Politics, open government, and safe streets. And the constant incursion of cycling.

Category: Law Page 16 of 27

Edging Toward Requiring Permission to Travel Domestically

A couple of developments on the travel monitoring “security” front have made the news, lately.  First, the Department of Homeland Security, come January, will:

take over responsibility for checking airline passenger names against government watch lists beginning in January, and will require travelers for the first time to provide their full name, birth date and gender as a condition for boarding commercial flights.

Even assuming that DHS can use this to better filter its “No Fly” list of false positives, we’re still left with the question – how can the government know someone to be so dangerous that they cannot be allowed onboard a plane, yet they cannot arrest them?  My view is that they can’t, and that this is merely another bit of security theatre.  It has the added bonus, however, of permitting the gradual building of an all-encompassing monitoring structure that I’m sure will never be abused.

The second story speaks to the “all encompassing monitoring structure”, too.  The ACLU highlights recent government efforts to create what the ACLU is calling a “Constitution Free Zone” that is defined as 100 miles inland from the external borders of the US (including coasts).    The ACLU summarizes the issue:

  • Normally under the Fourth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, the American people are not generally subject to random and arbitrary stops and searches.
  • The border, however, has always been an exception.  There, the longstanding view is that the normal rules do not apply.  For example the authorities do not need a warrant or probable cause to conduct a “routine search.”
  • But what is “the border”?  According to the government, it  is a 100-mile wide strip that wraps around the “external boundary” of the United States.
  • As a result of this claimed authority, individuals who are far away from the border, American citizens traveling from one place in America to another, are being stopped and harassed in ways that our Constitution does not permit.
  • Border Patrol has been setting up checkpoints inland — on highways in states such as California, Texas and Arizona, and at ferry terminals in Washington State. Typically, the agents ask drivers and passengers about their citizenship.  Unfortunately, our courts so far have permitted these kinds of checkpoints – legally speaking, they are “administrative” stops that are permitted only for the specific purpose of protecting the nation’s borders.  They cannot become general drug-search or other law enforcement efforts.
  • However, these stops by Border Patrol agents are not remaining confined to that border security purpose.  On the roads of California and elsewhere in the nation – places far removed from the actual border – agents are stopping, interrogating, and searching Americans on an everyday basis with absolutely no suspicion of wrongdoing.

Yesterday, the ACLU held a press conference to illustrate some of the results of this expansive view of the border and related powers:

Vince Peppard, a retired social worker, told of being stopped and harassed by the border authorities at least 15 miles from the Mexico border with his wife, Berlant.

Craig Johnson, a music professor at a San Diego college, told how he participated in a peaceful demonstration near the border to protest against the destruction of a state park so that offense could be constructed along the U.S. border. CBP agents monitored the protest and collected the license plate information of those who participated. Since this protest, Mr. Johnson has twice crossed the U.S.-Mexico border and, each time, he has been pulled aside for additional screening. He was taken to another room, handcuffed and questioned. On his first crossing, he was also partially stripped and subjected to a body cavity search. A CBP agent also told Mr. Johnson that he was on an “armed and dangerous” list. Before the protest, Mr. Johnson crossed the U.S.-Mexico border numerous times without incident. It is difficult to believe that his subsequent harassment at the border is unrelated to his protest activity. If it is related, that would constitute a significant abuse.

This is something to take seriously.  The grip of the state on individual freedoms has been tightening, and there’s no reason to believe that trend will reverse without significant public attention.  Obama is not going to wave a magic wand and make this all go away in January.  It’s up to you and me.

(And in case you’re wondering why I focus so much on these issues, this might help explain.)

Prop 8: Not Looking Any Better

From the WSJ:

A group leading the fight against the measure, Equality for All, said this week that one of its internal polls shows Proposition 8 leading by four percentage points. The close results of that poll, too, may suggest a dead heat as the Nov. 4 election approaches.

It looks like the Mormon church has decided that California is too close to home to let Prop 8 fail:

Pollsters say that fueling the rise in support for Proposition 8 is an advertising blitz heavily bankrolled by the Mormon Church, which suggests, among other things, that if Proposition 8 doesn’t pass then schoolchildren will be indoctrinated about gay marriage.

The Mormon church, concerned about the indoctrination of children?  That’s rich.  Can’t they just stick to baptizing dead people?

Update: Ta-Nehisi Coates has some excellent analysis concerning other areas of support for Prop 8.

DOJ Investigation of ACORN = GOP Running Out of Tricks

Josh Marshall reminds us:

DC Republicans have been aggressively lobbying the DOJ to open an investigation into ACORN in advance of the election. And leaking word of such an investigation (possibly starting the investigation at all) most likely violates DOJ guidelines about DOJ/FBI actions which can end up interfering with or manipulating an election.

But, remember, this is right out of the book of the Bush Justice Department’s efforts to assist in GOP voter suppression efforts in the 2004 and 2006 elections (part and parcel of the US Attorney firing story). This is the same scam US Attorney firing player Bradley Schlozman got in trouble for pulling with ACORN just before the 2006 election. And before he got canned, Gonzales helped revise and soften the departmental prohibition on DOJ announcements, thus making it easier to play these kinds of games.

Kind of early to be scraping the bottom of the barrel, no?

Another McCain Change of Convenience: Fair Use and Political Discourse

John McCain, who has never previously missed a chance to play up the importance of the DMCA’s restrictions on public usage, has suffered a bit at the hands of the DMCA.  His ads on YouTube have been the subject of takedown notices from CBS, NBC, and even CBN (the Christian Broadcasting Network).  He’s now complaining about this to YouTube, writing a letter (PDF) that includes:

[O]verreaching copyright claims have resulted in the removal of non-infringing campaign videos from YouTube, thus silencing political speech. Numerous times during the course of the campaign, our advertisements or web videos have been the subject of DMCA takedown notices regarding uses that are clearly privileged under the fair use doctrine. The uses at issue have been the inclusion of fewer than ten seconds of footage from news broadcasts in campaign ads or videos, as a basis for commentary on the issues presented in the news reports, or on the reports themselves. These are paradigmatic examples of fair use…

Finally, something the McCain campaign and I agree on, 100%.  But oh, wait, there’s more:

[W]e believe that it would consume few resources–and provide enormous benefit–for YouTube to commit to a full legal review of all takedown notices on videos posted from accounts controlled by (at least) political candidates and campaigns.

Ah, that’s more like it – McCain first, country second (perhaps McCain’s only reliable principle?).  Fred von Lohmann, an attorney with the Electronic Frontier Foundation, points out:

The obvious problem with this solution? It assumes that YouTube should prioritize the campaigns’ fair use rights, rather than those of the rest of us. That seems precisely backwards, since the most exciting new possibilities on YouTube are for amateur political expression by the voters themselves. After all, the campaigns have no trouble getting the same ads out on television and radio, options not available to most YouTubers.

This isn’t posturing – think about the most effective political videos you’ve seen.  Were any of them produced by a campaign?  I’ll bet they weren’t.  One of the most important political projects to be undertaken in the coming years will be not only to put a halt to – but roll back – IP laws that reach beyond commerce to control political discourse and culture.  Think we can count on McCain’s help when the time comes?

Copyright Controls Political Speech. Again.

I objected to CBS’ taking down a McCain ad from Youtube with a DMCA notice a few weeks ago.  And now NBC has taken down an Obama campaign ad:

Obama’s web team whipped up a frenzy this week with an edgy YouTube video imagining a victory by Sen. John McCain. They used archival footage of Tom Brokaw announcing the news, and the video climbed to the top of YouTube — besting celebrities, SNL clips and the Sarah Palin montages that dominate political hits at the web site. But this afternoon, NBC stripped the video off the web by filing a copyright claim with YouTube.

I haven’t seen the ad, so I can’t provide much of an analysis in favor of fair use.  That said, my very strong general objection to the ability of a commercial organization to control the message of a political candidate remains.  And that objection doesn’t just extend to control over political speech by public figures like Obama and McCain, but to political speech by all of us.  Earlier this week, I linked to a video which blamed the CRA (and, of course, Obama) for the current economic situation.  One of the commenters complained that it was taken down when he clicked on it, and I found that it had been replaced.  I had assumed that the original author had just updated it somewhat, and that was the issue.  In fact, it turns out that the first version was knocked down by a DMCA notice, too.  Why?  The original used music, as described by Larry Lessig:

So, for example. when describing how Fannie and Freddie gave low interest and no interest loans, the music is Dire Straits “Money for Nothing.” And when talking about the speculation, Talking Head’s “Burning down the house.” When talking about the influence of money inside the campaigns, AcDc “Money Talks.” And when talking about how “it ends now” if (as the author but not this author hopes) Obama is defeated, the music is “Survivor – Eye of the Tiger.” In each case, the music amplifies the message in powerfully and socially relevant way.

That’s a much tougher fair use case, and Lessig (who knows a thing or three about fair use) makes a strong argument for constructing a legal framework beyond traditional “fair use” to accomodate things like this.  Check it out.

Friday Notes: Surprise Edition

The surprise, of course, is that I’m actually getting a Friday Notes out.

First, I apparently screwed up the first video in this post about Idiocracy (yes, I note the irony).  Since no one told me about it, that means no one looked at the videos.  I blame you.  You are hereby sentenced to go watch it.

