HomeMy WebLinkAboutRESO 8301RESOLUTION NO. 8301
RESOLUTION OF THE COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF PALO
ALTO DIRECTING ENHANCED EFFORTS TO ASSURE THE
PROTECTION OF CIVIL LIBERTIES THAT ARE
THREATENED BY THE U.S.A. PATRIOT ACT
WHEREAS, the City of Palo Alto is proud of its long and
distinguished law enforcement tradition of protecting the civil
rights and liberties of all persons; and
WHEREAS, the City of Palo Alto has a diverse population,
including immigrants and students, whose contributions to the
community are vital to is economy, culture and civil character;
and
WHEREAS, the preservation of civil rights and liberties
is essential to the well-being of a democratic society; and
WHEREAS, federal, state and local governments should
protect the public from terrorist attacks l and should do so in a
rational and deliberative fashion to ensure that any new
security measure enhances public safety without impairing
constitutional rights or infringing on civil liberties; and
WHEREAS, government security measures that undermine
fundamental rights do damage to the American institutions and
values that the residents of the City of Palo Alto expect the
City to uphold and protect; and
WHEREAS, federal actions since September 11, 2001,
including provisions in the USA PATRIOT ACT (Public Law 107-56)
and related executive orders, regulations and actions, threaten
fundamental rights and liberties of all those who reside in, do
business with, or visit the City of Palo Alto, by:
(a) Authorizing the indefinite incarceration of non-
citizens based on mere suspicion l and the indefinite
incarceration of citizens designated by the President as "enemy
combatants" without access to counselor meaningful recourse to
the federal court;
(b) Limiting the authority of federal courts to curb
law enforcement abuse of electronic surveillance in anti
terrorism investigations and ordinary criminal investigations;
(c) Expanding the authority of federal agents to
conduct so-called "sneak and peek" or "black bag 'I searches, in
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which the subject of the search warrant is unaware that his
property has been searched;
(d) Granting federal law enforcement and intelligence
agencies broad access to personal medical, financial, library
and education records with little if any judicial oversight;
(e) Chilling constitutionally protected speech
through expansive definitions of "terrorism";
(f) Threatening the relationship between immigrant
communities and local law enforcement by encouraging involvement
of state and local police in the selective enforcement of
federal immigration law; and
(g) Permitting
religious services,
demonstrations, and other
having any evidence that a
the FBI to conduct surveillance of
internet chatrooms, political
public meetings of any kind without
crime has been or may be committed.
WHEREAS, thirty years ago California voters
overwhelmingly adopted a Constitutional right to privacy to
protect against a "proliferation of government snooping and data
collecting [that] is threatening to destroy our traditional
freedoms" .
NOW, THEREFORE, the Council of the City of Palo Alto
does RESOLVE as follows:
SECTION 1. The Council affirms its strong support for
fundamental constitutional rights and its opposition to federal
measures that infringe on civil liberties based upon
unsubstantiated fear, or racial or ethnic stereotyping.
SECTION 2. The Council affirms its strong support for
the rights of immigrants and opposes measures that single out
individuals for legal scrutiny or enforcement activity based
solely on their country of origin.
SECTION 3. The Council affirms its policy that
organizations and individuals should not be monitored based
solely on their religious or political views and no information
about political, religious or social views, associations, or
activities should be collected unless the information related to
an imminent threat to public safety or reasonable suspicion of
criminal activity.
