Bipartisan bill would repeal Patriot Act, cut down American surveillance

Reuters/Jonathan Ernst RT

The bipartisan Surveillance State Repeal Act, if passed, would repeal dragnet surveillance of Americans’ personal communications, overhaul the federal domestic surveillance program, and provide protections for whistleblowers.

House lawmakers Mark Pocan (D-Wis.) and Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) are co-sponsoring bill H.R.1466, which was introduced on Tuesday and would repeal the 2001 Patriot Act, limit powers of the FISA Amendments Act, and prohibit retaliation against federal national security whistleblowers, according to The Hill.  

The Patriot Act contains many provisions that violate the Fourth Amendment and have led to a dramatic expansion of our domestic surveillance state,” said Rep. Massie in a statement. “Our Founding Fathers fought and died to stop the kind of warrantless spying and searches that the Patriot Act and the FISA Amendments Act authorize. It is long past time to repeal the Patriot Act and reassert the constitutional rights of all Americans.”

Specifically, the bill would revoke all the powers of the Patriot Act, and instruct the Director of National Intelligence and the Attorney General to destroy any information collected under the FISA Amendments Act concerning any US person not under investigation.

It would repeal provisions of the FISA Amendments Act to ensure surveillance of email data only occurs with a valid warrant based on probable cause. The bill would also prohibit the government from mandating that manufacturers build mechanisms allowing the government to bypass encryption in order to conduct surveillance.

Additionally, the bill would protect a federal whistleblower’s efforts to expose mismanagement, waste, fraud, abuse, or criminal behavior. It would also make retaliation against anyone interfering with those efforts – such as threatening them with punishment or termination – illegal.

Really, what we need are new whistleblower protections so that the next Edward Snowden doesn’t have to go to Russia or Hong Kong or whatever the case may be just for disclosing this,” Massie said.

There have been previous attempts to limit dragnet surveillance under the Patriot Act since former National Security Agency analyst Edward Snowden leaked information regarding the programs in 2013, but the Senate bill introduced in 2013 never reached the floor for a vote.

The warrantless collection of millions of personal communications from innocent Americans is a direct violation of our constitutional right to privacy,” said Rep. Pocan in a statement.

Revelations about the NSA’s programs reveal the extraordinary extent to which the program has invaded Americans’ privacy. I reject the notion that we must sacrifice liberty for security – we can live in a secure nation which also upholds a strong commitment to civil liberties. This legislation ends the NSA’s dragnet surveillance practices, while putting provisions in place to protect the privacy of American citizens through real and lasting change.”

Portions of the Patriot Act are due for renewal on June 1.

http://rt.com/usa/243745-bill-repeal-patriot-act-surveillance/

Jim

5 thoughts on “Bipartisan bill would repeal Patriot Act, cut down American surveillance

  1. “Specifically, the bill would revoke all the powers of the Patriot Act, and instruct the Director of National Intelligence and the Attorney General to destroy any information collected under the FISA Amendments Act concerning any US person not under investigation.”

    After going to the trouble of pulling off the most massive false flag in history, they’re not about to let anyone tamper with the result.

    Never happen… not that they’d pay any heed to it if it did.

  2. See this? This supports my theory that they’re scared, and are possibly backing away from an angry population.

    They’re trying to throw us a bone by pulling one thorn out of our side, but there’s too much wrong for anyone in D.C., or everyone in D.C. to fix it. And they still have to pay for the crimes they already committed, and the generations of theft.

  3. Considering the amounts of money these Congressional psychos make investing in the surveillance industry, I will be shocked if this gets out of committee let alone gets voted on…and, of course, it will never pass. Or maybe I’m just being cynical… then again, this passes with the understanding that something even worse is set up to replace it.

    The day these psychos give a crap about the American people is either the day hell freezes over or they day they face the firing squad for treason.

  4. They’d do another false flag on u.s. soil if this got close to passing. Right?
    Then they’d say, “See? We need the Patriot Act”. That’s exactly what would happen. That’s what they did to get it in there in the first place.

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