Congressional Record: May 13, 2003 (Senate)
Page S6061
INTELLIGENCE AUTHORIZATION
Mr. WYDEN. Mr. President, I wish to inform my colleagues about why I
would object to a unanimous consent request to proceed to the
intelligence authorization bill or any other legislation that may
contain a provision undoing or modifying a straightforward law
establishing congressional accountability for the Total Information
Awareness Program.
Just this past February, as part of the fiscal year 2003 supplemental
appropriations bill, the Senate considered, debated and adopted
unanimously an amendment sponsored by myself and Senators Feinstein,
Reid, Boxer, Corzine, Leahy, Cantwell, Harkin, Levin, Durbin, Biden,
Daschle, and Clinton. That amendment requires specific congressional
approval for any deployment of technology developed by the Defense
Department's Total Information Awareness Program; the Defense
Department must seek authorization and appropriation for any deployment
of the TIA technology to another agency or department. DARPA may
continue to research and develop TIA technology as long as it submits a
report required by the amendment. The report is due May 20, 2003, and
it requires an explanation of the intended and actual use of funds for
each project and activity of the TIA Program, the schedule for proposed
research and development of each project and activity and target dates
for the deployment of each project and activity. The report will also
address the efficacy of systems such as TIA in predictive assessments
of terrorist capabilities and plans, the likely impact of the TIA
Program on privacy and civil liberties, the laws that will require
modification to use the TIA Program and recommendations for eliminating
or minimizing the adverse effects of the TIA Program on privacy and
other civil liberties.
The TIA technology will give the Federal Government the capability to
operate the most massive domestic surveillance program in the history
of our country. It will put the financial, medical and other details of
America's private lives at the fingerprints of tens of thousands of
bureaucrats. The American people have the right to know if the federal
Government intends to deploy this technology against them, when it will
do and how, and Congress should preserve its oversight over the
program. The amendment enacted in February provides that
accountability.
Just last week the American people got a painful reminder about the
shameful abuse of power and secrecy in the McCarthy era, and are
rightfully wary about the protection of their privacy. In fact,
although some in the Defense Department and elsewhere claim they are
only interested in mining ``lawfully-collected'' information, just
about any piece of information about any U.S. citizen can be
``lawfully'' collected or obtained by the federal government. It is for
these reasons that I will object to any motion to proceed to any
legislation affecting the Total Information Awareness Program unless
and until I have fully reviewed it to guarantee that the accountability
in the TIA amendment is preserved.
____________________