News (Media Awareness Project) - US TN: Patriot Act Yields Rise In Wiretaps, ACLU Says |
Title: | US TN: Patriot Act Yields Rise In Wiretaps, ACLU Says |
Published On: | 2004-06-01 |
Source: | Knoxville News-Sentinel (TN) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-18 08:49:59 |
PATRIOT ACT YIELDS RISE IN WIRETAPS, ACLU SAYS
CHATTANOOGA - Federal authorities are taking advantage of the Patriot Act
to place more wiretaps in Tennessee, civil libertarians said.
But law enforcement chalked up the increase to more aggressive
investigations, not indiscriminate use of the controversial federal law.
Federal authorities spent more than $1 million on 13 wiretaps in Tennessee
in 2003, resulting in 56 arrests. All the wiretaps were used for
mobile-phone surveillance in narcotics investigations
There were just seven wiretaps the year before, according to the
Administrative Office of U.S. Courts.
The increase follows a national trend, where wiretap requests increased 19
percent in 2003 from the previous year.
Hedy Weinberg, executive director for the American Civil Liberties Union in
Tennessee, said the Patriot Act gives federal authorities more leeway when
requesting wiretaps and surveillance equipment.
"I think that is something we can assume based on the numbers," she said.
"We know, with all those wiretaps requested, none were turned down."
Records indicate federal judges approved all wiretap requests brought
before them.
However, Harry S. "Sandy" Mattice, U.S. attorney from the Eastern District
of Tennessee, said the Patriot Act is not driving the increase.
"There are more terrorism cases being investigated, but I believe the
uptick represents more aggressiveness by law enforcement," he said.
The court that handles all terrorism requests, including those in
Tennessee, said it received 1,727 requests last year nationally for
electronic surveillance. The court approved all but three.
Patriot Act critics say it is being used in ways never intended and removes
judicial oversight.
Weinberg said requests are being "rubber-stamped."
CHATTANOOGA - Federal authorities are taking advantage of the Patriot Act
to place more wiretaps in Tennessee, civil libertarians said.
But law enforcement chalked up the increase to more aggressive
investigations, not indiscriminate use of the controversial federal law.
Federal authorities spent more than $1 million on 13 wiretaps in Tennessee
in 2003, resulting in 56 arrests. All the wiretaps were used for
mobile-phone surveillance in narcotics investigations
There were just seven wiretaps the year before, according to the
Administrative Office of U.S. Courts.
The increase follows a national trend, where wiretap requests increased 19
percent in 2003 from the previous year.
Hedy Weinberg, executive director for the American Civil Liberties Union in
Tennessee, said the Patriot Act gives federal authorities more leeway when
requesting wiretaps and surveillance equipment.
"I think that is something we can assume based on the numbers," she said.
"We know, with all those wiretaps requested, none were turned down."
Records indicate federal judges approved all wiretap requests brought
before them.
However, Harry S. "Sandy" Mattice, U.S. attorney from the Eastern District
of Tennessee, said the Patriot Act is not driving the increase.
"There are more terrorism cases being investigated, but I believe the
uptick represents more aggressiveness by law enforcement," he said.
The court that handles all terrorism requests, including those in
Tennessee, said it received 1,727 requests last year nationally for
electronic surveillance. The court approved all but three.
Patriot Act critics say it is being used in ways never intended and removes
judicial oversight.
Weinberg said requests are being "rubber-stamped."
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