Congressional Record: November 22, 2003 (Extensions)
Page E2399
 
            H.R. 2417, INTELLIGENCE AUTHORIZATION AGREEMENT

                                 ______
                                 

                               speech of

                            HON. MARK UDALL

                              of colorado

                    in the house of representatives

                      Thursday, November 20, 2003

  Mr. UDALL of Colorado. Mr. Speaker, I rise in opposition to H.R. 
2417. I voted for this bill earlier this year, but I cannot support it 
today.
  I have concerns about a provision in the conference report that would 
expand financial surveillance authority of our intelligence agencies. I 
also had concerns about this provision in the first version of the bill 
that passed the House, but I supported the bill then in the hope that 
the language would be further clarified in the final conference report. 
It has not been.
  Whereas currently banks, credit unions, and other financial 
institutions are required to provide certain financial data to 
authorized intelligence agencies and the Treasury Department, this 
legislation would expand the list of institutions to include car 
dealers, pawnbrokers, travel agents, casinos, and other businesses.
  This expanded definition of "financial institution" may indeed be 
necessary for effective counterintelligence, foreign intelligence, and 
international operations of the United States. But since this will 
represent such a significant expansion of the powers of our 
intelligence agencies, I believe it is important that it be clear and 
not go further than necessary.
  In particular, I am concerned that the language in the conference 
report only vaguely limits this expanded definition to financial 
information. I understand that report language makes this distinction 
more explicit, but that bill conferees objected to including this 
clarifying language in the conference report itself. The legislative 
intent of this provision is to expand surveillance in the area of 
financial--not other--information, but there are no assurances that 
this intent will be observed when the legislation is implemented.
  Mr. Speaker, this provision in the conference report involves the 
privacy rights of Americans--rights that I believe strongly we must 
protect even as we work to combat terrorism. Because I'm concerned that 
this conference report does not strike the right balance, I am voting 
against it today.

                          ____________________


Congressional Record: November 23, 2003 (Extensions)
Page E2423
 
 H.R. 2417, THE FISCAL YEAR 2004 INTELLIGENCE AUTHORIZATION CONFERENCE 
                                 REPORT

                                 ______
                                 

                               speech of

                          HON. BETTY McCOLLUM

                              of minnesota

                    in the house of representatives

                      Thursday, November 20, 2003

  Ms. McCOLLUM. Mr. Speaker, it is with great dismay that I rise to 
oppose H.R. 2417, the Fiscal Year 2004 Intelligence Authorization 
Report.
  The Republican Leadership inserted a controversial provision in the 
FY04 Intelligence Authorization Report that will expand the already 
far-reaching USA Patriot Act, threatening to further erode our 
cherished civil liberties. This provision gives the FBI power to demand 
financial and other records, without a judge's approval, from post 
offices, real estate agents, car dealers, travel agents, pawnbrokers 
and many other businesses. This provision was included with little or 
no public debate, including no consideration by the House Judiciary 
Committee, which is the committee of jurisdiction. It came as a 
surprise to most Members of this body.
  It is of great concern that the Republican Leadership, along with the 
Administration and Attorney General Ashcroft, would seek to include 
such a non-germane, controversial provision into what should otherwise 
be a nonpartisan bill. Furthermore, the Republican Leadership, in the 
Senate defeated an attempt to "sunset" this provision when they 
considered it. It is clear the Republican Leadership and the 
Administration would rather expand on the USA Patriot Act through 
deception and secrecy than debate such provisions in an open forum. The 
freedoms and civil liberties of the American people are too important 
to allow such an irresponsible, abusive power play by the Majority.
  The importance of our intelligence community has grown significantly 
in the wake of the September 11th terrorist attacks and the subsequent, 
continuing campaign against terrorism. The FY04 Intelligence 
Authorization Report includes a number of positive, beneficial 
provisions designed to improve our counterintelligence capabilities, 
strengthen our ability to share information between the federal 
government, local and state officials, and provide for our intelligence 
officers and their families. It is unfortunate that such a 
controversial provision had to be included.

                          ____________________


Congressional Record: November 23, 2003 (Extensions)
Page E2428-E2429


 
  CONFERENCE REPORT ON H.R. 2417, INTELLIGENCE AUTHORIZATION ACT FOR 
                            FISCAL YEAR 2004

                                 ______
                                 

                               speech of

                             HON. RON PAUL

                                of texas

                    in the house of representatives

                      Thursday, November 20, 2003

  Mr. PAUL. Mr. Speaker, I rise with great concerns over the 
Intelligence Authorization Conference Report. I do not agree that 
Members of Congress should vote in favor of an authorization that most 
know almost nothing about--including the most basic issue of the level 
of funding.
  What most concerns me about this conference report, though, is 
something that should outrage every single American citizen. I am 
referring to the stealth addition of language drastically expanding FBI 
powers to secretly and without court order snoop into the business and 
financial transactions of American citizens. These expanded internal 
police powers will enable the FBI to demand transaction records from 
businesses, including auto dealers, travel agents, pawnbrokers and 
more, without the approval or knowledge of a judge or grand jury. This 
was written into the bill at the 11th hour over the objections of 
members of the Senate Judiciary Committee, which would normally have 
jurisdiction over the FBI. The Judiciary Committee was frozen out of 
the process. It appears we are witnessing a stealth enactment of the 
enormously unpopular "Patriot II" legislation that was first leaked 
several months ago. Perhaps the national outcry when a draft of the 
Patriot II act was leaked has led its supporters to enact it one piece 
at a time in secret. Whatever the case, this is outrageous and 
unacceptable. I urge each of my colleagues to join me in rejecting this 
bill and its incredibly dangerous expansion of Federal police powers.
  I also have concerns about the rest of the bill. One of the few 
things we do know about this final version is that we are authorizing 
even more than the president has requested for the intelligence 
community. The intelligence budget seems to grow every year, but we 
must ask what we are getting for our money. It is notoriously difficult 
to assess the successes of our intelligence apparatus, and perhaps it 
is unfair that we only hear about its failures and shortcomings. 
However, we cannot help but be concerned over several such failures in 
recent years. Despite the tens of billions we spend on these myriad 
intelligence agencies, it is impossible to ignore the failure of our 
federal intelligence community to detect and prevent the September 11 
attacks. Additionally, it is becoming increasingly obvious that our 
intelligence community failed completely to accurately assess the 
nature of the

