On June 2, 2009, a janitor in an office building in
New Brunswick, N.J., noticed what he thought was terrorist-related
literature and sophisticated surveillance equipment in an office he had
been assigned to clean. He told his boss, who called the local police,
who notified the FBI. Later in the day, the FBI and the New Brunswick
police broke into the office and discovered five men busily operating
the equipment. Four of the men were police officers from the New York
City Police Department (NYPD), and the fifth was a CIA agent.
The conundrum faced by all of these public servants soon became apparent. Who should arrest whom?
Should the FBI agents and the local cops arrest the
NYPD and the CIA agent for violating the U.S. and New Jersey
constitutions, both of which prohibit searches and seizures without
search warrants, and for violating federal and New Jersey laws against
wiretapping and surveillance? Should the NYPD and the CIA agent arrest
the FBI agents and the local cops for breaking and entering and
obstructing a governmental function without a search warrant? Did the
FBI and the local cops even have a search warrant? Was the NYPD/CIA
surveillance a lawful governmental function?
No one at the scene of this unique encounter was
arrested. In return for not becoming a defendant, everyone agreed not to
become a complainant. The FBI and the New Brunswick police went home,
and the NYPD cops and their CIA mentor went back to their surveillance —
even though everyone in that office had sworn the same oath to uphold
the U.S. Constitution and the laws written pursuant to it.
Among those laws are the state statutes that limit
the authority and jurisdiction of local cops to the municipality that
employs them and the federal statutes that limit the legal ability of
CIA agents to steal secrets only from foreigners outside the U.S. Stated
differently, the NYPD has no authority or jurisdiction to engage in
surveillance in New Jersey, and the CIA has no authority or jurisdiction
to engage in surveillance in the U.S.
Nevertheless, we now know from the candid admissions
last week of NYPD Commissioner Raymond Kelly that the NYPD has been
spying without search warrants on Muslim groups in New Jersey and
elsewhere for 10 years. Former New Jersey acting governor and current
state Sen. Richard Codey recalls authorizing the NYPD — and not the CIA —
to inspect railroads and ferries that travel back and forth between
New Jersey and New York in 2005. He says he never authorized
surveillance. No public official in New Jersey has come forward to
acknowledge awareness of all this, and Kelly says the spying will
continue. But he needs a search warrant.
Can the police spy on us? Only if they have probable
cause to believe that criminal behavior is taking place and a search
warrant signed by a judge. Short of probable cause about the very
persons on whom they are spying, not about a group to which those
persons belong by birth or by choice, the police may not lawfully spy,
and judges will not sign search warrants without specific probable cause
about specific persons. The specificity is required by the language of
the Fourth Amendment. That language also guarantees that
quintessentially American right — the right to be left alone — by
establishing articulable suspicion as the linchpin of all police pursuit
of anyone for anything and probable cause as the trigger for search
warrants.
Can the police choose a target upon whom to spy based
on the target’s religion? No. The courts have been clear that under no
circumstances may religion lawfully be the sole or even the principal
basis for surveillance. That’s how World War II got started: German
police targeted Jews because they were Jews, for no legitimate law
enforcement purpose and without probable cause.
Was the New Brunswick operation criminal? Yes, it
was. It’s not too late to charge the NYPD officers or the CIA agent in
state or federal court for spying. It’s also not too late to charge the
FBI agents and the New Brunswick cops in state or federal court for
failing to obtain a search warrant (if they didn’t have one) and for
malfeasance in office by not arresting the spies.
The sacrifice of liberty for safety is illusory. The
liberty lost does not return. The safety gained is not real. Who in New
Jersey voluntarily gave up his liberty? Who can feel safe or free with
government agents secretly and unlawfully monitoring them? What is the
reliability and vitality of constitutional guarantees if those in whose
hands we repose them actively violate them? What religious group might
law enforcement target next? How dangerous to personal freedom is a
cabal of law enforcement when it looks the other way to avoid
prosecuting its own?
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