Record 'National Security' surveillance in 2000

http://www.securityfocus.com/news/201

Secret court authorizes more FBI taps, bugs and black bag jobs than ever before.
By Kevin Poulsen
May 2, 2001 5:30 PM PT

WASHINGTON--Federal agents filed a record 1,005 applications to perform electronic
surveillance and covert physical burglaries in supposed terrorism and espionage
investigations last year, all of which were granted, according to Justice Department
figures made public Wednesday.

The FBI's national security wiretapping in 2000 shattered the previous record of 886
applications in 1999, and took up the slack from an overall decrease in surveillance in
conventional criminal investigations during the same period, according to figures the
Department of Justice reported to Congress last week, obtained by the Federation of
American Scientists (FAS) under the Freedom of Information Act.

The surveillance was authorized under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act
(FISA), a 1978 law that was originally intended to reign in the FBI and the intelligence
community in the wake of decades of illegal domestic spying.

With FISA, Congress created a special five-judge panel in Washington, conveniently
housed within Justice Department headquarters, to hear secret FBI testimony and
issue orders for electronic surveillance against foreign nationals or U.S. citizens
suspected of serving foreign governments. The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court
operates under tight security, and its orders are never made public.

Secret evidence allowed 
In addition to electronic surveillance, the panel also issues special "sneak and peek"
search warrants allowing FBI agents to covertly enter a home or office to copy letters,
journals and diaries, plant bugs, steal encryption keys, or install monitoring software or
hardware on a target's computer. 
'The government has enormous authority to engage in surveillance and physical
searches that might arguably be unconstitutional.'
-- Steven Aftergood, Federation of American Scientists 

The 2000 FISA report does not break down how many orders were for electronic
surveillance, and how many were for physical intrusions.

Under FISA, a surveillance target is never notified that he or she was watched, except
in the rare case where criminal charges are filed. Even then defendants are not entitled
to review or challenge the evidence used to establish "probable cause" for the
surveillance -- a situation unique in American jurisprudence.

"As it stands now, the government has enormous authority to engage in surveillance
and physical searches that might arguably be unconstitutional," says FAS's Steven
Aftergood. "It's a troubling law, and there are at least some of us who think that it needs
to be refined."

Last month, the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear the appeal of Theresa Squillacote,
a former Pentagon lawyer, and her husband, Kurt Stand, who were convicted of
espionage in part based on evidence obtained in 550 days of intimate FISA-authorized
FBI bugging. An appeals court ruled that the couple had no right to examine the
evidence and testimony underlying the surveillance.

As in previous years, not a single FISA request was denied in 2000. But that may
reflect Justice Department restraint as much as courtroom rubber-stamping. In 1999,
then Attorney General Janet Reno came under fire in Congress when it was learned
that the Department of Justice refused to pursue a 1997 FBI request for FISA
surveillance on then-espionage suspect Wen Ho Lee. In a Senate hearing in June of
that year, Reno explained, "the Department determined that the evidence was
insufficient to support a finding of probable cause."

Of last year's applications, 1,003 of were approved before the end of the year, and the
remaining two were approved in January 2001. Nine requests submitted in 1999 were
also approved last year, for a total of 1,012 national security warrants granted in 2000. 

A separate report released by the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts this week
reflects a second year of decreased court authorized electronic surveillance in ordinary
criminal investigations. A total of 1,190 intercepts authorized by federal and state courts
were completed in 2000, down five percent from 1999. Cellular telephones were the
most popular technology for surveillance, with 691 wiretaps, and suspected drug
offenders remain the most frequent targets.




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