[[Page E2429]]

Iraqi threat. These are by any measure grave failures, costing us 
incalculably in human lives and treasure. Yet from what little we can 
know about this bill, the solution is to fund more of the same. I would 
hope that we might begin coming up with new approaches to our 
intelligence needs, perhaps returning to an emphasis on the proven 
value of human intelligence and expanded linguistic capabilities for 
our intelligence personnel.
  I am also concerned that our scarce resources are again being 
squandered pursuing a failed drug war in Colombia, as this bill 
continues to fund our disastrous Colombia policy. Billions of dollars 
have been spent in Colombia to fight this drug war, yet more drugs than 
ever are being produced abroad and shipped into the United States--
including a bumper crop of opium sent by our new allies in Afghanistan. 
Evidence in South America suggests that any decrease in Colombian 
production of drugs for the US market has only resulted in increased 
production in neighboring countries. As I have stated repeatedly, the 
solution to the drug problem lies not in attacking the producers abroad 
or in creating a militarized police state to go after the consumers at 
home, but rather in taking a close look at our seemingly insatiable 
desire for these substances. Until that issue is addressed we will 
continue wasting billions of dollars in a losing battle.
  In conclusion, I strongly urge my colleagues to join me in rejecting 
this dangerous and expensive bill.

                          ____________________

						  
						  
Congressional Record: December 9, 2003 (Extensions)
Page E2491


 
  CONFERENCE REPORT ON H.R. 2417, INTELLIGENCE AUTHORIZATION ACT FOR 
                            FISCAL YEAR 2004

                                 ______
                                 

                               speech of

                           HON. DENNIS MOORE

                               of kansas

                    in the house of representatives

                      Thursday, November 20, 2003

  Mr. MOORE. Mr. Speaker, I rise in opposition to one provision of the 
conference report before us today, which causes me to vote against the 
entire measure.
  This legislation authorizes classified amounts in fiscal year 2004 
for 14 U.S. intelligence agencies and intelligence-related activities 
of the U.S. government--including the CIA and the National Security 
Agency, as well as foreign intelligence activities of the Defense 
Department, the FBI, the State Department, the Homeland Security 
Department, and other agencies. H.R. 2417 covers CIA and general 
intelligence operations, including signals intelligence, clandestine 
human-intelligence programs and analysis, and covert action 
capabilities. It also authorizes covert action programs, research and 
development, and projects to improve information dissemination. All of 
these are important and vital programs, which I support.
  I am voting against this measure today, however, to draw attention to 
a provision which I believe should have been the subject of more 
rigorous congressional analysis than merely an up-or-down vote as part 
of a larger conference agreement. This measure expands the definition 
of "financial institution" to provide enhanced authority for 
intelligence community collection activities designed to prevent, deter 
and disrupt terrorism and espionage directed against the United States 
and to enhance foreign intelligence efforts. Banks, credit unions and 
other financial institutions currently are required to provide certain 
financial data to investigators generally without a court order or 
grand jury subpoena. The conference agreement expands the list to 
include car dealers, pawnbrokers, travel agents, casinos and other 
businesses.
  This provision allows the U.S. government to have, through use of 
"National Security Letters," greater access to a larger universe of 
information that goes beyond traditional financial records, but is 
nonetheless crucial in tracking terrorist finances or espionage 
activities. Current law permits the FBI to use National Security 
Letters to obtain financial records from defined financial institutions 
for foreign intelligence investigations. While not subject to court 
approval, the letters nonetheless have to be approved by a senior 
government official. The PATRIOT Act earlier had altered the standard 
for financial records that could be subject to National Security 
Letters to include the records of someone "sought for" an 
investigation, not merely of the "target" of an investigation.
  While this new provision of law included in the conference report 
does not amend the PATRIOT Act, I agree with the six Senators who 
recently wrote to the Senate Intelligence Committee and asked them not 
to move ahead with such a significant expansion of the FBI's 
investigatory powers without further review. As they stated, public 
hearings, public debate and legislative protocol are essential in 
legislation involving the privacy rights of Americans. As a member of 
the House Financial Services Committee, I am concerned that these new 
provisions of law could be used to seize personal financial records 
that traditionally have been protected by financial privacy laws. The 
rush to judgment following the attacks of September 11, 2001, led to 
the rapid enactment of the PATRIOT Act, a measure which has caused 
substantial concerns among many Americans who value our 
constitutionally-protected liberties. Now that we are able to legislate 
in this area with a lessened sense of urgency, I urge my colleagues to 
step back and return this provision of H.R. 2417 to committee, where it 
can undergo the rigors of the normal legislative process so that 
Congress, and all Americans, can pass an informed judgment upon its 
merit.

                          ____________________