Our privacy or our protection?
Should state and federal officials be given the freedom to pursue dangerous criminals without disregard for public rights such as privacy?
In 1949, the International News Service wanted to publish an article about the ‘toughest guys‘ that the FBI would like to catch. The article was so popular that the FBI officially released the list to aid in the capture of these fugitives. Today, the FBI’s most-wanted list includes the likes of Usama Bin Laden.
These criminals have often committed multiple heinous crimes, extortion, bank robberies, money laundering, drug importing, and murder. However, these criminals who are US citizens share the same rights as every other citizen of the US. Should these rights be forfeited for those the FBI deems most wanted?
It may be a slippery slope. Select fugitives losing their rights has the potential of evolving into criminals with lesser offenses losing their rights. On one hand, we have the overwhelming need for public safety and on the other, personal privacy.
A sterling example of this dichotomy is the Patriot Act. In response to our safety concerns after 9/11, the Patriot Act was passed to allow officials to use any means to provide surveillance, detain, arrest, and question people who are thought to be, or might hold information leading to, terrorists. This act has led to many people being locked away and being interrogated in Guantanamo Bay without the basic rights that you or I believe we are guaranteed. Some of the people detained are American citizens, whose rights were forfeited under the application of the Patriot Act.
Are we on the right path? Are our personal-privacy rights of less importance than the need to protect the population?