News Action Alert

CONGRESS PASSES “INTELLIGENCE” BILL

By December 13, 2004October 25th, 2018No Comments

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from Immigration News Briefs (INB)

On Dec. 7, the US House of Representatives voted 336-75 to

approve the 2004 Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention

Act; on Dec. 8 the Senate approved it 89-2. The bill came in

response to the 9/11 Commission’s recommendations for correcting

security problems relating to the terror attacks of Sept. 11,

2001. The bill is expected to be signed soon by President George

W. Bush. [Washington Post 12/8/04; Washington Times 12/8/04;

Govexec.com Daily Briefing 12/9/04; National Immigration Forum

Update 12/8/04; Houston Chronicle 12/9/04]

In addition to measures concerning intelligence information-

sharing and reorganization, the 245-page bill includes provisions

for increasing the number of full-time border patrol agents by

10,000 over five years and the number of full-time Immigration

and Customs Enforcement (ICE) investigators by 4,000 over five

years. It also orders an increase in the number of beds available

for immigration detainees by 40,000 in the same time period, and

establishes minimum federal standards for birth certificates and

driver licenses. [Govexec.com Daily Briefing 12/9/04]

Other measures in the bill will loosen standards for Federal

Bureau of Investigation (FBI) surveillance warrants, allow the

Justice Department to more easily detain suspects without bail

and expand the criteria that constitute “material support” to

terrorist groups. The bill does include one measure sought by

civil liberties advocates: a Privacy and Civil Liberties Board,

designed to safeguard individuals’ rights. [WP 12/8/04, 12/10/04;

NIF Update 12/8/04]

After prior versions of the bill were passed by the Senate on

Oct. 6 and the House on Oct. 8 [see INB 10/16/04], a conference

committee spent two months fighting mostly over anti-immigrant

provisions included in the House version. Most of the

representatives who opposed the final bill did so because they

objected to the removal of the anti-immigrant provisions; they

were outvoted after President George W. Bush promised, in a Dec.

7 letter, that he would consider border security provisions in

2005. “I look forward to working with the Congress early in the

next session to address these issues, including improving our

asylum laws and standards for issuing driver’s licenses,” Bush

wrote. In a closed Republican meeting on Dec. 7, House Speaker J.

Dennis Hastert (R-IL) apparently also promised to include the

immigration provisions in a “must-pass” legislative package early

next year–most likely attached to a bill seeking $70 billion for

military and “reconstruction” spending in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Rep. James Sensenbrenner (R-WI), who led the fight to keep the

anti-immigrant measures in the bill, has vowed to introduce a new

bill on Jan. 4–the first day of the new Congress–which will

include a national ban on issuing state driver licenses to

undocumented immigrants, a higher standard of proof for asylum-

seekers and closure of a three-mile gap in a fence along the

California-Mexico border. Sensenbrenner said his proposal will

not include a Bush-supported “guest worker” plan for immigrants.

[HC 12/9/04; NIF Update 12/8/04; WT 12/8/04; WP 12/8/04]