Congress delves into improper FBI spying
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Congress wants to know how the FBI illegally or
improperly gathered telephone, e-mail and financial records of
Americans and foreigners while chasing terrorists.
Glenn A. Fine, the Justice Department inspector general who revealed
FBI data-gathering abuses in a 130-page report last week, was to
appear before the House Judiciary Committee on Tuesday. The panel
also called FBI General Counsel Valerie Caproni, whose office was
taken to task by Fine for inadequate supervision of the bureau's use
of documents called national security letters to gather data.
In a review of headquarters files and a sampling of just four of the
FBI's 56 field offices, Fine found 48 violations of law or
presidential directives during 2003-2005 and estimated that "a
significant number of ... violations throughout the FBI have not been
identified or reported."
The bureau has launched an audit of all 56 field offices to determine
the full extent of the problem.
On Wednesday, the Senate Judiciary Committee hears from Fine and FBI
Director Robert Mueller on the same topic.
A key concern in Congress is whether the USA Patriot Act, which
substantially loosened controls over the letters, should be revised.
"Many of us have been saying that the potential for abuse of the
Patriot Act's national security letter authority is almost without
limit," Judiciary Committee Chairman Rep. John Conyers, Jr.,
D-Michigan, said in announcing the hearings. "This report
demonstrates how that potential has now become a reality.
"The Justice Department's total lack of internal control and cavalier
attitude toward the few legal restrictions that exist in the act have
possibly resulted in the illegal seizure of American citizen's
private information," Conyers added.
Security letters OK'd in 1986
In 1986, Congress first authorized FBI agents to obtain electronic
records without approval from a judge using national security
letters. The letters can be used to acquire e-mails, telephone,
travel records and financial information, like credit and bank
transactions. They can be sent to telephone and Internet access
companies, universities, public interest organizations, nearly all
libraries, financial and credit companies.
In 2001, the Patriot Act eliminated any requirement that the records
belong to someone under suspicion. Now an innocent person's records
can be obtained if FBI field agents consider them merely relevant to
an ongoing terrorism or spying investigation.
Fine's review, authorized by Congress over Bush administration
objections, concluded the number of national security letters
requested by the FBI skyrocketed after the Patriot Act became law.
Each letter may contain several requests.
In 2000, the FBI issued an estimated 8,500 requests. That number
peaked in 2004 with 56,000. Overall, the FBI reported issuing 143,074
requests in national security letters between 2003 and 2005. In 2005,
53 percent were for records of U.S. citizens or permanent residents.
In a sampling of 77 case files in four FBI field offices, Fine
discovered an additional 8,850 requests that were never recorded in
the FBI's database, and he estimated there were many more nationwide.
The 48 possible violations Fine uncovered included failing to get
proper authorization, making improper requests under the law and
unauthorized collection of telephone or Internet e-mail records.
Fine said the violations were unintentional, but that conclusion has
been disputed by critics of the Patriot Act.
"What the inspector general documented shows a pattern of intentional
misconduct that goes far beyond mismanagement," said Mike German, a
former FBI agent who is a national security counsel to the American
Civil Liberties Union. More than 700 "exigent circumstances" letters
"said the FBI had already asked for grand jury subpoenas although the
agents knew they hadn't."
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Received on Sat Mar 02 2024 - 00:57:26 CST