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Old 11-29-2005, 07:44 PM   #41 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by roachboy
o please, dj: look at posts 8-12 and tell me that i am blowing anything out of proportion. ustwo posted a list of victims of 9/11 and concluded with the "threat is real" slogan--this move ran directly counter to the position he outlined before that and counter to what we wrote later as qualification. it was a clearly an index that tried to justify whatever displays of authority the state would decide to take in the name of the war on terror.

perhaps you read things differently than that--had i posted as late in the thread as you did, dj, perhaps i would have agreed with you and not bothered with this at all. there was no way to anticipate a response to the post. not psychic. sorry.
I do think that either he misunderstood what was being asked, or that he was just being argumentitive, to that point. However, if you read what he said, and the posts he was responding to, they had nothing to do with the specific incident that was the topic of the thread.
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Old 11-29-2005, 08:00 PM   #42 (permalink)
 
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i will admit that this article was in the back of my mind when i wrote this morning:

Quote:
William M. Arkin on National and Homeland Security
Domestic Military Intelligence Is Back

Code Name of the Week: Cornerstone

Yesterday, Walter Pincus reported in The Washington Post about the Defense Department's Counterintelligence Field Activity (CIFA), certainly one of the more mysterious Pentagon agencies, and one that is at the center of the Defense Department's expanded programs aimed at gathering and analyzing intelligence within the United States.




Proposals, Pincus said,"would transform CIFA from an office that coordinates Pentagon security efforts -- including protecting military facilities from attack -- to one that also has authority to investigate crimes within the United States such as treason, foreign or terrorist sabotage or even economic espionage."




Well, CIFA already has these authorities, has its own agents, and collects information on common American citizens under the guise of "sabotage" and "force protection" threats to the military. Since 9/11, functions that were previously intended to protect U.S. forces overseas from terrorism and protecti U.S. secrets from spies have been combined in one super-intelligence function that constitutes the greatest threat to U.S. civil liberties since the domestic spying days of the 1970's.

On May 2, 2003, Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz signed a memorandum (large pdf) directing the military to collect and report "non-validated threat information" relating to U.S. military forces, installations or missions. His memorandum followed from the establishment of the Domestic Threat Working Group after 9/11, the intent of which was to create a mechanism to share low-level domestic "threat information" between the military and intelligence agencies.


It is the military's equivalent of the FBI and intelligence community's post 9/11 shift, and Wolfowitz directed the sharing of reports on ambiguous activity. This new reporting mechanism -- called TALON for Threat and Local Observation Notice -- applies to seven reporting categories:
Non-specific threats
Surveillance
Elicitation
Test of security
Unusual repetitive activity
Bomb threats
Other suspicious activity

According to a classified Standing Joint Force Headquarters-North document on "intelligence sharing" dated July 20, 2005, and obtained exclusively by this washingtonpost.com blogger, collection of intelligence on U.S. persons is allowed by military intelligence units if there is a reason to believe the U.S. person is:


"Connected to international terrorist activities;

Connected to international narcotics;

Connected to foreign intelligence;

A threat to DoD installations, property, or persons; or,

The subject of authorized counterintelligence."

In other words, some military gumshoe or over-zealous commander just has to decide that someone is "a threat to" the military.



Under well-worn intelligence oversight rules, military intelligence units are restricted from collecting information concerning "U.S. persons," but the post 9/11 reality is these restrictions are increasingly meaningless.



What is more, the post 9/11 redefinition of "counter-intelligence" opens the way for the military to conduct domestic surveillance. Military law enforcement organizations such as the Air Force Office of Special Investigations (AFOSI), the Army Criminal Investigations Division (CID) and its domestic counter-intelligence brigade, and the Naval Criminal Investigative Service (NCIS) have increasing domestic duties that straddle the world between "counter-intelligence" and law enforcement, and are the main sources for TALON reporting to CIFA.



Ever since 1998, when Secretary of Defense William Cohen went crazy building up a cover-your-ass force protection policy, the law enforcement arms have increasingly moved from traditional counter-intelligence missions of going after enemy spies to going after, well, whomever they deem as a "threat" to the military. Overseas, this makes sense, but in the United States, the counter-intelligence/force protection loophole is ripe for abuse.



The "counter-intelligence" function of CIFA itself is couched to encompass "force protection," according to DOD Directive Number 5105.67, "Counterintelligence Field Activity (DoD CIFA)," February 19, 2002. What is more, the directive states that "in carrying out the mission of these elements, the Director of the DoD CIFA may employ law enforcement personnel, in whole or in part, as appropriate, to carry out the DoD CIFA's law enforcement functions?"



CIFA is charged with correlating TALON information with all-source intelligence and providing "fused" products. In this regard, fused products are raw law enforcement and FBI reports relating to suspected domestic terrorism, NSA intercepts, and CIA and military intelligence reports that might bear upon domestic security.



