The Bush administration—through law enforcement—had made at least 200 and probably close to 600 requests to libraries for information on what citizens are reading since October 2001. So says a new American Library Association (ALA) study that found both formal and informal demands were made of librarians to disclose the reading habits of library patrons.
The ALA used anonymous responses to survey 1,500 public libraries and 4,000 academic libraries, finding 137 formal demands for information since October 2001.
Not surprisingly, according to Eric Lichtblau’s account in the New York Times, “the Bush administration says that while it is important for law enforcement officials to get information from libraries if needed in terrorism investigations, officials have yet to actually use their power under the Patriot Act to demand records from libraries or bookstores.”
One would think that the existence of a subpoena—if not the content of the subpoena—is a matter of public record, and it should be relatively easy to determine whether the Bush administration is telling the truth. That would be wrong: secrecy provisions of the Patriot Act make it a crime for a librarian to acknowledge even receiving a subpoena.
Nonetheless, abuses by the Bush administration are clear according to a source for Lichtblau’s article:
