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18-JUL-07
14:52
JACQUELINE E. ROSS*
The Place of Covert Surveillance in Democratic Societies: A Comparative Study of the United States and Germany In the wake of the September 11 attacks, undercover policing has become an increasingly important law enforcement tool in the United States and in Europe. More frequent deployment of covert tactics has confronted democratic governments with difficult questions about how these extraordinary operations should be controlled and conceptualized. How ubiquitous should covert tactics become, and how should regulatory systems respond to their increased importance? What are the challenges of taming the constantly changing and highly contested practices of undercover policing, which stubbornly resist oversight? Legal systems differ in their concerns about undercover surveillance and in their willingness to deploy covert agents and informants against a spectrum of perceived threats ranging from national security dangers like terrorism or political and religious extremism to organized crime, drug trafficking, and more ordinary forms of criminality. In most democracies, political elites, legal actors, and critics agree that undercover investigations are in some sense a necessary evil. But national legal systems vary in what they mean by that. They have disparate conceptions of what makes covert investigations troublesome; of the proper goals of infiltration; and of the mechanisms by which undercover tactics should be legitimated and controlled. In short, legal systems forge different regulatory compromises and accord * Professor, University of Illinois College of Law; Assistant United States Attorney (federal prosecutor), Northern District of Illinois (Chicago) (1990-2000). I would like to thank the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD) for supporting my 2004 visits to Germany to interview undercover agents, police supervisors, prosecutors and judges and Professor Dr. Juergen Stock, Vice-President of the Bundeskriminalamt, who assisted me in obtaining approval from state and federal ministries and who helped make these interviews possible. For help and advice, the author would like to thank: Albert Alschuler, Rachel Barkow, Jennifer Collins, Cyrille Fijnaut, Thomas Ginsburg, Bernard Harcourt, Friedrich Katz, Orin Kerr, Maximo Langer, Andrew Leipold, Gary Marx, Richard McAdams, Erin Murphy, Mathias Reimann, Daniel Richman, Richard Ross, Daniel Solove, Julie C. Suk, James Whitman and participants at law school workshops at the University of Chicago, George Washington University, the University of Illinois, and Yale University. My research assistants Andreas Keller, Verena Kabisch, ¨ and Martina R¨ossel provided excellent research support.
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Electronic copy available at: http://ssrn.com/abstract=909010