Dear ACLU Supporter,

Planning a vacation? Thinking about traveling outside the country?

If you travel outside the United States, you can kiss your right to privacy, and perhaps your laptop, digital camera and cell phone, goodbye.

With no suspicion and no explanation, the U.S. government can seize your laptop, cell phone, or PDA as you enter the United States and download all your private information -- including your personal and business documents, emails, phone calls, and web history. The Department of Homeland Security confirms that this is the official policy.

Tell Congress: it’s time to rein in travel abuses by the Department of Homeland Security. secure.aclu.org/site/Advocacy

What happens if you refuse to let the agents download your personal photos? Or if you have encrypted your private information? Then Border Patrol -- which is now an agency of the Department of Homeland Security -- can simply copy your entire hard drive or even take your device and hang on to it indefinitely.

Unfortunately, seizing laptops and cameras at the border isn’t the only travel security measure that infringes on our civil liberties.

Just last month, the U.S. government's "terrorist watch list" surpassed one million names and is growing by over twenty-thousand names per month. The watch list includes the names of prominent people, like Senator Ted Kennedy (D-MA), plus hundreds of thousands of ordinary Americans -- many of them with common names like Robert Johnson and James Robinson. Your name might be on the list, but there's no way to know for sure until you are delayed -- or even detained for hours in a back room. If you discover your name is on the list, it's nearly impossible to get off. It actually took an Act of Congress to get Nelson Mandela off the list. No joke. An Act of Congress.

These abuses have something in common: They make all of us into suspects, with no rule of law and no accountability.

Tell Congress: it’s time to rein in travel abuses by the Department of Homeland Security. secure.aclu.org/site/Advocacy


It’s hard to know what surveillance-state bureaucrats will come up with next. For instance, many airports are using scanners that are so invasive that they are like a virtual strip search! See-through body scanning machines are capable of showing an image of a passenger's naked body. Security measures like this are extremely intrusive -- and should only be used when there is good cause to suspect that an individual is a security risk.

And recently, the TSA expressed interest in having every traveler wear an "electro-muscular disruption" bracelet that airline personnel or marshals could use to shock passengers into submission. Unless something is done, this plan may not be as far-fetched as one would think.

Tell Congress: it’s time to rein in travel abuses by the Department of Homeland Security.
secure.aclu.org/site/Advocacy

Traveling shouldn’t mean checking your rights when you’re checking your luggage. It’s time for some sanity when it comes to security. Please, speak out now.

Caroline Fredrickson, ACLU
Caroline Fredrickson, Director
ACLU Washington Legislative Office

P.S. Many Americans don’t know about these travel abuses. Please forward this email on to anyone you know who travels and ask them to take action, too.
  • *With no suspicion and no explanation, the U.S. government can seize your laptop, cell phone, or PDA as you enter the United States and download all your private information -- including your personal and business documents, emails, phone calls, and web history.*

    as a matter of policy i do not travel with a laptop. before traveling the memory card on my camera is clear and all calls are cleared from my non-contract phone. I never program numbers into my phone just in case it's stolen. anything else i will ship ahead of time.

    Airline baggage fees chart
    www.airfarewatchdog.com/Airfar...ne.aspx
  • TSA to allow laptops to stay in approved bags

    Thu, August 7, 2008 - 5:44 PM
    ap.google.com/article/ALe...sqgD92CBIL0H

    WASHINGTON (AP) — There's a new option for people annoyed at having to take their laptops out of their bags at airport security. The Transportation Security Administration will now allow travelers to leave their computers inside "checkpoint friendly" cases.

    The new rules, announced Tuesday and set to take effect Aug. 16, are intended to help streamline the X-ray inspection lines.

    TSA said it reached out to bag manufacturers this year to design laptop cases that would provide a clear, unobstructed image of the computer as it passed through an X-ray machine. The agency said the new bags will be available for purchase this month.

    To qualify as "checkpoint friendly," a bag must have a designated laptop-only section that unfolds to lie flat on the X-ray machine belt and contains no metal snaps, zippers or buckles and no pockets.

    Among the manufacturers selling TSA-approved laptop bags are Mobile Edge, Skooba Design and Targus Inc.
  • >the U.S. government can seize your laptop, cell phone, or PDA as you enter the United States and download all your private information<

    Well duh. But just because they can, just like they have always been able to, doesn't mean they will. Do your part and pass through security showing respect for the process, not acting like a little anti-American fanatic that has something to hide and you'll most likely not have any issues.
    • hope you're staying fit!

      www.gadling.com/tag/homeland%20security/

      so the blogs, a little outdated whatever

      it's also going to effect tourism...estimated in the billions....at a time when America really can't afford to turn down an honest dollar ... just sayin' ... I mean we have to keep funding Israel's apartheid on Palestine you guys so come on..

      Oh btw... I'm just asking, so no one get huffy, but do we want to ask Congress to re-enact the Sedition Act while we're at it?
      • The Sedition Act of 1918 was an amendment to the Espionage Act of 1917 passed at the urging of President Woodrow Wilson. (WWI President)

        The passing of this act forbade Americans to use "disloyal, profane, scurrilous, or abusive language" about the United States government, flag, or armed forces during war.

        The act also allowed the Postmaster General to deny mail delivery to dissenters of government policy during wartime. (i.e. anything that had anything to do with the German pigs)


        yeah. I wiki. how 'bout you?
    • *Do your part and pass through security showing respect for the process, not acting like a little anti-American fanatic that has something to hide and you'll most likely not have any issues.*

      or

      ". . . a scandal loomed akin to the one that engulfed the Veterans Administration in 2006, when news broke that a VA official had taken home a laptop with the personal records of 26 million veterans, which was subsequently stolen.

      The senior IG official said Duda’s remarks were not as dire as they sounded.

      But Flaggs warned that the department’s weak controls over personally identifiable information in laptops and other systems could lead to being branded a “material weakness,” an accounting term-of-art that essentially means inventories are out of control.

      “It’s the worst flaw you can have in management control,” one close observer of the State Department’s problems told CQ last week.

      One official, speaking on terms of anonymity, told CQ that the department’s report that the laptops had been found still meant that they had been “lost” for a period of time, “no matter where they were.”

      “I would expect many of the laptops to be ‘found’ in the sense that they may not have actually left a State Department facility,” the official said, “But if they don’t know where they are, that is bad management, and they may as well have disappeared,”

      www.cqpolitics.com/wmspage.cfm

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