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1 1 (July 6, 2006)

handle is hein.crs/crsmthaaany0001 and id is 1 raw text is: Order Code RS21441
Updated July 6, 2005
CRS Report for Congress
Received through the CRS Web
Libraries and the USA PATRIOT Act
Charles Doyle
Senior Specialist
American Law Division
Summary
The USA PATRIOT Act, P.L. 107-56, enacted to help track down and punish
terrorists and to prevent further terrorism, contains no provisions specifically directed
at libraries or their patrons. It has several provisions, however, that might apply in a
library context. The most frequently mentioned of these is Section 215 that amends the
business record sections of the Foreign Surveillance Intelligence Act (FISA).
Before the USA PATRIOT Act, federal authorities, engaged in gathering foreign
intelligence information or conducting an investigation of international terrorism, could
seek a FISA court order for access to hotel, airline, storage locker, or car rental business
records. The businesses to whom the orders were addressed were bound to silence.
Section 215 amended the procedure so that in a foreign intelligence or international
terrorism investigation federal authorities may obtain a FISA order for access to any
tangible item no matter who holds it, including by implication library loan records and
the records of library computer use.
Although past practices have apparently made the library community apprehensive,
the extent to which the authority of Section 215 has been used, if at all, is unclear.
Media accounts of federal investigations involving library patrons ordinarily do not
distinguish between simple inquiries, grand jury subpoenas, criminal search warrants,
FISA physical search orders, and FISA tangible item orders. Moreover, the Justice
Department has indicated that as of March 30, 2005 the authority under Section 215 had
been exercised on 35 occasions, but had not been used in any instance to secure library,
bookstore, gun sale or medical records.
Related legislation has been introduced. The House-passed Commerce, State,
Justice appropriations bill for FY2006 contains an amendment that bars the expenditure
funds to use Section 215 in order to acquire library or book store records; the
amendment does not appear in the Senate committee-reported version of the bill. At the
same time, the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence reported legislation that would
rework Section 215, which is scheduled to expire on December 31, 2005, and make it
permanent.

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