|
Last year brought surveillance reform achingly close to passage. The Fourth Amendment Is Not for Sale Act – which would have forced the government to obtain a warrant before purchasing Americans’ personal data from data brokers – passed the U.S. House but died in the U.S. Senate. A warrant requirement for the review of Americans’ personal data fell short in the House in a tie vote. Now, we know that these were uphill votes not just because of the intense opposition of federal intelligence agencies, but because the Biden White House had overseen an intense lobbying effort to give the illusion of grassroots opposition from state law enforcement. To create this illusion, the administration reached out to local and federal law enforcement alike with pre-approved talking points from a Washington lobbying firm, letters to sign, and a list of lawmakers to target. The efforts involved the misuse of High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTAs). These are hybrid federal-state entities intended to provide coordination and ensure the efficient use of federal funds in fighting organized drug crime. The federal side of this partnership is directly overseen by the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy. A response to a PPSA Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request reveals that during the prior 118th Congress, these organizations were repurposed for lobbying Congress. Emails from the Chicago HIDTA piggybacked off efforts from a Capitol Hill lobbying firm and orchestrated all the elements of what would appear to a Member of Congress to be a spontaneous grassroots movement by state law enforcement groups and associations in opposition to popular surveillance reform amendments. This network of federal agencies working behind the scenes to coordinate this messaging, under the purview of the White House, distorted the debate and abused Congressional trust in sincere-sounding letters to Congressional leaders like Rep. Jim Jordan, Chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, and Rep. Jerry Nadler, Ranking Member. Given that HIDTAs are distribution points for significant amounts of much-needed federal funding, it’s questionable how voluntary the sign-on from state law enforcement groups really was. Perhaps Chairman Jordan and Ranking Member Nadler might want to look into how much federal money might have been spent limiting their oversight. At the very least, the current administration should cut off federal funds for lobbying before the surveillance reform debate begins again next year. Comments are closed.
|
Categories
All
|
RSS Feed