Source: The Washington Post Copyright: 1999 The Washington Post Company Page: A26 Pubdate: Thu, 4 Feb 1999 Contact: http://washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/edit/letters/letterform.htm Website: http://www.washingtonpost.com/ Author: Eric H. Holder Jr. Note: The writer is deputy attorney general of the United States. Only Necessary Wiretaps In his Jan. 2 op-ed column, "Raid on Rights," Nat Hentoff is mistaken about a change in the law that allows federal officials to wiretap conversations of a given suspect regardless of the phone the suspect uses. First, Mr. Hentoff suggests that so-called roving wiretaps are a new idea. In fact, they have been legal for more than a decade. In 1986 Congress authorized the roving wiretap to deal with the sophisticated criminal who tries to avoid electronic surveillance by constantly switching phones. This law allows law enforcement to tap the criminal, not the phone. Unfortunately, under the 1986 law, officials could use this authority only if they showed that the suspect was changing phones with the intent of thwarting surveillance. But that requirement forced law enforcement to determine what was going on in the criminal's mind before a court would issue a wiretap order. So now, instead of requiring intent, the modified law requires a showing that the suspect's actions have the effect of thwarting surveillance. Nothing else changed. Second, Mr. Hentoff writes that the FBI can listen to the roving tapped phones "even if the owner of a phone and his or her family -- and not the target -- are using it." That is incorrect. The law requires that federal officials identify the specific suspect in their request to the court and listen in only on those criminally related conversations in which the suspect is a party. In fact, unlike a regular wiretap, roving surveillance must end once the suspect hangs up -- even if the co-conspirators stay on the line. In this regard, roving wiretaps are actually a more limited intrusion upon privacy than "regular" wiretaps. Third, Mr. Hentoff leaves the misimpression that the roving wiretaps are used frequently. The statistics do not support his assertion. Of all of the federal electronic surveillance requests reviewed in the Department of Justice last year, less than one percent involved roving wiretaps -- and almost all of those were against major drug dealers. Wiretapping, properly used under judicial supervision, is an important law enforcement tool. It not only helps law enforcement catch criminals after they commit additional crimes, it helps us prevent criminals from committing the crime at all. For example, court-authorized wiretapping enabled the FBI to prevent terrorists from blowing up the bridges and tunnels leading into New York City in 1994. As a lifelong advocate for the protection of privacy rights, I agree that government should not have the ability to intrude unreasonably on an individual's privacy. But I also understand that law enforcement must have the technical tools to keep pace with the more sophisticated criminals we now must confront. The recent wiretap change is a relatively minor adjustment to an existing statute that serves to protect privacy rather than intrude upon it. ERIC H. HOLDER JR. Washington The writer is deputy attorney general of the United States. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake