Censorship & Privacy - Terrorism Archive
Files in this Archive
- patriot2draft.html
OCR-HTML-ized version of the Patriot 2 draft legislation
(mirrored from Daily Rotten:
http://www.dailyrotten.com/source-docs/patriot2draft.html)
- son-of-patriot.php
This is a Jan. 9 draft of a new, "Son of Patriot Act"
that would give the government even more domestic intelligence-gathering,
surveillance and other powers, while decreasing public access to information
and accountability.
- hr3162.php
HTML version of H.R. 3162
- hr3162.pdf
PDF verssion of H.R. 3162 (673k)
- antiterrorism_chill.html
The Electronic Frontier Foundation\'s survey
of the chilling effects of anti-terrorism laws, actions and sentiment:
the chilling effects of anti-terrorism - National Security\'s toll on
freedom of expression and freedom of information.
- 20011212_eff_usapa_sunset_analysis.html
Electronic Frontier Foundation
Analysis of USA-PATRIOT Act sunset provisions and threats to civil
liberties. Includes recommendations that Congress use its plenary
powers to critically oversee implementation and use of the new
surveillance law. (Dec. 12, 2001)
- 20011031_eff_usa_patriot_analysis.html
Electronic Frontier Foundation
analysis of civil liberties impact of the Uniting & Strengthening of
American by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and
Obstruct Terrorism (USA-PATRIOT) Act surveillance law (a.k.a USAPA).
(Oct. 31, 2001)
- 20010926_eff_wiretap_pr.html
Electronic Frontier Foundation Media
Release: Proposed Anti-Terrorism Laws Overbroad and Overreaching: All
Computer Trespass Treated as Terrorism. San Francisco - The Electronic
Frontier Foundation (EFF) today condemned portions of the Anti-Terrorism
Act (ATA) currently under consideration in Congress which would treat
all computer trespass as terrorism. "Treating low-level computer
crimes as terrorist acts is not an appropriate response to recent
events," said EFF Executive Director Shari Steele. "A
relatively harmless online prankster should not face a potential life
sentence in prison." The ATA includes provisions that dramatically
increase the penalties for acts that have no apparent relationship to
terrorism. (Sep. 26, 2001)
- 20020925_patriot_act.html
USA PATRIOT Act Public Law 107-56 107th Congress,
the Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing
Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism Act of 2001.
- 20011029_idof_doj_foia_letter.html
Freedom of Information Act request
letter to U.S. Department of Justice urging full disclosure on
individuals arrested or detained in wake of Sep. 11 attacks; signed by
many public interest organizations (members of the In Defense of Freedom
[IDoF] Coalition). (Oct. 29, 2001)
- 20011015_hr2975_usaa_bill.html
Rep. Sensenbrenner-sponsored "Uniting and
Strengthening America Act" (USA Act or USAA), H.R. 2975,
anti-terrorism and surveillance legislation as passed by the House and
sent to the Senate (Oct. 15, 2001)
- 20011012_usaa_bill_draft.html
Rep. Sensenbrenner-sponsored draft
"Uniting and Strengthening America Act" (USA Act or USAA)
anti-terrorism and surveillance legislation; this version is a revision
of the Senate-passed version, which borrows some of the "sunset"
features of the PATRIOT bill (Oct. 12, 2001)
- 20011012_usaa_bill_draft.pdf
Rep. Sensenbrenner-sponsored draft
"Uniting and Strengthening America Act" (USA Act or USAA)
anti-terrorism and surveillance legislation; this version is a revision
of the Senate-passed version, which borrows some of the "sunset"
