http://www.jewishsf.com/bk020614/us16.shtml
Jewish groups debate FBI surveillance guide
SHARON SAMBER
Jewish Telegraphic Agency
WASHINGTON -- NEW FBI guidelines that give the agency greater
leeway in monitoring Americans' everyday lives have Jewish groups
debating how far personal freedoms can be pushed in the war on
terrorism.
The FBI announced new surveillance guidelines last week that
the Bush administration says will help prevent terrorism. The
Jewish community generally supports the need to change law
enforcement and intelligence methods following the Sept. 11 terror
attacks, but is concerned over how civil liberties will be
protected.
The guidelines will allow the FBI greater flexibility to
monitor Internet sites, libraries, houses of worship and political
organizations and will lower the evidentiary threshold needed to
initiate investigations.
In recent years, the Anti-Defamation League has called for
giving law enforcement additional tools. The ADL and most other
Jewish groups gave strong support to anti-terrorism laws in 1996
and last year's USA Patriot Act, which gave new powers to domestic
law enforcement and intelligence agencies after Sept. 11.
"The movement from simply enforcing the law to preventing
terrorism is necessary," said Michael Lieberman, Washington counsel
for the ADL.
For some people, however, talk of increased domestic
surveillance conjures up disturbing memories of the McCarthy era
and the alleged abuses of power when J. Edgar Hoover led the FBI.
Law enforcement excesses in the 1950s and 1960s led to revised
guidelines in the 1970s. Jewish and civil liberties groups embraced
the reforms, as well as subsequent adaptations over the years.
Attorney General John Ashcroft said that new powers are needed
now to combat terrorism effectively, adding that these guidelines
would not allow for the kind of abuses seen in the past.
Many groups have faulted the FBI for taking an overly cautious
approach in recent years.
ADL's national director, Abraham Foxman, wrote in 1999 that
the Justice Department and the FBI could not act aggressively
because they were "hamstrung" by the Hoover legacy, fears of
lawsuits and concerns from conservative lawmakers after the 1993
Waco debacle.
The current guidelines, however, are "way too broad," argues
Rabbi David Saperstein, director of the Religious Action Center of
Reform Judaism.
Saperstein recalled that the Reform movement was watched by
the FBI several decades ago and that his organization has worked to
stop such abuses against other civil liberties groups.
The Religious Action Center, which also argued that the USA
Patriot Act was rushed through Congress, is calling for public
hearings on Capitol Hill to ensure that the new FBI guidelines are
finely focused on preventing terrorism and are implemented in a way
that ensures the least amount of infringement on civil rights.
Some lawmakers are already sounding off about the new
guidelines.
"I believe that the Justice Department has gone too far," Rep.
James Sensenbrenner (R-Wis.) said last week. There is no need "to
throw respect for civil liberties into the trash heap" in order to
improve the FBI's ability to fight terrorism.
Some civil rights groups are up in arms over the FBI's
expanded powers. Jewish rights groups, however, are often
especially sensitive to terrorism issues, and occasionally part
company with their regular allies on this issue.
The American Civil Liberties Union said that Ashcroft's
decision to rewrite longstanding restrictions on domestic spying
"threatens core civil liberties guaranteed under the Constitution
and Bill of Rights."
While the Religious Action Center raises some similar
concerns, it is reserving judgment on the guidelines. The ADL is
willing to take a firmer stance in favor of the new guidelines,
though Foxman notes that any new enforcement power has to be
subject to governmental accountability.
The guidelines themselves are not really the issue, according
to Steven Pomerantz, a former assistant director of the FBI who now
is a senior adviser on counterterrorism and security for the
American Jewish Committee.
The guidelines need to be tweaked, Pomerantz said, but the
political climate is also important in determining the FBI's
behavior. While certain investigations might have been allowed even
under the old guidelines, the threshold for proceeding with an
investigation depends on other factors.
"It's not black and white, it's subject to interpretation."