US | Department of Homeland Security Traveling? Uncle Sam is Watching Feds are keeping track of Americans: who they fly with, where they stay... what they read By Kevin Spak Posted Sep 22, 2007 3:39 PM CDT Copied Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff speaks during a news conference at Washington's Reagan National Airport, Thursday, Aug. 9, 2007, to announce new international flight screening procedures. (AP Photo/Dennis Cook) (Associated Press) The Feds are stockpiling data on millions of Americans as they travel, the Washington Post reports. Civil liberties activists charge Homeland Security with violating the Privacy Act, saying that travel partners, hotel bookings and reading material should not be in the Feds’ database. But Michael Chertoff claims that the data helps unravel terrorist plots and avoid "inconvenient screening of low-risk travelers." The Feds have been collecting such info for more than 10 years, but now it's gathered by more border guards and by airlines via electronic links. Reservation systems are also coughing up data on itineraries and travel partners. Says one traveler, "My first reaction was I kind of expected it. My second reaction was, that's illegal." Read These Next A Delta flight got wild with an allegedly unruly passenger. A naughty rabbit kicked off the 51st season of Saturday Night Live. The inventor of the web wants to fix it. Alien life on a Saturn moon? There's new evidence. Report an error