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Do Virginia Republicans do anything but whine about non-existent attacks on them?  Del. Bill Carrico was just on WAMU’s Politics Hour going on about how awful it is that the Fourth Circuit said a state employee can’t use his office to lead a mass prayer to Jesus Christ (in particular.  Non-denoms are okay).  You’d think that the Fourth Circuit was burning Christians at the stake.  More about the issue here (with a similarly overwrought tone) and here (which brings it back to reality).

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A friend turned me on the Fratellis’ Flathead track last week.  Because Universal is still afraid of its customers, I can’t embed the video.  So check it out.  (Warning: this song came to me as a volley in an earworm war.)

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CycleTo – a well-produced site run by a fellow with a lot of access in the sport – picked up some of my shots from last weekend’s ING Direct Capital Criterium.  CycleTo does a lot of original short video interviews (like this recent one with Levi Leipheimer at Worlds in Varese).  If you’re into pro cycling, give them a look.

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Looks like the Associated Press lent the McCain campaign its time machine.

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You’ve probably recieved one of those fear-mongering “don’t wear buttons to the polls!” email this week.  Vivian Paige lays out the law for Virginia residents, and Adam Bonin gives us a national view.

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Sign war amusement.

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It’s often easy to assume that all of humanity’s easy problems have been solved.  This is a reminder that simple ideas can still make a difference.

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I somehow missed the recent skirmishes over the role of the US military personnel on American soil.  If you find it as interesting as I do, this is as good a place as any to jump in.

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What are you do this weekend?  Depending on the weather, I’ll either be at Bike DC or the Charlottesville Vegetarian Festival.

Copyright Proposal: Bush Admin Gets It Right

No, for real.  I just said that.  The Bush Admin is pushing back against a proposal to make the Department of Justice de facto copyright cops at the beck and call of private industry.  Why would the RIAA spend its own money chasing college kids trading songs when they could get the taxpayer to foot the bill?

The government agencies wrote that the proposal “could result in Department of Justice prosecutors serving as pro bono lawyers for private copyright holders regardless of their resources. In effect, taxpayer-supported department lawyers would pursue lawsuits for copyright holders, with monetary recovery going to industry.”

In all, the Bush administration agreed with digital rights groups and others who said the measure goes too far and is a gift to copyright holders who normally use the civil courts to sue copyright infringers.

This is an issue on which you can count on both sides of the aisle to demonstrate some seriously bad judgment (which is probably putting it too kindly).  Sen. Leahy, for example, is a very smart fellow, but his record on copyright issues is truly appalling (you can thank him and Orrin Hatch for the DMCA).

The Bailout: Mindboggling

And I’m not talking about the numbers (those are merely incomprehensible).  I’m talking about the fact that Congress seems poised to – yet again – hand the Bush administration carte blanche to deal with a critical threat, with no apparent thought to the impact.  NPR’s Planet Money blog notes:

I would guess that this has to be one of the biggest peacetime transfers of power from Congress to the Administration in history.

[ . . . ]

The Treasury Secretary can buy broadly defined assets, on any terms he wants, he can hire anyone he wants to do it and can appoint private sector companies as financial deputies of the US government. And he can write whatever regulation he thinks are needed.

[ . . . ]

This graph really stands out:

Decisions by the Secretary pursuant to the authority of this Act are non-reviewable and committed to agency discretion, and may not be reviewed by any court of law or any administrative agency.

Whoa.

So, for the next three months, and then an additional six months after that, the Treasury Secretary can do anything he deems appropriate without anybody anywhere looking it over.

That seems like an awful lot of absolute power.

And that doesn’t even get to the merits of the matter.  For that, we have Paul Krugman, who sums it up as: no deal.  (I also recommend following Calculated Risk on this subject.)  This is happening quickly, and perhaps the radio reports of Congressional willingness to move forward with this bill in this form were optimistic.  I have to hope so.  We all do.

Copyright Law Controlling Political Discourse

Looks like CBS used a DMCA notice to make YouTube pull a (ridiculous, but this is beside the point) McCain ad that used some footage of CBS news personality Katie Couric.

Dangerous stuff, people.

The Database State: France Gets In On The Competition

The US has Total Information Awareness (whatever the latest name is), the UK is going full speed ahead with its own database surveillance society, and now it looks like France isn’t going to be left behind:

The decree creating the “Edvige” electronic database appeared in the official gazette on July 1, when the country was winding down for the summer, but news of its content has been gradually filtering out and is now stirring fierce criticism.

[ . . . ]

The decree says the aim is to centralize and analyze data on people aged 13 or above who are active in politics or labor unions, who play a significant institutional, economic, social or religious role, or who are “likely to breach public order.”

The information that can be collected includes addresses, phone numbers, email addresses, physical appearance, behavioral traits, fiscal and financial records, and details about people who have personal ties with the subject.

Okay, SuperFrenchie, time to stop admiring Sarah Palin and tell me what the French think about this.

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