Patriot Act
The U.S.A. Patriot Act was passed because of the terrorist attacks on the United States on September 11, 2001. We realized that our current body of laws did not completely address the task of finding terrorists before they take action. The Patriot Act was passed to make it easier for us to protect ourselves from future terrorist acts. The Act has been controversial because although most people recognize the need to effectively prevent future attacks, some people feel the law has gone too far and infringed on civil liberties. Other critics contend that the law doesn't give government enough power (Doyle, 2002).
The Patriot Act makes various actions by the government when trying to identify who might be a terrorist easier to execute. It extends wiretapping to email, provides for nationwide permission to use wiretapping and related investigatory techniques rather than having to get those permissions on a state by state or municipality by munipality basis. The Patriot Act includes voice mail, and allows computer system searches under some circumstances. It allows for property confiscation and increases laws regarding money laundering. (Doyle, 2002).
It also puts restrictions on due process and allows for double jeopardy (being tried more than once for the same crime) under some circumstances. It identifies specific activities as new crimes including harboring terrorists and attacks on mass...
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