features of the PATRIOT bill (Oct. 12, 2001) [PDF version]
- 20011004_usaa_s1510_bill.html
Sen. Thomas Daschle, Sen. Patrick Leahy
and Sen. Orrin Hatch\'s "Uniting and Strengthening America Act" (USA Act
or USAA), S. 1510, anti-terrorism and surveillance legislation,
something of a compromise between the DoJ\'s ATA/MATA and the more
moderate House version, PATRIOT Act. On Oct. 11, it passed the
Senate 96-1. (Oct. 4, 2001)
- 20010921_usaa_bill_draft.html
[D-VT] Sen. Patrick Leahy-sponsored
draft "Uniting and Strengthening America Act" (USA Act or USAA)
anti-terrorism and surveillance legislation. HTML version. (Sep. 21,
2001)
- 20010921_usaa_bill_draft.pdf
[D-VT] Sen. Patrick Leahy-sponsored draft
"Uniting and Strengthening America Act" (USA Act or USAA) anti-terrorism
and surveillance legislation. PDF version. (Sep. 21, 2001)
- 20010921_leahy_usaa_summary.html
Summary, by [D-VT] Sen. Patrick
Leahy\'s staff, of the Leahy-sponsored draft "Uniting and Strengthening
America Act" (USA Act or USAA) anti-terrorism and surveillance
legislation (Sep. 21, 2001)
- 20010921_leahy_usaa_analysis.html
Analysis, by [D-VT] Sen. Patrick
Leahy\'s staff, of the Leahy-sponsored draft "Uniting and Strengthening
America Act" (USA Act or USAA) anti-terrorism and surveillance
legislation (Sep. 21, 2001)
- 20011002_patriot_hr2975_bill.html
The "Provide Appropriate Tools
Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism (PATRIOT) Act of
2001", H.R. 2975, the Sensenbrenner/Conyers compromise version of
anti-terrorism and surveillance legislation. Nearly identical to draft
version from Oct. 1. Probably similar to or same as the House Judiciary
Cmte. Democrats\' compromise bill. (Oct. 2, 2001)
- 20011002_patriot_hr2975_bill.pdf
The "Provide Appropriate Tools
Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism (PATRIOT) Act of
2001", H.R. 2975, the Sensenbrenner/Conyers compromise version of
anti-terrorism and surveillance legislation. Nearly identical to draft
version from Oct. 1. Probably similar to or same as the House Judiciary
Cmte. Democrats\' compromise bill. (Oct. 2, 2001) [PDF version]
- 20011001_patriot_bill_draft.html
The draft "Provide Appropriate Tools
Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism (PATRIOT) Act of
2001", the Sensenbrenner/Conyers compromise version of
anti-terrorism and surveillance legislation. Probably similar
to or same as the House Judiciary Cmte. Democrats\' compromise
bill (Oct. 1, 2001)
- 20011001_patriot_bill_draft.pdf
The draft "Provide Appropriate Tools
Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism (PATRIOT) Act of
2001", the Sensenbrenner/Conyers compromise version of
anti-terrorism and surveillance legislation. Probably similar
to or same as the House Judiciary Cmte. Democrats\' compromise
bill (Oct. 1, 2001) [PDF version]
- 20011001_house_patriot_analysis.html
Analysis, provided by the
sponsors, of the draft "Provide Appropriate Tools Required to
Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism (PATRIOT) Act of 2001", the
Sensenbrenner/Conyers compromise version of anti-terrorism and
surveillance legislation, introdcued Oct. 2 as H.R. 2975. (Oct. 1, 2001)
- 20010927_house_compromise_summary.html
House-provided summary of House
Judiciary Committee Democrats\' compromise draft anti-terrorism bill, the
"Provide Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism
(PATRIOT) Act of 2001". Considerably more moderate than the
Anti-Terrorism Act proposed by the Justice Department.
