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Some TIPS for John Ashcroft

Jean | 11.08.2002 01:13

Some TIPS for John Ashcroft

Daily Briefing: PRIVACY MATTERS

Remember the movie The Cable Guy? It's the one where Jim Carrey plays a cable-TV repairman who only wants to help, yet he unwittingly sets out to ruin the life
of one of his customers. That story could be coming to a reality near you.

That's right. The government wants your cable guy, meter reader, even your postman to voluntarily report any
and all suspicious information about you to a new, central FBI database. It's called Operation TIPS, short for
the Terrorism Information & Prevention System. The goal is to give millions of American truckers, letter
carriers, train conductors, ship captains, and utility employees a formal way to report suspicious activity.

A pilot phase, slated to begin later this summer, would initially recruit 1 million workers in 10 cities. The
Teamsters Union has already signed on. The U.S. Postal Service, which originally said its 800,000 workers
would not participate, is also encouraging its workforce to join.

SOWING SUSPICION. The idea is the brainchild of Attorney General John Ashcroft. But like many of
Ashcroft's salvos in the war on terrorism, Operation TIPS will more than likely reduce privacy without
increasing security. Let's be real: Terrorists with half a brain aren't likely to be outsmarted by the mailman or
open the door to have the gas meter read if they have bomb-making material nearby.

But ordinary people, who might be reading the Koran, will. The result could be a flood of unsubstantiated and largely irrelevant tips that overwhelm law-enforcement
officials already mired in data. Worst of all, the program could sow the seeds of suspicion among loyal American citizens.

Privacy-protection advocates allege that Operation TIPS is simply a way for the FBI to get into people's homes without a warrant. Before the police or FBI can
search your residence, they need probable cause and an order from a judge. But you let the cable guy into your home voluntarily. And once you do that, you
relinquish certain rights of privacy. Whatever the cable guy sees is fair game.

"This is an end run around the Fourth Amendment," warns Harvey Silverglate, a Boston civil liberties lawyer. "It's a way into every American's home without judicial
oversight."

A PHONE LINE WOULD DO. The government maintains that it has no intention of recruiting a civilian army of spies. The Justice Dept. declined to return repeated
calls for comment or elaboration on Operation TIPS. In a terse statement, Justice's Director of Public Affairs Barbara Comstock said Operations TIPS is a program
that empowers Americans "uniquely well positioned to understand the ordinary course of business in the area they serve, and to identify things that are out of the
ordinary."

If that's the case, why do we need TIPS at all? Robert Levy, a senior fellow at the Cato Institute, argues that if the aim is a central database to log suspicious activity,
it would be better to simply publish a toll-free phone number for all 285 million Americans, not just 10 million workers with special access to individuals' homes.

Some powerful legislators agree. On July 18, House Majority Leader Dick Armey [R-Tex.] added language to the House version of the Homeland Security Bill
[which would create the new Homeland Security Dept.] that would prohibit Justice from setting up Operation TIPS.

BIASED REPORTS. Whatever the Administration's intentions, Operation TIPS won't work. A million informants could file several million tips a week, all of which
would have to be followed up by law enforcement. One of the lessons learned from the September 11 tragedy is that a lack of information isn't what prevented the
FBI from picking up on the terrorists' plans. It was an excess of badly organized and shared data. The TIPS program will only add to the problem by forcing agents
to waste resources on unsubstantiated tips.

Worse, many of those tips will come as a result of personal bias or racial profiling. "Law enforcement may end up chasing information based on uninformed citizens
who have their own biases or may be prejudiced. It's an ineffective way to use police resources," says Rachel King, legislative counsel for the American Civil
Liberties Union.

Another important -- and still-unanswered -- question is how will the data be stored, and who will have access to it. Will the TIPS program create FBI files on
thousands, even millions, of unsuspecting Americans? And where will those files end up? The next time you're passed over for a job or a loan, will you wonder if it's
because the cable guy filed a tip about your collection of Middle East travel books? "The U.S. government has a history of abusing information," says King. "These
are not hysterical fears."

OVERBLOWN FEARS. Not everyone is so worried. "Deterring potential criminality requires pattern recognition. You have to identify factors or people who are
acting out of context. And it isn't wrong to try to do that better," says Paul Rosensweig, a senior legal research fellow at the Heritage Foundation.

Rosensweig adds that fears of a new McCarthyism are overblown. He sees Operation TIPS as a simple extension of other government programs such as Highway
Watch, Coast Watch, and River Watch, which enable workers on key transport routes to report unusual activity.

Perhaps. But those programs involve eyes trained on public thoroughfares. The idea that government and private-sector workers will do surveillance on their fellow
citizens in their own homes is simply un-American.

For evidence, we need only look at the results of the McCarthy era's red-baiting. In his memoir Timebends, Arthur Miller recalls the conversation he had with film
director Elia Kazan who had decided to name names to the House Un-American Activities Committee. As Miller walked away, he felt "pure sadness." "Who and
what was safer because this man in his human weakness had been forced to humiliate himself?" Miller wondered. The same should be asked about Operation TIPS.

Jean
- e-mail: cee@post.com
- Homepage: http://ar.geocities.com/heinzreport

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