our reading choices aren't being monitored by the government," said Larry Siems, director of PEN's Freedom to Write Program.
The Bush administration opposes changes in Section 215. Attorney General John Ashcroft has characterized concern over the privacy of bookstore and library records as "hysteria." In his State of the Union message on January 20, President George Bush called on Congress to reauthorize the provisions of the PATRIOT Act that are due to expire at the end of next year, including Section 215. More than 253 anti-PATRIOT Act resolutions have been passed nationwide in states, counties, cities and small towns - including New York City, Kansas City, Mo., and Valencia County, N.M., in just the last two weeks.
"Our concerns about privacy are far from hysterical. The federal government has attempted to monitor library records before and it seems inevitable that they will use Section 215 to try again," said Judith F. Krug, director of the ALA's Office for Intellectual Freedom.
To demonstrate the unity of the book and library community, the groups also released a statement of support for proposed legislation that amends Section 215. The statement is signed by 40 organizations representing virtually every bookstore, library and writer in the country as well as 81 individual companies, including Barnes & Noble Booksellers, Borders Group, Inc., Ingram Book Group, Random House, Simon & Schuster and Holtzbrinck Publishers.
To see the statement online, click here.
~~~
Book and Library Community Statement Supporting The Freedom to Read Protection Act (H.R. 1157) The Library and Bookseller Protection Act (S. 1158) The Library, Bookseller and Personal Data Privacy Act (S. 1507)
Our society places the highest value on the ability to speak freely on any subject. But freedom of speech depends on the freedom to explore ideas privately. Bookstore customers and library patrons must feel free to seek out books on health, religion, politics, the law, or any subject they choose, without fear that the government is looking over their shoulder. Without the assurance that their reading choices will remain private, they will be reluctant to fully exercise their right to read freely.
Section 215 of the USA PATRIOT Act threatens bookstore and library privacy. FBI agents do not need to prove they have "probable cause" before searching bookstore or library records: they can obtain the records of anyone whom they believe to have information that may be relevant to a terrorism investigation, including people who are not suspected of committing a crime or of having any knowledge of a crime. The request for an order authorizing the search is heard by a secret court in a closed proceeding, making it impossible for a bookseller or librarian to object on First Amendment grounds prior to the execution of the order. Because the order contains a gag provision forbidding a bookseller or librarian from alerting anyone to the fact that a search has occurred, it would be difficult to protest the search even after the fact.
The organizations listed below strongly support federal legislation that addresses this problem: the Freedom to Read Protection Act (H.R. 1157), the Library and Bookseller Protection Act (S. 1158) and the Library, Bookseller and Personal Data Privacy Act (S. 1507). These bills strengthen protections for the privacy of bookstore and library records without preventing the FBI from obtaining crucial information. Under H.R. 1157 and S. 1158, the courts would exercise their normal scrutiny in reviewing requests for bookstore and library records. S. 1507 allows the FBI to follow the procedures authorized by Section 215 but limits searches to the records of "foreign agents" engaged in acts of terrorism or espionage.
We applaud the authors of these bills, U.S. Representative Bernie Sanders (H.R. 1157), Senator Barbara Boxer (S. 1158) and Senator Russell D. Feingold (S. 1507) as well as the Democratic and Republican sponsors and co-sponsors of this legislation. They have shown great courage by defending civil liberties during a time of crisis.
American Association of Law Libraries American Booksellers Association American Booksellers Foundation for Free Expression American Library Association American Society of Journalists and Authors Association of American Publishers Association of American University Presses Association of Booksellers for Children Authors Guild California Library Association Children's Book Council Comic Book Legal Defense Fund Florida Publishers Association Freedom to Read Foundation Great Lakes Booksellers Association Illinois Library Association Medical Library Association Mid-South Independent Booksellers Association Minnesota Library Association Montana Library Association Mountains and Plains Booksellers Association National Association of Independent Publishers Representatives New Atlantic Independent Booksellers Association New England Booksellers Association New York Library Association Northern California Independent Booksellers Assn. Pacific Northwest Independent Booksellers Assn. PEN American Center PEN New England PEN USA West Publishers Association of the West Publishers Marketing Association Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America Small Press Center Society of Children's Book Writers and Illustrators Southeast Booksellers Association Southern California Booksellers Association Special Libraries Association Upper Midwest Booksellers Association Virginia Library Association
96 Inc. Abebooks Academy Chicago Publishers Akashic Books Aliform Publishing A. Pankovich Publishers Arte Público Press Avalon Publishing Group Avocet Press Inc. Baker & Taylor Barnes & Noble Booksellers Beacon Press Borders Group Inc. Capital Books Cat's-paw Press Center for Thanatology Research & Education, Inc. Chicory Blue Press Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press Cornell Maritime Press & Tidewater Publishers Darwin Press Devenish Press Duke University Press The Feminist Press at the City University of New York First Books & Inkwater Press FoulkeTale Publishing Four Walls Eight Windows Fugue State Press Fulcrum Publishing Gival Press, LLC Green Map System Grove/Atlantic, Inc. Holtzbrinck Publishers Houghton Mifflin Humanics Publishing Group International Publishers Co., Inc. Independent Booksellers Consortium, Inc. Ingram Book Group Inkwell Books Island Press John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Lee Stookey Books Lynne Rienner Publishers Mountain Empire Publications Mountaintop Books New York University Press North Country Books Patria Press, Inc. Pelican Island Publishing Penington Press Pocahontas Press Plum Branch Press Princeton University Press PublishingGame.com/Peanut Butter and Jelly Press Rainbow Books, Inc. Random House, Inc. Red Dust, Inc. Red Rock Press Rexdale Publishing Company Sem Fronteiras Press Seven Stories Press Shambling Gate Press Simon & Schuster Snake Nation Press Southern Illinois University Press Square One Publishers Star Bright Books Stein Software Corporation Surrey Books Turtle Books Trafalgar Square University Press of Colorado VaiVecchio Press Viveca Smith Publishing Walker & Company Wesleyan University Press Wild Horizons Publishing, Inc. Wildcat Press Winged Willow Press The Winstead Press Ltd. Workman Publishing Yale University Press
>> Campaign for Core Freedoms
>> Freedom to Write
|
|
|
|
 |
|