Surveillance measures allowed under the Patriot Act and
other post-Sept. 11 legislation serve to enrich our liberty,
not hinder it, John Ashcroft said in Springfield on Thursday.
Ashcroft, a former U.S. attorney general and Missouri governor,
was in town to address the Springfield Metropolitan Bar Association
at its Law Day U.S.A. luncheon.
During a 20-minute speech, he told a packed banquet hall
at the Doubletree Hotel on North Glenstone how the rule of
law served to enrich life in America.
"Why is it that America is the best location, the best
geography, the best community on the face of the earth?"
he said. "Because we have a central core value that this
fundamentally imparted. It is the core value of liberty."
(Article continues below)
The most important characteristic Americans share, Ashcroft
said, is the "value of freedom."
He went on to recount how he first came to hear of the Sept.
11 terrorist attacks --as he was flying to Milwaukee --and
the scramble to secure the country in the days that followed.
"There's been a great deal of debate ... regarding my
involvement in how we were prepared to defend and sustain
freedom," he said. "If you don't like what you get,
you better change what you're doing, so the Patriot Act was
a means for us to increase our level of activity so we did
not suffer a recurrence of what had transpired."
He singled out provisions in the act that allow "roving
wiretap" surveillance of suspected terrorists. The measure
came under intense scrutiny in the days after the Patriot
Act was enacted.
Full
article here.