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SECTION 4. The Council acknowledges the tremendous work
the Palo Alto Police Department has done to assure the
protection of civil liberties, and based upon that proud
tradition directs the City Manager to take reasonable steps to
prevent the Police Department of the City of Palo Alto from
being pressured by any person or agency to:
(a) Engage in the surveillance of individuals or
groups of individuals based on their participation in activities
protected by the First Amendment, such as political advocacy or
the practice of a religion, without particularized suspicion of
criminal activity unrelated to the activity protected by the
First Amendment;
(b) Collect or maintain information about the
political, religious or social views, associations or activities
of any individual, group, association, organization,
corporation, business or partnership unless such information
directly relates to an investigation of criminal activities, and
there are reasonable grounds to suspect the subject to the
information is or may be involved in criminal conduct;
(c) Use images from a video surveillance network
except insofar as it is done in clear compliance with all civil
rights existing under the federal and state constitutions;
(d) Use video surveillance as a form of intimidation,
and only when the police have a reasonable suspicion that the
subjects of the video surveillance have or are about to commit a
crime;
(e) Deploy any form of biotechnology, such as facial
recognition technology, prior to it being accepted as admissible
evidence in the State of California;
(f) Conduct searches, pursuant to warrants, without
leaving a copy of the warrant for the individual whose premises
have been the subject of search;
(g) Use race, religion, ethnicity or national origin
as a factor in selecting which individuals are subject to
investigatory activities, except when seeking to apprehend a
specific suspect whose race, religion, ethnicity or national
origin is part of the description of the suspect;
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(h) Stop drivers or pedestrians for the purpose of
scrutinizing their identification documents without
particularized suspicion of criminal activity; and
(i) Rely solely on information provided by Federal
authorities, such as the Terrorism Information and Prevention
System ((TIPS), that encourages members of the general public to
illegally gather information about their neighbors, colleagues
or customers.
SECTION 5. The Council directs the City Manager to
report to the City Council to the extent possible any
extraordinary requests by federal authorities that, if granted,
would cause departments of the City of Palo Al to to exercise
powers or cooperates in the exercise of powers that do not meet
the common standards of the city and are in apparent violation
of any city ordinance or laws or Constitution of this State or
the united States.
SECTION 6. The Council directs the City Manager to seek
periodically from federal authorities the following information
in a form that facilitates an assessment of the effect of
federal anti-terrorism efforts on the residents of the City of
Palo Alto:
(a) The number of search warrants that have been
executed in the City of Palo Alto without notice to the subject
of the warrant pursuant to section 213 of the USA PATRIOT Act;
(b) The number of times education records have been
obtained from public schools and institutions of higher learning
in the City of Palo Alto under section 507 of the USA PATRIOT
Act;
(c) The number of times library records have been
obtained from libraries in the City of Palo Alto under section
215 of the USA PATRIOT Act;
(d) The number of times that records of the books
purchased by store patrons have been obtained from bookstores in
the City of Palo Alto under section 215 of the USA PATRIOT Act;
(e) The extent of electronic surveillance carried out
in the City of Palo Alto under powers granted in the USA PATRIOT
Act;
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(f) The names of all residents of the City of Palo
Alto who have been arrested or otherwise detained by federal
authorities as a result of terrorism investigations since
September 11, 2001; the location of each detained; the
circumstances that led to each detention; the charges, if any,
lodged against each detainee; the name of counsel, if any,
representing each detainee; and
(g) The extent to which federal authorities are
monitoring political meetings, religious gathering or other
acti vi ties protected by the First Amendment wi thin the City of
Palo Alto.
SECTION 7. The Council directs the City Manager to
transmit to the City Council no less than once every six months
a summary of the information obtained pursuant to the preceding
paragraph and based on such information and any other relevant
information, and assessment of the effect of federal anti-
terrorism efforts on the residents of the City of Palo Alto.
SECTION 8. A copy of this resolution shall be sent to
Senator Barbara Boxer, Senator Dianne Feinstein and
Congresswoman Anna Eshoo, accompanied by a letter urging them to
monitor federal anti-terrorism tactics and work to repeal
provisions of the USA PATRIOT Act and other laws and regulations
that infringe on civil rights and liberties;
SECTION 9. A copy of this resolution shall be sent to
Governor Gray Davis, and appropriate members of the State
Legislature, accompanied by a letter urging them to ensure that
state anti-terrorism laws and policies by implemented in a
manner that does not infringe on civil liberties as described in
this resolution.
SECTION 10. A copy of this resolution shall be sent to
President Bush and Attorney General Ashcroft.
SECTION 11. It is not the intent of the Council and
this resolution shall not be construed to establish local policy
that creates any right of action under any state or federal law.
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SECTION 12. The Council finds that this is not a project
under the California Environmental Quality Act and, therefore,
no environmental impact assessment is necessary.
INTRODUCED AND PASSED: June 9, 2003
AYES: BEECHAM, BURCH, FREEMAN, KISHIMOTO, KLEINBERG, LYTLE,
MORTON, MOSSAR, OJAKIAN
NOES:
ABSENT:
ABSTENTIONS:
Mayor
AP~
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