Probably similar to or same as the PATRIOT bill. (Sep. 27, 2001)
- 20010919_ata_bill_draft.html
Second draft of Department of Justice
draft surveillance and anti-terrorism bill, renamed the Anti-Terrorism
Act of 2001 (ATA), originally proposed as the Mobilization Against
Terrorism Act (MATA). (Sep. 20, 2001)
- 20010927_eff_ata_analysis.html
Electronic Frontier Foundation Analysis
of Anti-Terrorism Act (ATA) of 2001: How it would change FISA
surveillance (Sep. 27, 2001)
- fisa_faq.html
EFF-prepared Frequently Asked Questions and Answers
About the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA). (Sep 27, 2001)
- 20010919_doj_ata_analysis.html
US Justice Department analysis of their
own draft Anti-Terrorism Act (ATA), originally drafted as the
Mobilization Against Terrorism Act (MATA). Draft version. (Sep. 19,
2001)
- 20010920_ata_redline_ia.html
"Redline" showing how Title I, Subtitle A
of Sep. 20, 2001 draft Anti-Terrorism Act (ATA) would amend existing
law (Sep. 20, 2001)
- 20010920_ata_redline_ib.html
"Redline" showing how Title I, Subtitle B
Sections 151-157 of Sep. 20, 2001 draft Anti-Terrorism Act (ATA) would
amend existing law (Sep. 20, 2001)
- 20010919_mata_bill_draft.html
Department of Justice legislative
proposal in response to the Sep. 11, 2001 attacks on the World Trade
Center and the Pentagon. While much of it consists of potentially
reasonable antiterrorism measures, the draft bill contains many
disturbing expansions of police and intelligence surveillance powers,
and includes FBI "wishlist" items that have nothing to do with
terrorism. This is the early draft version, later replaced with the
Anti-Terrorism Act (ATA) version, later the same day. (Sep. 19, 2001)
- 20010919_doj_mata_analysis.html
US Justice Department analysis of
their own draft Mobilization Against Terrorism Act (MATA), later
redrafted as the Anti-Terrorism Act (ATA). Draft version. (Sep. 19,
2001)
- 20010919_eff_wiretap_pr.html
Electronic Frontier Foundation Media
Release: DOJ\'s Anti-Terrorism Bill Would Dismantle Civil Liberties -
Legislate to Improve Security Not Eliminate Freedoms. San Francisco -
EFF today criticized the "Mobilization Against Terrorism Act" (MATA)
a.k.a. "Anti-Terrorism Act" (ATA) proposed by the US Department of
Justice because many provisions of the bill would dramatically alter the
civil liberties landscape through unnecessarily broad restrictions on
free speech and privacy rights in the United States and abroad. EFF
again urged Congress to act with deliberation in approving only measures
that are effective in preventing terrorism while protecting the freedoms
of Americans. (issued Sep. 19, 2001; updated Sep. 20, 2001)
- 20010913_sa1562_hr2500_amendment.html
Excerpts from the Combating
Terrorism Act (CTA), Senate Amendment S.AMDT.1562 to House Bill H.R.2500
with new system cracker wiretap provisions. Very similar to the House
draft bill, Public Safety and Cyber Security Enhancement Act (PSCSEA).
(Sep. 13, 2001)
- 20010919_eff_sa1562_analysis.html
DRAFT EFF analysis of the Combating
Terrorism Act (CTA), S.A. 1562 (S.AMDT.1562), a Senate amendment to
House-passed appropriations bill H.R. 2500, containing various
anti-terrorism provisions - and other provisions that masquerade as
anti-terrorism provisions but which are not. Among the goals of the
legislation is increasing law enforcement wiretapping authority and
scope. (Sep. 19, 2001)
- 20010913_senate_sa1562_debate.html
Senate Debate (such as it was) on
the Combating Terrorism Act (CTA) surveillance amendment S.A. 1562 to
bill H.R. 2500, from the Congressional Record (Sep. 13, 2001)
- 20010920_pscsea_bill_draft.html
Public Safety and Cyber Security
Enhancement Act of 2001 (PSCSEA) draft bill, proposed by Rep. Lamar
Smith, chairman, House Subcommittee on Crime. Similar to the
Senate amendment (to H.R. 2500) S.A. 1562, Combating Terrorism Act
(CTA). (Sep. 20, 2001)
- 20010920_joint_statement.html
Joint Statement In Defense of Freedom at
a Time of Crisis: EFF & numerous other organizations urge reflection and
caution in the wake of the World Trade Center attack, and remind
policymakers that sacrificing liberty for security is not a legitimate
goal. (Sep. 20, 2001)
- 20010917_ashcroft_mueller_statement.html
Attorney General John
Ashcroft Remarks at Press Briefing, with FBI Director Robert Mueller, on
new wiretapping legislation and other anti-terrorism issues (Sep. 17,
2001)
- 19990429_faa_alert.html
Alert: The U.S. Dept. of Transportation\'s
Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has submitted a proposal
to require airlines to use a computer-assisted passenger screening
program that selects passengers both randomly and who fit the supposed
profile of a terrorist for heightened security examination of their
checked bags.