Cornerstone is the new repository for this combined intelligence and TALON threat reporting. It originated in May 2000, when Deputy Secretary of Defense John Hamre established a requirement to track foreign visitors to DOD installations. Post 9/11, the database came to encompass not intelligence and investigative leads to support foreign visitor tracking, but also "insider threat" information, counter-intelligence, law enforcement support, counter-terrorism, and force protection. Under a new program -- Project Voyager -- the Cornerstone database is being improved to support coordination with local, state and federal law enforcement.



When one looks at the seven TALON reporting categories, it is clear that what is to be collected is broad enough to encompass virtually anything the military feels is a threat. "Non-specific threats" and "other suspicious activity" can be interpreted to include just about anything.

"Elicitation," for instance, is defined in TALON documents as:


"Any attempts to obtain security-related or military-specific information by anyone who does not have the appropriate security clearance and the need-to-know. Elicitation attempts may be made by mail, fax, telephone, by computer, or in person."

Ask questions of a military person about their tour in Iraq, protest about the presence of military recruiters on campus or at the Mall, engage in lawful protest against the Iraq war, and you could find yourself in the Cornerstone database, forever a "suspect." Tomorrow I'll write about how this is really happening.

CIFA not only manages the Cornerstone database, but it also "makes the determination whether to release information about U.S. persons to analysts." In other words, CIFA as both a "counter-intelligence" and law enforcement arm of the Pentagon bridges between two worlds, and is allowed to obtain and store information about American citizens. I hope that there are a lot of lawyers on the staff.



And there's the rub. One can hardly find out who the director of this organization is, let alone how many people work there are what they are really doing.
source: http://blogs.washingtonpost.com/earl...lita.html#more

i am still working out what i think about this.
but the blurring of the line that seperates police from military functions, and which results in direct military interference with domestic politics (under the guise of the "war on terror" obviously) seems to me an a priori bad thing.

as for the article, i dont think the writer's tone adds much to the presentation of the information.

speaking of tone....perhaps the above article (and that i have been thinking about it) accounts for my-----um-------highly-----o what's the word?------directed reading of ustwo's posts from earlier.
mea culpa.
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Last edited by roachboy; 11-29-2005 at 08:06 PM..
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Old 11-29-2005, 08:05 PM   #43 (permalink)
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Roachboy, I used that very same article to start a new thread about the proper role of the Dod. Your concern about a show of force at the state or federal level was my inspiration.
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Old 12-05-2005, 01:38 PM   #44 (permalink)
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So, what happens when you don't show your ID? This happens.
Quote:
Meet Deborah Davis. She's a 50 year-old mother of four who lives and works in Denver, Colorado. Her kids are all grown-up: her middle son is a soldier fighting in Iraq. She leads an ordinary, middle class life. You probably never would have heard of Deb Davis if it weren't for her belief in the U.S. Constitution.

One morning in late September 2005, Deb was riding the public bus to work. She was minding her own business, reading a book and planning for work, when a security guard got on this public bus and demanded that every passenger show their ID. Deb, having done nothing wrong, declined. The guard called in federal cops, and she was arrested and charged with federal criminal misdemeanors after refusing to show ID on demand.

On the 9th of December 2005, Deborah Davis will be arraigned in U.S. District Court in a case that will determine whether Deb and the rest of us live in a free society, or in a country where we must show "papers" whenever a cop demands them.
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Old 12-05-2005, 02:20 PM   #45 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Redlemon
So, what happens when you don't show your ID? This happens.
You know I was pretty horrifed with this, and then something hit me.

Whats the difference between an aircraft and a bus, besides the obvious?

What makes aircraft special that they require ID's and buses not?
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Old 12-05-2005, 02:35 PM   #46 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ustwo
You know I was pretty horrifed with this, and then something hit me.

Whats the difference between an aircraft and a bus, besides the obvious?

What makes aircraft special that they require ID's and buses not?
again, if people do not want to deal with this, don't take the public transportation. drive yourself. when enough people stop supporting the system like that, it will stop.
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Old 12-05-2005, 03:13 PM   #47 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dksuddeth
again, if people do not want to deal with this, don't take the public transportation. drive yourself. when enough people stop supporting the system like that, it will stop.
If you drive yourself the terrorists have won. Seriously though, this will only stop when people start refusing to show ID. Then the person behind them doesn't show ID, and then the next person.

Haven't we lost already if you have alter your daily schedule so you don't have to be confronted by the "Paper's Please" police?
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Old 12-05-2005, 03:20 PM   #48 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by samcol
If you drive yourself the terrorists have won. Seriously though, this will only stop when people start refusing to show ID. Then the person behind them doesn't show ID, and then the next person.

