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<DIV><FONT face="Lucida Sans Unicode" color=#000080 size=2>putting this kind of
power in the hands of our corrupt, dysfunctional legal system is
lunacy.</FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face="Lucida Sans Unicode" color=#000080 size=2></FONT> </DIV>
<DIV><FONT face="Lucida Sans Unicode" color=#000080 size=2>R</FONT></DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<BLOCKQUOTE
style="PADDING-RIGHT: 0px; PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; BORDER-LEFT: #000080 2px solid; MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px">
<DIV style="FONT: 10pt arial">----- Original Message ----- </DIV>
<DIV
style="BACKGROUND: #e4e4e4; FONT: 10pt arial; font-color: black"><B>From:</B>
<A title=andie_nachgeborenen@yahoo.com
href="mailto:andie_nachgeborenen@yahoo.com">andie nachgeborenen</A> </DIV>
<DIV style="FONT: 10pt arial"><B>To:</B> <A title=lbo-talk@lbo-talk.org
href="mailto:lbo-talk@lbo-talk.org">lbo-talk@lbo-talk.org</A> </DIV>
<DIV style="FONT: 10pt arial"><B>Sent:</B> Sunday, September 14, 2003 12:31
PM</DIV>
<DIV style="FONT: 10pt arial"><B>Subject:</B> [lbo-talk] New Terror Laws Used
Vs. Common Criminals</DIV>
<DIV><BR></DIV><BR>An example of the real problem and trhe real threat
of<BR>the police state:<BR><BR>--- Top Stories - AP <BR> <BR>New Terror
Laws Used Vs. Common Criminals <BR><BR>By DAVID B. CARUSO, Associated
Press Writer <BR><BR>PHILADELPHIA - In the two years since law
enforcement<BR>agencies gained fresh powers to help them track down<BR>and
punish terrorists, police and prosecutors have<BR>increasingly turned the
force of the new laws not on<BR>al-Qaida cells but on people charged with
common<BR>crimes. <BR><BR><BR>AP Photo <BR> <BR> <BR><BR>The
Justice Department (news - web sites) said it has<BR>used authority given to
it by the USA Patriot Act to<BR>crack down on currency smugglers and seize
money<BR>hidden overseas by alleged bookies, con artists and<BR>drug dealers.
<BR><BR><BR>Federal prosecutors used the act in June to file a<BR>charge of
"terrorism using a weapon of mass<BR>destruction" against a California man
after a pipe<BR>bomb exploded in his lap, wounding him as he sat in<BR>his
car. <BR><BR><BR>A North Carolina county prosecutor charged a man<BR>accused
of running a methamphetamine lab with breaking<BR>a new state law barring the
manufacture of chemical<BR>weapons. If convicted, Martin Dwayne Miller could
get<BR>12 years to life in prison for a crime that usually<BR>brings about six
months. <BR><BR><BR>Prosecutor Jerry Wilson says he isn't abusing the
law,<BR>which defines chemical weapons of mass destruction as<BR>"any
substance that is designed or has the capability<BR>to cause death or serious
injury" and contains toxic<BR>chemicals. <BR><BR><BR>Civil liberties and legal
defense groups are bothered<BR>by the string of cases, and say the government
soon<BR>will be routinely using harsh anti-terrorism laws<BR>against
run-of-the-mill lawbreakers. <BR><BR><BR>"Within six months of passing the
Patriot Act, the<BR>Justice Department was conducting seminars on how
to<BR>stretch the new wiretapping provisions to extend them<BR>beyond terror
cases," said Dan Dodson, a spokesman for<BR>the National Association of
Criminal Defense<BR>Attorneys. "They say they want the Patriot Act to<BR>fight
terrorism, then, within six months, they are<BR>teaching their people how to
use it on ordinary<BR>citizens." <BR><BR><BR>Prosecutors aren't apologizing.
<BR><BR><BR>Attorney General John Ashcroft (news - web sites)<BR>completed a
16-city tour this week defending the<BR>Patriot Act as key to preventing a
second catastrophic<BR>terrorist attack. Federal prosecutors have
brought<BR>more than 250 criminal charges under the law, with<BR>more than 130
convictions or guilty pleas. <BR><BR><BR>The law, passed two months after the
Sept. 11 attacks,<BR>erased many restrictions that had barred
the<BR>government from spying on its citizens, granting<BR>agents new powers
to use wiretaps, conduct electronic<BR>and computer eavesdropping and access
private<BR>financial data. <BR><BR><BR>Stefan Cassella, deputy chief for legal
policy for the<BR>Justice Department's asset forfeiture and
money<BR>laundering section, said that while the Patriot Act's<BR>primary
focus was on terrorism, lawmakers were aware<BR>it contained provisions that
had been on prosecutors'<BR>wish lists for years and would be used in a
wide<BR>variety of cases. <BR><BR><BR>In one case prosecuted this year,
investigators used a<BR>provision of the Patriot Act to recover $4.5
million<BR>from a group of telemarketers accused of tricking<BR>elderly U.S.
citizens into thinking they had won the<BR>Canadian lottery. Prosecutors said
the defendants told<BR>victims they would receive their prize as soon as
they<BR>paid thousands of dollars in income tax on their<BR>winnings.
<BR><BR><BR>Before the anti-terrorism act, U.S. officials would<BR>have had to
use international treaties and appeal for<BR>help from foreign governments to
retrieve the cash,<BR>deposited in banks in Jordan and Israel. Now,
they<BR>simply seized it from assets held by those banks in<BR>the United
States. <BR><BR><BR>"These are appropriate uses of the statute,"
Cassella<BR>said. "If we can use the statute to get money back for<BR>victims,
we are going to do it." <BR><BR><BR>The complaint that anti-terrorism
legislation is being<BR>used to go after people who aren't terrorists is
just<BR>the latest in a string of criticisms. <BR><BR><BR>More than 150 local
governments have passed<BR>resolutions opposing the law as an overly broad
threat<BR>to constitutional rights. <BR><BR><BR>Critics also say the
government has gone too far in<BR>charging three U.S. citizens as enemy
combatants, a<BR>power presidents wield during wartime that is not part<BR>of
the Patriot Act. The government can detain such<BR>individuals indefinitely
without allowing them access<BR>to a lawyer. <BR><BR>
<BR><BR><BR><BR>And Muslim and civil liberties groups have criticized<BR>the
government's decision to force thousands of mostly<BR>Middle Eastern men to
risk deportation by registering<BR>with immigration authorities. <BR><BR>"The
record is clear," said Ralph Neas, president of<BR>the liberal People for the
American Way Foundation.<BR>"Ashcroft and the Justice Department have gone
too<BR>far." <BR><BR>Some of the restrictions on government
surveillance<BR>that were erased by the Patriot Act had been enacted<BR>after
past abuses - including efforts by the FBI (news<BR>- web sites) to spy on
civil rights leaders and<BR>anti-war demonstrators during the Cold War. Tim
Lynch,<BR>director of the Project on Criminal Justice at the<BR>Cato
Institute, a libertarian think tank, said it<BR>isn't far fetched to believe
that the government might<BR>overstep its bounds again. <BR><BR>"I don't think
that those are frivolous fears," Lynch<BR>said. "We've already heard stories
of local police<BR>chiefs creating files on people who have protested
the<BR>(Iraq (news - web sites)) war ... The government is<BR>constantly
trying to expand its jurisdictions, and it<BR>needs to be watched very, very
closely." <BR><BR>___
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