- 960801_terrorbill.alert
ALERT: ACTION NEEDED IMMEDIATELY! Newly revised
"anti-terrorism" legislation poses privacy threats: Warrantless wiretaps,
roving wiretaps, and greatly expanded wiretapping capabilities. DEADLINE:
Aug. 1, to Aug. 2 at the latest!
- 960424_aclu_terror_bill.announce
ACLU press release condemning the
signing of the so-called counter-terrorism bill into law.
- 960417_aclu_clinton.letter
ACLU letter to President Clinton, urging
veto of the "anti-terrorism" (and decidedly anti-American-freedom)
legislation nearing passage.
- 960417_aclu_terror_bill.announce
ACLU announcement of deceptive
attempts by committee reviewing "terrorism" bill to sneak anti-privacy,
and other dangerous, measures past the House of Representatives.
- 960415_aclu_terror_bill.announce
announcement of ACLU efforts to convince
the House and Senate conferees to reject President Clinton\'s call for
counter-terrorism legislation that would gut the Bill of Rights
- 960318_aclu_terror_immig_bills.announce
Press releases from ACLU,
regarding "Congressional shell game": Dangerous provisions stripped from
terrorism bill only to reappear a week later in anti-immigration bill!
- 960313_aclu_terror_immig_bills.article
Op-ed piece by ACLU\'s Laura W.
Murphy: Congress might as well declare March 13-20 "National Wiretap
Week", given the content of the anti-terrorism and anti-immigration bills
our legislature seems hell-bent on passing despite mounting
constitutionality concerns.
- 960313_aclu_terror_bill.announce
ACLU announces taht the revision of
the House "anti-terrorism" bill still severely threatens the civil
liberties of every US citizen.
- 960312_aclu_terror_bill.announce
ACLU Warns: Don\'t Be Deceived. House
Leadership Maneuvers on Anti-Terrorism Bill; Continues To Threaten
Civil Liberties, Personal Freedom
- 960307_aclu_terror_bill.announce
ACLU announcement: "Family of
Oklahoma City Bombing Victim Will Speak Out Against Habeas Corpus
\'Reform\' and Antiterrorism Bill"
- 960305_aclu_terror_bill.announce
ACLU press release: "So-called
Counterterrorism Bill Moving; Rules Committee Sets Clock Ticking to Floor
Debate"
- 960229_aclu_terror_bill.background
"ACLU Background Briefing:
House Prepares to Consider Revised Terrorism Bill: Individual Rights,
Personal Freedom Even More At Risk"
- 951215_tartaro_terror_bills.article
Article by Joseph P. Tartaro, exec.
ed. of _The_New_Gun_Week_, on the dangers to civil liberties posed by the
House & Senate "anti-terrorism" bills (see also Hagin article).
- 951215_hagin_nacdl_habeas.article
Article by Leslie J. Hagin of Nat\'l.
Assoc. of Criminal Defense Lawyers, on the threats to civil liberties
posed by HR 1710 and S 735, in particular their \'reform\' of the Great
Writ of Habeas Corpus.