Haven't we lost already if you have alter your daily schedule so you don't have to be confronted by the "Paper's Please" police?
how have the terrorists won? if police want to check ID's on public transportation, especially upon entering federal property, that is completely within their purview. now, if they should be doing random checkpoints on private vehicles asking for ID, then we have a problem.

As far as altering daily schedules.......it's all about privacy rights, correct? So what expectation of privacy do you think you are entitled to on government funded transportation as opposed to private transportation?
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Old 12-05-2005, 03:39 PM   #49 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ustwo
You know I was pretty horrifed with this, and then something hit me.

Whats the difference between an aircraft and a bus, besides the obvious?

What makes aircraft special that they require ID's and buses not?
9/11 for one. I may not agree with it, but I certianally see the logic.
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Old 12-05-2005, 03:47 PM   #50 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dksuddeth
how have the terrorists won? if police want to check ID's on public transportation, especially upon entering federal property, that is completely within their purview. now, if they should be doing random checkpoints on private vehicles asking for ID, then we have a problem.

As far as altering daily schedules.......it's all about privacy rights, correct? So what expectation of privacy do you think you are entitled to on government funded transportation as opposed to private transportation?
The terrorists hate us for our freedom, so why do we have to give up more of our liberty and freedom than ever before to fight the terrorists? I just can't see the logic there. Why do we have to show ID domestically when we have thousands of undocumented immigrants, illegals, aliens, terrorists, workers or whatever you want to call them coming across the borders everyday? Btw they have been doing random car searches since 9/11 and with DUI checkpoints before then.

I have every expectation of privacy from the government in public as well as private places as outlined in the 4th amendment.
Quote:
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
They have no reason to check your papers unless they have probable cause that you are breaking the law. Throughout history governments abusing its own citizens has been a much greater threat than terrorists ever have or will be.
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Old 12-05-2005, 04:32 PM   #51 (permalink)
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There has never been a requirement for "probable cause" to require identification. That requires only mere suspicion. Police can then use the identification process to refine their suspicion to a higher level (this from cases dating back to the sixties and seventies). There is NOTHING new here, cops have been doing it for thirty and more years. I had it done to me in 1983 for the crime of walking down the sidewalk by a city policeman while walking to work. I completely understood then. The law requiring identification is very old and has been challenged many times. Your information is grossly incorrect and you have an expectation for privacy in public (think about that phrase, privacy in public, it's a myth) that does NOT exist and hasn't for a few decades.
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Old 12-05-2005, 05:07 PM   #52 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Chilek9
There has never been a requirement for "probable cause" to require identification. That requires only mere suspicion. Police can then use the identification process to refine their suspicion to a higher level (this from cases dating back to the sixties and seventies). There is NOTHING new here, cops have been doing it for thirty and more years. I had it done to me in 1983 for the crime of walking down the sidewalk by a city policeman while walking to work. I completely understood then. The law requiring identification is very old and has been challenged many times. Your information is grossly incorrect and you have an expectation for privacy in public (think about that phrase, privacy in public, it's a myth) that does NOT exist and hasn't for a few decades.
You're correct that you don't have the right of privacy in public, but as I said you have the right to privacy FROM the government in public. The fourth amendment is a restriction on policing power and has no regard whether it's public or private property. Being in public does not waive your right to be secure in your person and papers.

What did you completely understand when that cop asked you for your ID back in 1983? That he had no real reason to do so and was violating the fourth amendment? Where's this law that says you have to show your ID anyway?

There are reasons words like "Police-state" and "paper's please" have such negative connotations in the United States. Past governments that did these kind of things were the most abusive in history, and these kinds of anti-terrorism policies need to be stopped dead in their tracks.
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Old 12-05-2005, 09:01 PM   #53 (permalink)
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Samcol there have been precedents set as close as 2004 that in public you may not be secure in your person and papers. Such as the Illonois(sp) case where a man was pulled over and searched externally by a cop dog, and found to have illegal "narcotics" in his possession. The search was upheld by the Supreme Court. I think there might have been a similar Nevada filing surrounding the providing of legal documents in the case of approach.

It has nothing to do with terrorism or past civilizations, it is fairly relevant in our own context.
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Old 12-06-2005, 07:34 AM   #54 (permalink)
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First, every state in the Union has a requirement that someone identify themselves on request, failure to do so (the criminal charge is "Failure to identify" in New Mexico) can have criminal repercussions. If you don't have ID, then you can't provide it. But the reason behind it is crystal clear. First, an encounter in public, under certain circumstances, can be consensual, you have the option to walk away. In 1983, I was walking to work, where the dress requirement was dark clothing, about an hour before dawn in my neighborhood. The officer was doing a "Field Interview" to identify people that might be connected to criminal activity later on. This requires "mere suspicion" which is basically a minor to moderate deviation from normal contact conditions. During that contact, the officer is permitted to do a "pat down" for weapons (Terry v. Ohio) or the "Terry frisk."

