Checking out library users
Libraries remain a focus of the debate over personal privacy in the age of terrorism. A recent Associated Press news story reminded me of that and how government often uses terrorism as a trump card in the privacy game.
In the Randolph, Vt., library, children’s librarian Judith Flint recently found herself confronted by state police detectives. They wanted to seize the library’s public-access computers. She refused them access.
Amy Grasmick, library director, backed Flint and asked the detectives to produce a search warrant, which they could not. She refused the request until they could produce a warrant.
The detectives sought a missing 12 year old. A tipster told them the missing girl often used the library’s computers. They wanted to search the computer hard drives for clues to the missing girl’s whereabouts, they said.
Eight hours later, a judge signed the warrant, and the library complied.
With the passage of the PATRIOT Act in 2001 and its subsequent renewal in March 2006, government access to library information remains a contentious issue. Librarians and civil-liberty advocates insist that law enforcement needs warrants to seize library records of what books people check out and what they do on library computers.
Anti-terrorism advocates cite the PATRIOT Act and other provisions for fighting terrorism to support the contention that law enforcement does not need warrants. But in this case, the investigation did not involve terrorism. The state police readily admitted that.
Often people scoff at those who say relaxing law enforcement warrant requirements based simply on a broad fight against terrorism leads to a “slippery slope.” The slide leads to further erosion of rights protected by the Fourth Amendment.
The incident in Vermont shows that the slippery slope does exist.
In this case, Brooke Bennett, 12, disappeared the day before the detectives arrived at the library. Law enforcement found her dead on July 2, and an uncle, a convicted sex offender, faces charges for kidnapping her. The story did not report whether anything found on the library computers led to his arrest. It did report that detectives believe the suspect gained access to Bennett’s MySpace account and altered it to make it look like she arranged a rendezvous with someone else.
So, when it comes to library use, how much should law enforcement know about what you and I read and research?
That’s a tough question.
Maybe readers can offer some answers.
Resources:
- News Story - ap.google.com/article
- News Story - www.timesargus.com/apps/pbcs
- About the Patriot Act

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