From: rineer@QUIXNET.NET (Kenneth Rineer)
To: AZRKBA@asu.edu
Subject: Anti-terror computer system plans wide, warrantless access
Date: Sat, 09 Nov 2002 04:09:01 -0700

For those who think the conservatives will save us from it all:

Printed in the Arizona Daily Star Tucson, Arizona Saturday, 9 November 2002

WAR ON TERRORISM Anti-terror computer system plans wide, warrantless access By John Markoff THE NEW YORK TIMES

The Pentagon is constructing a computer system that could create a vast electronic dragnet, searching personal information as part of the hunt for terrorists around the world - including the United States.

The program director, Vice Adm. John Poindexter, says the system would provide intelligence analysts and law enforcement with instant access to information from e-mail and calling records to credit card, banking transactions and travel records - without a search warrant.

Historically, military and intelligence agencies have not been allowed to spy on Americans without legal authorization. But Poindexter, national security adviser in the Reagan administration, has said the government needs broad new powers to process, store and mine billions of electronic details of life in the United States.

Poindexter, who has described the plan in public documents and speeches but declined to be interviewed, has said the government needs to "break down the stovepipes" that separate commercial and government databases, allowing teams of intelligence analysts to hunt for hidden patterns of activity with powerful computers.

"We must become much more efficient and more clever in the ways we find new sources of data, mine information from the new and old, generate information, make it available for analysis, convert it to knowledge and create actionable options," he said in a speech in California earlier this year.

Poindexter quietly returned to the government in January to take charge of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency's Office of Information Awareness, charged with developing new surveillance technologies in the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

To deploy such a system, known as Total Information Awareness, new legislation would be needed, some of which has been proposed by the Bush administration in the Homeland Security Act now before Congress. That legislation would amend the Privacy Act of 1974, which was intended to limit what government agencies could do with private information.

The possibility that the system might be deployed domestically to let intelligence officials look into commercial transactions worried civil liberties proponents.

"This could be the Perfect Storm for civil liberties in America," said Marc Rotenberg, director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center in Washington. "The vehicle is the Homeland Security Act, the technology is DARPA and the agency is the FBI. The outcome is a system of national surveillance of the American public."

Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld has been briefed on the project by Poindexter, according to a Pentagon spokesman.

-- IRA, CIA, FBI, KILL, TERRORIST, BOMB, TARGET, TERMINATE, JIHAD, CEASEFIRE, ATHEIST, ALLAH, FREEDOM, TRUTH, JUSTICE, MARIJUANA, POT, COKE, BREW, DOPE, SEX, DRUGS, TNT, C4, CORDITE, GUNPOWDER, REBELS, OVERTHROW, I love it when the government reads my email.


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