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U.S. Overhauls Operation TIPS
Plan
Sat Aug 10, 8:29 AM ET
By CHRISTOPHER NEWTON, Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - A Bush administration
proposal for a network of anti-terrorism tipsters
is being overhauled, thanks to harsh criticism
that it would encourage Americans to spy on one
another.
The Operation TIPS program being instituted by
the Justice Department initially was to have been
launched this month. But on Friday, officials said
it will not be put into effect until Congress
returns in September. The idea is to allow time
for consultation with lawmakers, they said.
In the meantime, the department modified the
plan to exclude as would-be tipsters people from
industries and government agencies that often have
access to people's homes. The Terrorism
Information and Prevention System (TIPS) will
focus instead on workers who operate on the
highways, such as truck drivers, and at the ports
of entry, officials said.
The program came under heavy assault from civil
libertarians and many in Congress, and the House
passed a bill last month introduced by House
Majority Leader Dick Armey, R-Texas, that would
prohibit it.
Justice officials said in June that utility
companies, the Postal Service and trucking
companies would be sought as possible
participants. The goal was to offer a hot line
people could call if during the course of their
workday they noticed something suspicious that
could be terrorist activity.
But the Postal Service balked at its inclusion
and other industries also expressed reservations,
saying they didn't want their workers looked at by
customers as potential spies.
The Justice Department no longer is seeking the
participation of the Postal Service or utility
companies that work in homes.
"We are not going to target any company or
industry that has workers that are going inside
people's homes or working around people's
homes," said a Justice Department official,
speaking on condition of anonymity. The official
said the department is "absolutely
discouraging" tips on activities from within
people's homes.
Laura W. Murphy, director for the American
Civil Liberties Union, said Operation TIPS in any
form is still a breach of public trust by the
administration.
"They've scaled back Operation TIPS, but
it is still an effort to enlist the private sector
as government sanctioned peeping Toms,"
Murphy said. "And it is still not clear that
the government is offering any guidance about how
to respect people's civil liberties."
The Justice Department has not decided who will
operate the hot line, but a likely choice is the
National White Collar Crime Center. The
organization is a nonprofit corporation of law
enforcement agencies and state and local
prosecution offices.
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