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Did the Patriot Act help with seizing Osama? Will the govt lay off it or implement more restrictions?

May 10th, 2011 4 comments

WASHINGTON – Freshman Republican Randy Hultgren had no problem voting against extending the Patriot Act in February. But the death of Osama bin Laden, just weeks before part of the terrorist-fighting law expires, raises new questions for the Illinois congressman.

"It hasn’t changed my mind, not yet," Hultgren said this week. "I want to see that we’re doing it in a careful way, that we’re seeing results from it."

There’s no indication that the mission to take out bin Laden relied on the Patriot Act, which was designed after the Sept. 11 attacks to find terrorists inside the U.S. But the afterglow of the operation’s success shined new light on the nature of the terrorist threat nearly a decade after the attacks bin Laden inspired.

Interviews with House and Senate experts on the law, from both parties, indicate this week’s developments may have marginalized any effort to tighten the Patriot Act’s protections and perhaps scuttled Senate plans to hold a full week of debate on the bill.

From its inception, the law’s increased surveillance powers have been criticized by both liberals and conservatives as infringements on free speech rights and protections against unwarranted searches and seizures.

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Some Patriot Act opponents suggest that bin Laden’s demise should prompt Congress to reconsider the law, written when the terrorist leader was at the peak of his power. But the act’s supporters warn that al-Qaida splinter groups, scattered from Pakistan to the United States and beyond, may try to retaliate.

"Now more than ever, we need access to the crucial authorities in the Patriot Act," Attorney General Eric Holder told the Senate Judiciary Committee.

If bin Laden’s death has any impact on the law’s fate, "I hope…it’ll be in the direction of extending the current law," said Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell. "Most of us believe it’s been an effective tool in the war on terror."

The provisions that expire May 27 allow the government to use roving wiretaps on multiple electronic devices and across multiple carriers and get court-approved access to business records relevant to terrorist investigations. The third, a "lone wolf" provision that was part of a 2004 law, permits secret intelligence surveillance of non-U.S. individuals without having to show a connection between the target and a specific terrorist group.

The Senate Judiciary Committee in March approved a bill that would extend the provisions until 2013, tighten its civil liberties protections and increase oversight. But there’s evidence that bin Laden’s death may have marginalized any such effort to do more than extend the law, as is. A Senate official not authorized to speak for the record said it wasn’t clear that there would be a full week of floor debate on the Patriot Act as Majority Leader Harry Reid had indicated.

The law’s fate, for now, resides in the Republican-controlled House and the odd pairing of GOP libertarians and Democratic liberals who have long viewed the Patriot Act as an oppressive overreach.

Would the govt prefer it if we were all under lock and key?

I think the patriot Act was the Big Brother movement of them all pushed on us by our fear of the perpetual media booogey man I dont like it