What a LOT of folks know is that the Constitution restricts government activity, but they forget that it is not a suicide pact. You can't yell "Fire" in a crowded theater, that is an exception to preserve the public safety. Police have, not just the authority, but the responsibility, in the interest of public safety, to identify people that are suspicious that they encounter. 99 times out of 100, there is no record made because it turns out that their suspicions weren't warranted (as in my case in '83, the officer made no contact card or record) and nothing is ever heard or done about after that. Remember, that with all rights come responsibilities.

By stopping someone on the street, the officer is conducting a Fourth Amendment "seizure" by "seizing" your person. The courts have all viewed this, under prescribed circumstances, to be reasonable. His request for identification is a REASONABLE search, under the Fourth Amendment, or at least so says the Supreme Court. There isn't ONE SINGLE country where this isn't the case. At least in the U.S., if you don't have an ID or a passport, they'll take your word for it, not take you to jail because POSSESSING ID in most other countries is required, but not in the U.S.

Last edited by Chilek9; 12-06-2005 at 07:37 AM..
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Old 12-06-2005, 10:58 AM   #55 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ustwo
You know I was pretty horrifed with this, and then something hit me.

Whats the difference between an aircraft and a bus, besides the obvious?

What makes aircraft special that they require ID's and buses not?
Ustwo, the obvious answer to your question is that what they do with the information is different. At the airport, an agent uses ID to verify that you are who you claim to be, and that identity is checked against a watchlist database. I'm sure you aren't suggesting that a security guard on a bus was doing the same thing. In fact, every time I have to show ID to get into an event or building I wonder how this prevents crime or terrorism. We are aware that terrorists don't have driver's licenses that identify them as such.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Chilek9
The officer was doing a "Field Interview" to identify people that might be connected to criminal activity later on. This requires "mere suspicion" which is basically a minor to moderate deviation from normal contact conditions. During that contact, the officer is permitted to do a "pat down" for weapons (Terry v. Ohio) or the "Terry frisk."
You've got some interesting information - thanks for posting. I still think there is a difference between "suspicion" (even as slight as you describe) and blanket searches. Unless there is a reason to suspect every person on a specific bus or flight, I'd have thought that random ID checks are not an exercise of 4th Amendment seizure as there is no reason to do the check. Am I wrong in thinking there is a distinction between the two things?
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Old 12-06-2005, 02:55 PM   #56 (permalink)
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I still think there is a difference between "suspicion" (even as slight as you describe) and blanket searches.
There is a difference. Blanket or random searches require no suspicion. Suspicion means that you are depending on facts that you can clearly articulate to justify a Fourth Amendment seizure of someone (a detention) and to require them to identify themselves. The articulable facts can include suspicious behavior, manner of dress, not matching the environment you are in ("that guy just doesn't look like he lives in this area"), and so on. A seizure of a person can require that the officer, if something develops later on like a complaint or an arrest of the seized person, that he justify his actions in seizing the person to identify that person. If a random or blanket contact is used, there is some kind of justification or authority that is far above the individual officer to make such a stop and would be articulated in documents.

I'd have thought that random ID checks are not an exercise of 4th Amendment seizure as there is no reason to do the check.
Okay, whenever a government agent, with authority to do so, stops someone, it is a seizure under the Fourth Amendment. They are using their government authority to seize your person. If there is justification for the "seizure," then it is not "unreasonable" as stated in the Constitution. There has to be a lawful, empowering regulation or law to allow the seizure, immigration checkpoints, for instance. When there is a reasonable expectation that public safety is jeopardized, the random or blanket contact can be used to identify individuals, during that contact the officer/agent of the government is allowed to develop MORE suspicion that would allow an enforced detention to investigate criminal activity as long as the detention stays REASONABLE within the facts that he can articulate that justify the detention. There are court cases that give police strong guidelines to follow under these circumstances. So, to answer the question, depending on the risk to public safety and the possibility of an attack, a blanket or random contact system is justifiable. On the bus, after McVeigh and the two WTC attacks ('93 and 9/11) and the attack on the Pentagon in 9/11, government buildings are a high risk target and blanket and/or random searches are permitted as being REASONABLE by the courts because of the higher, inherent risk.

So, the two ideas of throwing out the drift net and seeing what we catch and a Fourth Amendment seizure of a person kind of closely interact if not overlap. The blanket search is still a Fourth Amendment seizure of a person when the demand for identification is made. But just chatting about who you are might be construed, by the courts, as a consensual encounter that you are free to walk away from, even if it gets around to a REQUEST to see your ID during that consensual encounter, and, therefore NOT a Fourth Amendment seizure of your person.
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