June 13, 2005 Mr. Robert Dear Mr.: Thank you for contacting me regarding the USA Patriot Act. I appreciate this opportunity to respond to your concerns. Congress passed the Patriot Act in October 2001, following the September 11th terrorist attacks. At the time, some of its provisions were recognized as necessary short-term responses to a national emergency. As a result, many of its provisions will terminate at the end of this year. The Senate Judiciary Committee will hold hearings on these expiring provisions this spring. Several provisions of the Patriot Act are now recognized as ineffectual, overly intrusive on citizens' civil rights, or both. One particularly troubling provision subjects our nation's libraries and bookstores to sweeping searches by the federal government. I believe that information held about us by libraries and bookstores should be subject to the regular search warrant process not secret warrants obtained in secret courts. That is why, in 2003, I introduced the Libraries and Bookstore Protection Act, S. 1158, which would require the federal government to obtain a regular warrant tied to a specific suspect before conducting a search in any of our nation's libraries or bookstores. ^L Again, thank you for contacting me. Rest assured that I will continue to be vigilant when it comes to maintaining the civil rights that define our freedom. Please do not hesitate to contact me in the future about the issues that concern you. Sincerely, Barbara Boxer United States Senator ================================================ Please do not reply to this e-mail. This is not an active e-mail address. If you wish to comment further on this issue or an any other issue and want to ensure an answer--please complete the form at http://boxer.senate.gov/contact/webform.cfm