- 951206_aclu_terror_bills_opposition.announce
ACLU press release:
Gun Groups, Civil Liberties Organizations Announce Opposition
To Provisions of Counter-Terrorism Legislation
- 951206_aclu_terror_bills.statement
"More Law Enforcement Power, No
Accountability - The Counter-Terrorism Legislation Must Fail", statement
of Laura W. Murphy, Director, ACLU National Washington Office
- 951206_aclu_nra_hr.letter
Letter of ACLU, NRA and many other organizations,
alerting Speaker Newt Gingrich and Minority Leader Richard Gephardt of
the US House of Representatives about the constitutional and social
dangers posed by the House anti-terrorism legislation\'s over-breadth.
- 951206_ccrkba_terror_bills.announce
Citizens\' Committee for the Right
to Keep and Bear Arms press release regarding coalition with ACLU and
other disparate organizations against the "absolutely outrageous"
expansion of federal law enforcement\'s authority to trample our rights,
as codified in the House "anti-terrorism" legislation.
- 951206_nra_terror_bills.statement
NRA Institute for Legislative Action
statement against the so-called "anti-terrorism" bills.
- 951206_goa_terror_bills.announce
Gun Owners of America press release
regarding GOA\'s opposing to the government\'s "Terror Bills".
- 951206_lawprofs_hr1710_gingrich.letter
Letter (to Speaker of the
House Newt Gingrich) signed by a number of leading law professors,
urging the withdrawal or defeat of HR 1710, the Comprehensive
Antiterrorism bill, on civil liberties grounds
- 951206_nacdl_terror_bills.announce
National Assoc. of Criminal Defense
Lawyers Legislative Committee press relss release attacking the "Tap
\'Em, Entrap \'Em and Zap \'Em" terrorism bill as a threat to the rights of
all Americans.
- 19950511_berman_netbomb_senate_jud.testimony
Testimony of Jerry Berman,
Center for Democracy and Technology, before the Senate Judiciary
Committee, on unconstitutionality of "anti-terrorism" bills that would
censor "violent" or "bomb-making" information on the Net.
- epic_to_specter.letter
Letter from EPIC to Sen. Arlen Specter (R-PA),
arguing that the FBI has broad enough powers to investigate terrorism as
it is, and that any expansion would result in undue restriction of
citizens\' rights.
- fbi_counterterror.policy
Center for National Security
Studies explanation of the FBI Domestic Counterterrorism Program,
including examples and issues to be considered.
- fbi_unabomber_net.letter
open letter to the Internet community from
the US Federal Bureau of Investigation seeking assistance in identifying
the Unabomber.
- hr1635_95.bill
Introduced by Representative Gephardt (D-MO). This bill is
intended to combat domestic terrorism. It increasing the access and use
of substantive investigative enhancements, substantive prosecutive
enhancements and criminal penalties. Reffered to the Committee
on the Judiciary, Banking and Financial Services and Commerce.
- hr1655_95_bill.old
Intelligence Authorization Act of 1995, as introduced.
Preserved for comparison purposes with the version that passed (archived
here as hr1655_96.act).
- hr1655_96.act
Intelligence Authorization Act of 1996. Includes
provision for easier police and spy agency access to credit records.
Passed into law, as Public Law 104-93, 1996.
- hr1710_95.bill
Introduced by Representative Hyde (R-IL). A bill to combat
terrorism. Entitled the Comprehensive Antiterrorism Act of 1995. It
lists new offenses, increased penalties, investigative tools, nuclear
materials and immigration related policies. Was reffered to the
Committee on the Judiciary.
- hr2703_96.bill
The Hyde Comprehensive Antiterrorism Act
was introduced December 5, 1995. Written to attempt to control acts
of terrorism in America. According to the ACLU, such legislation
gives the Executive Branch the authority to determine what groups
would be labeled as terrorist organizations. It increases the
opportunity for government infringement in the area of wiretapping
and the confiscation of personal records on an unprecedented scale.
Closely related to Hyde\'s very similar H.R. 2768, the Effective Death
Penalty and Antiterrorism Act. Passed House & Senate, in the version
archived as hr2703_s736_final.bill
- hr2703_s735_96.act
the Hyde/Dole "Effective Death Penalty and Public
Safety Act of 1996", a.k.a. "the Comprehensive Antiterrorism/Terrorism
Prevention Act", as passed. Includes elements of H.R.2768. Internet
censorship provision was gutted, but many other "features" of this bill
are cause for concern, including changes to criminal forfeiture law,
"Removal Procedures for Alien Terrorists", "Access to certain
confidential INS files through court order", subpoenas for bank records,
"Study of publicly available instructional material on the
making of bombs...", Habeas corpus "reform", limits on appeals, etc.
All in all, one of the most threatening pieces of legislation ever
passed by the US Congress. Signed into law, 1996, as Public Law 104-132.
- hr2768_95.bill
The Hyde Effective Death Penalty and Antiterrorism Act
was introduced December 15, 1995. Written to attempt to control acts
of terrorism in America. According to the ACLU, such legislation
gives the Executive Branch the authority to determine what groups
would be labeled as terrorist organizations. It increases the
opportunity for government infringement in the area of wiretapping
and the confiscation of personal records on an unprecedented scale.
Closely related to Hyde\'s very similar H.R. 2703, the Comprehensive
Antiterrorism Act. Major features of it were merged into H.R.2703/
S.735 before passage. H.R. 2768 itself did not pass, per se.
- hr896_95.bill
Introduced by Representatives Charles Schumer (D-NY) and
Norman Dicks (D-WA). Prohibits fund-raising for "terrorist organizations."
Increases use of wiretaps in "terrorism" cases, including "providing
material support." Referred to Judiciary Committee.
- hr896_95_aclu.analysis
Opposes H.R. 896 because it would severly infringe
on constitutional rights. Aliens would not be afforded due process of
law as Classified Information Act would be ignored. "Terrorism activity"
criteria is dangerously broad, and would allow for FBI "fishing
expeditions."
- hr896_s390_95_cnss.analysis
Analysis of the Counterterrorism bill drafted
by the Clinton adminsitration by the Center for National Security Studies.
The analysis looks at the new powers that would be created that violate
many precepts of the constitution and the normal American judicial system.
- hr896_s390_95_nlg.alert
National Lawyers Guild alert about anti-terrorism
bill HR896/S390. (symlinked to s390_hr896_95_nlg.alert)
- mcintyre_dateline_criticism.letter
Dave McIntyre\'s criticism of NBC
Dateline (4/26/95) report on the availability of bomb-building
information on the Internet.
- okc_media_reactions.article
Collection of articles about foreign media reactions to the Oklahoma City bombing.
- post_bombing_censorship_epic.release
EPIC press release summarizing the
letter to Sen. Specter (see epic_to_specter.letter)
- rhetoric_of_violence_agre.article
Article by Phil Agre about the
violent, anti-government rhetoric of radio talk-show hosts and
influential political figures and the possible connection between this
rhetoric and the Oklahoma City bombing.
- s1762_96_feinstein.amend
New version of Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-CA)
Net censorship legislation, going after "bomb-making" info on the
Internet. Based on her amendment to the 1995 Senate anti-terrorism bill,
this one is an amendment to the 1996 Defense Authorization bill. Passed
the Senate, late July, 1996.
- s3_95.bill
Violent Crime Control and Law Enf. Improvement Act of 1995.
Introduced by Bob Dole. Among other things, would extend wiretapping
authority and restrict appeals for those convicted of terrorist crimes.
- s735_051195_meeks.article
Article by Brock Meeks describing the Senates
discussion about censoring the internet.
