4th Amendment
R.I.P
by Carol Norris
The 4th
Amendment, an unwavering champion of our right to privacy, died on 18 November
2002. The amendment, adopted by the convention of states on 15 December, 1791,
was 211. The 4th tirelessly fought to guarantee that "the right of the
people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against
unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants
shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and
particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to
be seized."
The 4th has had
health issues over the years, struggling with those that have tried to weaken
it. Most recently, it received a life-threatening blow from the USA Patriot
Act. But lower courts, concerned about possible civil liberties abuses, tended
to the injury by trying to curtail some of the Act's power.
On the 18th, the
ruling of the lower courts was overridden by an all but unknown court: the
Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court of Review, which is the appeals arm of
the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC). The appeals panel includes
three men that were appointed by Chief Justice William Rehnquist. The courts
meet in secret at the Justice Department. Initially, the FISC ruled the
surveillance privileges sought by John Ashcroft after 9.11 "were not
reasonably designed" to ensure the privacy rights of citizens. It cited
many previous abuses of surveillance laws. But government lawyers sought a
review. And the appeals panel determined the authorized surveillance measures
of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) are "reasonable."
And so, with the
courage characteristic of its life, the 4th succumbed to this ruling at its
home in the pages of the Constitution, surrounded by friends and loved ones.
Ann Beeson of
the Civil Liberties Union, a long-time supporter of the 4th stated: "As of
today, the attorney general can suspend the ordinary requirements of the 4th
Amendment in order to listen to phone calls, read e-mails, and conduct secret
searches of Americans' homes and offices." Those that are being monitored
won't know it. So, in essence, there is no mechanism in place to challenge the
surveillance. And currently, only the government can do that.
John Ashcroft
was reportedly seen shortly after the decision dancing around in circles on
tiptoe, hugging himself while singing, "hot damn, hot damn, hot
damn." On record, he called the ruling revolutionary and said, "the
decision allows the Department of Justice to free immediately our agents and
prosecutors in the field to work more closely and cooperatively in achieving
our core mission...the mission of preventing terrorists attacks." As it
stands, the definition of a "terrorist" is broad enough to include
almost anybody.
Even if the
ruling had gone the other way, the 4th would've surely lost its life at the
hands of the likes of John Poindexter and his new post-9.11 brainchild: the
Information Awareness Office (IAO), a new pentagon operation with a $200
million budget that Poindexter will head. Poindexter, retired rear admiral, and
former national security advisor is most remembered for another of his
brainchildren: funding anti-Sandinista rebels in Nicaragua by selling arms to
Iran. He was released from the jail sentence he was serving for lying to
Congress about this because it was decided his evidence warranted congressional
immunity.
The premiere
program of the IAO will be called the Total Information Awareness Program. This
program, if it so desires, can develop a dossier on every single American,
unearthing and tracking nearly everything a person does with little or no need
to explain itself and its motivations. This unchecked, broad-sweeping power is
something our dearly departed amendment would be greatly dismayed to see.
The 4th was
loved and respected by the citizens throughout the US that it protected.
"How will I ever feel comfortable exercising my 1st amendment rights
without the protections of the 4th?" asked one mourner, crying into her
copy of the Constitution. Fearing repercussions, she refused to state her name.
"I always knew I could count on it," she continued. "It was
always there for me." Another sobbed, "El Cuarto - that's what we
used to call it- was such a big part of my life. It's what made our country
different from those police states. What are we going to do now?"
What indeed. The
4th Amendment will be sorely missed.
It is survived
by 26 sibling amendments. The besieged 1st, 6th, and 14th amendments are also
fighting for their lives. And the 2nd continues to be held hostage by special
interests.
The surviving
amendments ask that in lieu of flowers, you send your congressperson(s) your
heartfelt sentiments.
Carol Norris
is a reformed advertising copywriter, psychologist and freelance writer based
in San Francisco, CA. Email: writingforjustice@hotmail.com.