[Infowarrior] - Bush Nominates Three to Empty Privacy Board

Richard Forno rforno at infowarrior.org
Sat Mar 1 03:50:10 UTC 2008


Bush Nominates Three to Empty Privacy Board
By Ryan Singel EmailFebruary 29, 2008 | 8:21:30 PMCategories: Privacy

http://blog.wired.com/27bstroke6/2008/02/bush-nominates.html

A newly independent Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board may soon
actually have members again, after sitting empty for nearly a full month.

On Thursday, President Bush took the first step to fill vacancies on the
Board as he nominated 3 people, including a chairman, to fill some of the
five seats.

Bush allowed the board to be emptied on January 30, even as he pushed
Congress to grant him wide powers to install blanket wiretap orders inside
the United States.

Bush nominated Daniel Sutherland, the current civil liberties officer at the
Department of Homeland Security, to head the commission for the next six
years. Ronald Rotunda, a George Mason University law professor known for his
bow ties and for work on the Senate Watergate Commission, was nominated to
join the board for an initial four-year term, while Francis X. Taylor, who
previously served on the board, was re-nominated for a two-year term.

Sutherland's main work at DHS involved convincing Muslims and minorities
that DHS does not racially profile. Privacy issues with programs are handled
by the chief privacy officer Hugo Teufel.

The nominations will need to get through the Senate Homeland Security
committee and confirmed by the full Senate.

In a 2007 measure implementing 9/11 Commission recommendations, Congress
reconfigured the oversight committee, known as the Privacy and Civil Liberty
Oversight Board. The intent was to make the board more independent of the
White House, require it to be bipartisan and make it more accountable to the
public.

Those changes came after civil-liberties groups blasted the board for a lack
of independence and relevance.

Former Board chairwoman Carol Dinkins formerly served as a campaign
treasurer for President Bush and was a partner at the same law firm as
former Attorney General Alberto Gonzales. Also appointed to the board was
formidable lawyer Ted Olson, who was named solicitor general after winning
the Bush v. Gore case that settled the 2000 election dispute, and whose wife
died in the 9/11 attacks.

Lanny Davis -- the board's sole Democrat -- resigned in May 2007 to protest
edits the White House made to the board's 2007 annual report to Congress.




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