- s735_95.bill
Introduced by Senator Robert Dole (R-KS). Comprehensive
Terrorism Prevention Act of 1995. Requires Secretary of State to
provide Speaker of House and Chairman of Senate Committee on Foreign
Relations with list of products and technologies which could be used
to promote or engage in terrorist activities, including "critical
technologies." This version (the final, Senate-passed version)
includes an amendment by Sen. Feinstein (D-CA) to restrict
"bomb-making" information on the Internet and other networks (see
s735_95_feinstein_amend.draft for the original version of this
amendment and s735_95_feinstein_amend_draft_eff.notes for an EFF
analysis of it. The version included in S.735 as it passed was
substantially less threatening to free speech. Passed senate, and,
with amendments, the House.
- s735_95_bill.old
S.735 as introduced (does not contain the Feinstein
Internet censorship amendment.
- s735_95_cdt.alert
Alert dealing with the Senate hearings that tried to
determine if and how the Congress should limit speech on the internet
dealing with bombs and other potentially dangerous information.
- s735_95_clinton.comment
Statement made by President Clinton
regarding the anti-terrorism bill and how he supports it.
- s735_95_epic.analysis
Questions appropriate scope of government power
regarding S. 735 and Antiterrrorism Amendments Act of 1995. Antiterr.
Amend. Act extends electronic surveillance capabilities of FBI,
particularly wiretap capabilities. Establishes Telecommunications
Compliance Fund to permit Attorney General to pay telephone companies
and other firms to design wiretap-ready technology.
- s735_95_feinstein_amend.draft
Amendment to s735 intorduced
by Senator Feinstein intended to stop people from teaching how
to create explosives with intent of criminal acts. Gutted before passage.
A version has been reintroduced, July 96, as an amendment to S.1762.
- s735_95_feinstein_amend_draft_eff.notes
EFF summary of the Feinstein
amendment and analysis of it.
- s735_95_gage.alert
Alert about the anti-terrorism bill, stating that
it is overbroad and unecessary and why it is so.
- s735_95_internet_terrorism.article
Article regarding the Senate hearings
on the anti-terrorism bill and analysis of what went on.
- s735_hr2703_96.act
the Hyde/Dole "Effective Death Penalty and Public
Safety Act of 1996", a.k.a. "the Comprehensive Antiterrorism/Terrorism
Prevention Act", as passed. Includes elements of H.R.2768. Internet
censorship provision was gutted, but many other "features" of this bill
are cause for concern, including changes to criminal forfeiture law,
"Removal Procedures for Alien Terrorists", "Access to certain
confidential INS files through court order", subpoenas for bank records,
"Study of publicly available instructional material on the
making of bombs...", Habeas corpus "reform", limits on appeals, etc.
All in all, one of the most threatening pieces of legislation ever
passed by the US Congress. Signed into law, 1996, as Public Law 104-132.
- s761_95.bill
Bill introduced by Senator Daschle that has the intent
to improve the ability of the U.S. to respond to the international
terrorist threat. As of May 15, 1995. Read the second time and
then placed on the calender.
- s761_95_bill.old
Bill introduced by Senator Daschle that has the intent
to improve the ability of the U.S. to respond to the international
terrorist threat. As of May 5, 1995.
- sale_unabomber.analysis
_Nation_ editor and self-described luddite
Kirkpatrick Sale\'s (often favorable) analysis of the Unabomber manifesto.
Sale identifies fairly strongly with the bomber\'s central notion that
industrial/technological society is oppressing the individual, and
that it will probably collapse, though he is very critical of the
Unabomber\'s vision of the future (such as it is), his planning, as
well as his reasoning and intelligence.
- terrorism_trends.article
Center for National Security Studies article
about trends in terrorism, and how they conflict with public perception
and do not provide reason to alter current government policy.
- unabomber.manifesto
The "manifesto" of the "Unabomber", one
or more luddites responsible for the death and maiming of several people
in academic and technology circles. The document was essentially
censored by the FBI, until its eventual publication in a DC newspaper.
Links to Related Off-Site Resources