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HOW THE USA-PATRIOT ACT EXPANDS LAW ENFORCEMENT "SNEAK AND PEEK"
WARRANTS
The final version of the anti-terrorism legislation, the Uniting and
Strengthening America By Providing Appropriate Tools Required To Intercept and
Obstruct Terrorism (H.R. 3162, the "USA PATRIOT Act") would allow law
enforcement agencies to delay giving notice when they conduct a search. This
means that the government could enter a house, apartment or office with a search
warrant when the occupant was away, search through her property and take
photographs, and in some cases seize physical property and electronic
communications, and not tell her until later. This provision would mark a sea
change in the way search warrants are executed in the United States.
The Fourth Amendment protection against unreasonable searches and seizures
requires the government to both obtain a warrant and to give notice to the
person whose property will be searched before conducting the search. The notice
requirement enables the person whose property is to be searched to assert her
Fourth Amendment rights. For example, a person with notice might be able to
point out irregularities in the warrant, such as the fact that the police are at
the wrong address, or that because the warrant is limited to a search for a
stolen car, the police have no authority to be looking in dresser drawers. The
Supreme Court recently affirmed that notice is a key Fourth Amendment
protection. However, it has not ruled on the constitutionality of sneak and peek
searches.
The major rationale for requiring a warrant before conducting a search is to
ensure that a neutral and detached third person - usually a magistrate - will
review a warrant prior to issuance. The invasion of privacy must be held to a
minimum. In a covert search warrant, there are often no limitations on what can
or will be searched. Any protections afforded by a warrant are meaningless when
the searching officer has complete and unsupervised discretion as to what, when
and where to search and the individual owner is not provided notice so cannot
assert and protect her rights.
The government already has the authority, in limited situations, to delay
notification, for searches of some forms of electronic communications that are
in the custody of a third party. It must show the judge that if the person to be
searched is given notice, one of the five things will happen - (1) an
individual's physical safety will be endangered, (2) someone will flee
prosecution, (3) evidence will be tampered with, (4) potential witnesses will be
intimidated or, (5) an investigation would be jeopardized or a trial unduly
delayed.
Section 213 would take an extremely limited authority and expand it so that
it would be available in any kind of search (physical or electronic) and in any
kind of criminal case. The standard that law enforcement must show - that an
investigation will be jeopardized - is a very low one. Law enforcement agents
will seek to delay notification whenever it is to their advantage to do so. Over
time, the delayed notice "exception" would become the rule and would deal
another serious blow to the privacy protections afforded by the Fourth
Amendment.
Even though this provision is one of the most far-reaching of all of the
search provisions in the bill, unlike many of those provisions, it does sunset
is a permanent change in the law.
For more information, see the joint letter on Sneak and Peek Warrants by
ACLU, the Free Congress Foundation and others at http://www.aclu.org/congress/l101901a.html.
Copyright 2001,
The American Civil Liberties UnionReprinted with permission of the
American Civil Liberties Union
http://www.aclu.org |