Pubdate: Fri, 09 Nov 2001 Source: New York Times (NY) Copyright: 2001 The New York Times Company Contact: http://www.nytimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298 Section: National Author: David Johnston THE REORGANIZING Ashcroft Plan Would Recast Justice Dept. In A War Mode WASHINGTON, Nov. 8 — Attorney General John Ashcroft announced today that he had ordered the Justice Department to assume a wartime footing and had begun to revamp the agency's priorities under a plan that would send thousands of employees from Washington to offices around the country where they would work to prevent terror attacks. The plan envisions a reorganization of the Justice Department and important component agencies like the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Immigration and Naturalization Service, each of which would be overhauled to take a more aggressive stance in the effort to ward off terrorism. "Today, I am announcing a wartime reorganization and mobilization of the nation's justice and law enforcement resources to meet the mission of the Department of Justice," Mr. Ashcroft said in a speech to managers at the Justice Department. He offered only a few specifics, but outlined a fundamental shift in priorities that would occur in the next five years under a plan to be submitted to Congress. The changes could require Congressional approval — if, for example, the F.B.I. ceded its authority over drug trafficking to the Drug Enforcement Administration, as some law enforcement officials have suggested. Some changes Mr. Ashcroft discussed today have been discussed in news reports. Some are new, like the proposal to redirect 10 percent of the Justice Department's budget, about $2.5 billion, to counterterrorism efforts, mainly for upgrading technology. Among the new initiatives disclosed today was an order by the attorney general to allow federal prison authorities to eavesdrop on attorney-client conversations involving people suspected of posing a direct threat to national security. Mindy Tucker, the Justice Department spokeswoman, said the order, published in the Federal Register on Oct. 31, would apply to about 100 federal prisoners. The authorities would not be allowed to use information overheard in criminal cases against the suspects, she said. "The team that listens is not involved in the criminal proceedings," Ms. Tucker said. "There's a firewall there." The order drew criticism from civil libertarians, who said it impinged on constitutional protections of attorney-client confidentiality. In recent days, the F.B.I. has been criticized for its inability to track down the source of anthrax mailings and for issuing vague terrorism alerts that offered no idea of the potential targets or weapons. Although the time period of the warnings has lapsed, officials said the country should remain on alert. The Congressional response to Mr. Ashcroft's plan seemed positive, if less than fully enthusiastic. Senator Patrick J. Leahy, the Vermont Democrat who is chairman of the Judiciary Committee, which would review the proposals, said he agreed with realigning the bureau to focus on terrorism. But Mr. Leahy seemed unwilling to allow Mr. Ashcroft complete control of the reorganization. He recommended that the bureau's counterterrorism program be reviewed by an existing commission led by William H. Webster, a former F.B.I. director. Mr. Webster is examining the bureau's counterintelligence operations as a result of the unmasking of a senior agent, Robert P. Hanssen, as a Russian spy. "You cannot plan for the future effectively without knowing what went wrong in the past," Mr. Leahy said. Senator Charles E. Grassley, Republican of Iowa, who has long been an F.B.I. critic, said the changes at the bureau should redefine its institutional attitudes. "As with any reorganization, the devil will be in the details," Mr. Grassley said. "I hope for new accountability measures, not just structural changes." Mr. Ashcroft said that the F.B.I. director, Robert S. Mueller III, who has been conducting a review of the bureau since taking office in September, plans to present preliminary reorganization plans to the Justice Department by the end of the year. So far, the bureau's top national security official and deputy director have announced their retirements, and Mr. Mueller is expected to shake up the entire managerial ranks. The immigration service will also be given a new mission. "In the war on terrorism, the restructured Immigration and Naturalization Service will focus on preventing aliens who engage in or support terrorist activity from entering our country," Mr. Ashcroft said. "It will lead the campaign to detain, prosecute or deport the terrorist aliens who are already inside the nation's borders." Mr. Ashcroft said that James W. Ziglar, the immigration commissioner, was planning to close some of the gaps in immigration procedures that made it relatively easy for the hijackers in the Sept. 11 attacks to enter the country. The plan includes stricter enforcement of existing regulations and reducing the backlog of visa and immigration applications. Mr. Ashcroft also said he intends to break up the immigration service, separating border enforcement and immigrant-service functions, an idea raised early in the Bush administration that had languished until now. Mr. Ashcroft's announcement was the latest step in his aggressive stewardship of the Justice Department since the Sept. 11 attacks. It was also a forceful assertion of his dominance of the government's legal and law enforcement establishment, a position of power all of his predecessors have sought, but few ever obtained. Some senior career officials at the Justice Department and the F.B.I. have privately complained that Mr. Ashcroft, in his insistence on cracking down on terrorists, may go too far to weaken rules that bar investigations of people and groups based solely on their political leanings. Mr. Ashcroft has said he would defend the rights of all Americans, but legal rights groups say he has shown little concern about the erosion of civil liberties. "Defending our nation and defending the citizens of America against terrorist attacks is now our first and overriding priority," Mr. Ashcroft said. "To fulfill this mission, we are devoting all the resources necessary to eliminate terrorist networks, to prevent terrorist attacks, and to bring to justice all those who kill Americans in the name of murderous ideologies." - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart