
Senate Must Reject Cybercrime Treaty
by James Plummer
An internationalist
assault on the sovereignty of the United States and the privacy
of U.S. citizens is currently awaiting action by the full Senate.
The Council of Europe Convention on Cybercrime is being
aggressively pushed by Senate Foreign Relations Chairman Richard
Lugar (R.-Ind.), who reported the treaty out from his committee
in early November. That should come as little surprise, in
that Lugar has also been a leading proponent of the better-known
Law of the Sea Treaty (LOST), another key building-block in the
structure of world government.
Originally conceived as a tool to facilitate international
cooperation in the pursuit of computer hackers and the like, the
Cybercrime Treaty evolved during 15 years of negotiations to
encompass any criminal offense that involves electronic evidence
-- which in the 21st century is essentially limitless.
As written, it could require more surveillance on Americans who
have been accused of violating the laws of foreign countries --
even if they havent violated U.S. law. Treaty
cheerleaders paint menacing pictures of hackers and child
pornographers. But in reality the Convention is drafted so
broadly that it encompasses virtually every area of law where the
possibility exists of computerized evidence. That could
affect thousands of innocent people, including not only political
dissidents, but also the politically incorrect.
Fortunately, one heroic, albeit currently anonymous, conservative
senator has placed a hold on this Cybercrime
Convention, a procedural maneuver that prevents an immediate,
unannounced vote on the floor of the whole Senate.
Conservatives concerned with sovereignty and the Bill of Rights
need to both become aware and raise others awareness of the
dangers posed by the Cybercrime Treaty, lest the Senate acquiesce
in this subjugation of Americans to European-style hate
speech laws through an electronic back door.
Lugars pro-treaty rhetoric belies the broad, expansionary
nature of the treaty. He claimed last year, in opening the sole
hearing on the treaty, that "Prompt ratification . . . will
help advance the security of Americans." That is simply not
the case when one considers that the treaty could allow European
or even Chinese Communist agents to electronically spy on
innocent Americans.
And make no mistake, greater control over what we do on the
Internet is the goal of the Eurocrats so enamored with global
government. This is what Council of Europe Deputy Secretary
General Maud de Boer-Buquicchio had to say in mid-November at the
World Summit on the Information Society, hosted by
that great human rights champion, Tunis: "The Information
Society is clearly in need of a global governance mechanism. The
Council of Europe, with its unchallenged human rights expertise,
political consultation structures, and solid relationship with
civil society, must be party to discussions undertaken at every
step of the way concerning internet governance and human rights,
she said.
The European view of human rights includes the
shielding from mere criticism of certain protected minorities
such as abortionists, third-world immigrants, and homosexuals.
The London Times reports that the European Commission has
announced its first list of mandatory continent-wide criminal
laws and will soon seek to add speech-based crimes such as
incitement to hatred to the list. (France has in the past
fined Californias Yahoo! for an American customers
auction of a vintage Nazi war medal.) De Boer-Buquicchio
and other Eurocrats regard the Cybercrime Treaty as one of those
global governance mechanisms by which to enforce
these views. She even went on to press for greater
ratification of the Cybercrime Treaty in the very same speech.
And so it is no wonder that many leading conservatives have
called on the Senate to hold serious, open hearings on this
treaty. Leaders from American Conservative Union, Eagle
Forum, and Free Congress Foundation, among others, wrote to the
Senate in June urging real hearings on these important concerns.
But despite these concerns, Lugar has put the treaty on the
Senate calendar without conducting serious, probative hearings or
investigations, calling only pro forma hearings and inviting only
treaty supporters from the Justice and State Departments to
testify.
Its little wonder that the hearings were rigged. An open
discussion of the issues at stake could cause many senators to
cast a skeptical eye on the treaty, raising as it does many
bipartisan concerns similar to those that have stalled expansion
of the USA PATRIOT Act in the upper body as of late. Though
the treaty is replete with mutual assistance in electronic
surveillance, not one of the articles mention privacy.
Most egregious in Lugars ratification report to the full
Senate is the voluntary declaration that foreign governments,
under the fig leaf of urgency, be able to order
American law enforcement agencies to enforce their orders without
judicial review. So even though these foreign orders may be
opposition to the U.S. Constitution, no U.S. judge will be able
to enforce the Constitution to prevent it. The treaty also
has no dual criminality requirement, which means
federal law enforcement agencies could be investigating Americans
for constitutionally-protected activities which offend European
sensibilities.
Even worse, the Cybercrime Treaty is open to all nations to
ratify. That means a future leftist President could even
allow Communist China to sign on to the treaty and direct U.S.
law enforcement to investigate Chinese dissidents, even Americans,
based in the United States.
CFPA: The
Convention on Cybercrime would be highly detrimental to American
sovereignty and free people everywhere. The Senate should
under no circumstances blindly approve such a document.
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Posted: 10 Dec 2005