AGA Looks
at FBI Snooping
The issue of the FBI snooping
on visitors to Las Vegas and their private lives
is coming home to roost.
American
Gaming Association Chairman Frank Fahrenkopf
said the issue is a priority for his organization
and will discuss it at the group's Dec. 7 board
meeting in Las Vegas.
The
problem for the gaming industry is that FBI
sweeps of casino customers' information, especially
those done without their knowledge, and widespread
reports of the snooping could very well discourage
visitors from coming to Las Vegas, he said.
"There
is a point where it starts to hurt the industry,"
Fahrenkopf said. "I don't know how exactly
to put it on a compass, but it's there."
Federal
snooping on Las Vegas visitors first became
public in December 2003 when the Review-Journal
reported the FBI had served national security
letters on casino companies and airlines for
information on all their customers during the
holiday season.
The
FBI had also obtained similar information from
the gaming companies immediately after the terrorist
attacks on Sept. 11, 2001.
The
data mining in Las Vegas arose again Sunday
when The Washington Post in a front page article
reported on FBI activities and its previously
unknown policy of preserving all such information
collected under the Patriot Act, rather than
destroying it when it's no longer of use.
The
FBI told the Post it could cite no incident
where up to 1 million customer records gathered
on Las Vegas visitors had ever been used in
a useful way. Local FBI spokesman Todd Palmer
could not be reached for comment.
Industry
and civil rights organization officials said
the FBI's information sweeps go too far and
could damage casinos in Las Vegas.
"There's
certain information about our customers that
goes beyond what we feel is necessary for national
security, and that constitutes an invasion of
privacy. There are certain lines they shouldn't
be able to cross in the name of national security,"
Fahrenkopf said.
Nevada
Resort Association President Bill Bible echoed
that concern.
"I
think it could well become an issue for the
industry. I don't know precisely where. But
since they've had no appropriate use for the
records, it's appropriate for them to stop.
And why would they need to keep them forever?"
he said.
Gary
Peck, executive director of the ACLU of Nevada,
praised the American Gaming Association's decision
to address the issue publicly in December.
"There's
no question but that the revelations about what
went on New Year's Eve several years ago and
the possibility it continues is bad for the
industry," he said.
Spokesmen
for hotel-casino operators said they are prohibited
by federal statute from discussing whether the
federal government is still mining their databases
for information on guests or about the potential
impact on customers.
However,
one casino company spokesman who asked not to
be named because of the gag order said he does
not believe his company has received a national
security letter in 18 months. However, he said,
the company does still have a regular pipeline
for exchanging information with the FBI.
Spokesmen
for organizations that have not been served
with national security letters are not prohibited
under the law from speaking about the sweeps
and were more open about the damage they could
cause.
"People
take the slogan 'What happens in Vegas, stays
in Vegas' seriously. They have a right to expect
that," Peck said. "There's no doubt
many patrons and visitors would be troubled
by having their business made an open book.
"Patrons
of Las Vegas care about privacy. These are fundamental
American values most people take very seriously.
They believe the government has no business
looking into their affairs unless there is a
really good reason for it and that's not going
on here," Peck said.
Before
the Patriot Act, government generally could
only seek information on specific individuals,
and it had to show cause before a federal judge
to get information on individual Americans.
Under
the new law, the government has been able to
conduct sweeps on vast numbers of unnamed individuals
without cause and it has admitted preserving
the information in perpetuity.
The
Post article estimated that more than 30,000
national security letters are served on companies
every year, each of which may sweep up information
on thousands of individuals, as they have in
Las Vegas.
The
Post article said the data mining in Las Vegas
started at the end of 2003 as part of an emergency
operation, thought to be the first of its kind
in the country.
The
Department of Homeland Security declared an
orange alert on Dec. 21 of that year, in part
because of intelligence that hinted at a New
Year's Eve attack in Las Vegas.
The
FBI sent a little-known Proactive Data Exploitation
Unit to assemble a real-time census of every
visitor in the city.
Government
and private- sector sources described epic efforts
to vacuum up information.
An
interagency task force began pulling together
the records of every hotel guest, everyone who
rented a car or truck, every lease on a storage
space, and every airplane passenger who landed
in the city.
The
operation remained secret for about a week before
it was reported in the Las Vegas Review-Journal.
Under
former U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft's
revised policy, none of the information that
was gathered has been purged. The Post reported
the whole operation found no suspect, and the
orange alert ended on Jan. 10, 2004.
"The
whole thing washed out," one participant
said.
Peck
said there is every reason to believe the government
is still abusing the law on a massive scale.
The
national ACLU is litigating a case involving
an affected individual that neither it nor Peck
can discuss.
"The
gag order is part of the law and has a profound
chilling effect on discussing the policies,
even on the ACLU," Peck said.
Fahrenkopf
said any use of national security letters to
solicit private information on seemingly innocent
individuals constitutes an unacceptable intrusion
on the privacy of our customers.
"Asking
our companies to surrender records, (possibly)
chronicling everything from where our visitors
eat and what shows they see to what souvenirs
they purchase and how much they gamble -- and
making that information available to various
sectors of the government and some private businesses
-- simply goes too far," he said.
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