[Ppnews] FBI finds it overstepped in collecting data
Political Prisoner News
ppnews at freedomarchives.org
Thu Jun 14 12:31:16 EDT 2007
WP: FBI finds it overstepped in collecting data
Internal audit faults national security investigations
By John Solomon
The Washington Post
Updated: 9:27 p.m. PT June 13, 2007
An internal
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/related-topics.html/Federal+Bureau+of+Investigation?tid=informline>FBI
audit has found that the bureau potentially
violated the law or agency rules more than 1,000
times while collecting data about domestic phone
calls, e-mails and financial transactions in
recent years, far more than was documented in a
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/related-topics.html/U.S.+Department+of+Justice?tid=informline>Justice
Department report in March that ignited bipartisan congressional criticism.
The new audit covers just 10 percent of the
bureau's national security investigations since
2002, and so the mistakes in the FBI's domestic
surveillance efforts probably number several
thousand, bureau officials said in interviews.
The earlier report found 22 violations in a much smaller sampling.
The vast majority of the new violations were
instances in which telephone companies and
Internet providers gave agents phone and e-mail
records the agents did not request and were not
authorized to collect. The agents retained the
information anyway in their files, which mostly
concerned suspected terrorist or espionage activities.
But two dozen of the newly-discovered violations
involved agents' requests for information that
U.S. law did not allow them to have, according to
the audit results provided to
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/related-topics.html/The+Washington+Post+Company?tid=informline>The
Washington Post. Only two such examples were
identified earlier in the smaller sample.
FBI officials said the results confirmed what
agency supervisors and outside critics feared,
namely that many agents did not understand or
follow the required legal procedures and
paperwork requirements when collecting personal
information with one of the most sensitive and
powerful intelligence-gathering tools of the
post-Sept. 11 era -- the National Security Letter, or NSL.
Such letters are uniformly secret and amount to
nonnegotiable demands for personal information --
demands that are not reviewed in advance by a
judge. After the 2001 terrorist attacks, Congress
substantially eased the rules for issuing NSLs,
requiring only that the bureau certify that the
records are "sought for" or "relevant to" an
investigation "to protect against international
terrorism or clandestine intelligence activities."
The change -- combined with national anxiety
about another domestic terrorist event -- led to
an explosive growth in the use of the letters.
More than 19,000 such letters were issued in 2005
seeking 47,000 pieces of information, mostly from
telecommunications companies. But with this
growth came abuse of the newly relaxed rules, a
circumstance first revealed in the Justice
Department's March report by
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/related-topics.html/Glenn+Fine?tid=informline>Inspector
General Glenn A. Fine.
"The FBI's comprehensive audit of National
Security Letter use across all field offices has
confirmed the inspector general's findings that
we had inadequate internal controls for use of an
invaluable investigative tool," FBI General
Counsel Valerie E. Caproni said. "Our internal
audit examined a much larger sample than the
inspector general's report last March, but we
found similar percentages of NSLs that had errors."
"Since March," Caproni added, "remedies
addressing every aspect of the problem have been
implemented or are well on the way."
Of the more than 1,000 violations uncovered by
the new audit, about 700 involved telephone
companies and other communications firms
providing information that exceeded what the
FBI's national security letters had sought. But
rather than destroying the unsolicited data,
agents in some instances issued new National
Security Letters to ensure that they could keep
the mistakenly provided information. Officials
cited as an example the retention of an extra
month's phone records, beyond the period specified by the agents.
Clear lines of responsibility
Case agents are now told that they must identify
mistakenly produced information and isolate it
from investigative files. "Human errors will
inevitably occur with third parties, but we now
have a clear plan with clear lines of
responsibility to ensure errant information that
is mistakenly produced will be caught as it is
produced and before it is added to any FBI database," Caproni said.
The FBI also found that in 14 investigations,
counterintelligence agents using NSLs improperly
gathered full credit reports from financial
institutions, exercising authority provided by
the
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/related-topics.html/United+States?tid=informline>USA
Patriot Act but meant to be applied only in
counterterrorism cases. In response, the bureau
has distributed explicit instructions that "you
can't gather full credit reports in
counterintelligence cases," a senior FBI official said.
In 10 additional investigations, FBI agents used
NSLs to request other information that the
relevant laws did not allow them to obtain.
Officials said that, for example, agents might
have requested header information from e-mails --
such as the subject lines -- even though NSLs are
supposed to be used to gather information only
about the e-mails' senders and the recipients, not about their content.
The FBI audit also identified three dozen
violations of rules requiring that NSLs be
approved by senior officials and used only in
authorized cases. In 10 instances, agents issued
National Security Letters to collect personal
data without tying the requests to specific,
active investigations -- as the law requires --
either because, in each case, an investigative
file had not been opened yet or the authorization
for an investigation had expired without being renewed.
FBI officials said the audit found no evidence to
date that any agent knowingly or willingly
violated the laws or that supervisors encouraged
such violations. The Justice Department's report
estimated that agents made errors about 4 percent
of the time and that third parties made mistakes
about 3 percent of the time, they said. The FBI's
audit, they noted, found a slightly higher error
rate for agents -- about 5 percent -- and a
substantially higher rate of third-party errors -- about 10 percent.
The officials said they are making widespread
changes to ensure that the problems do not recur.
Those changes include implementing a
corporate-style, continuous, internal compliance
program to review the bureau's policies,
procedures and training, to provide regular
monitoring of employees' work by supervisors in
each office, and to conduct frequent audits to
track compliance across the bureau.
The bureau is also trying to establish for NSLs
clear lines of responsibility, which were lacking
in the past, officials said. Agents who open
counterterrorism and counterintelligence
investigations have been told that they are
solely responsible for ensuring that they do not
receive data they are not entitled to have.
The FBI audit did not turn up new instances in
which another surveillance tool known as an
Exigent Circumstance Letter had been abused,
officials said. In a finding that prompted
particularly strong concerns on
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/related-topics.html/Capitol+Hill?tid=informline>Capitol
Hill, the Justice Department had said such
letters -- which are similar to NSLs but are
meant to be used only in security emergencies --
had been invoked hundreds of times in
"non-emergency circumstances" to obtain detailed
phone records, mostly without the required links to active investigations.
Many of those letters were improperly dispatched
by the bureau's Communications Analysis Unit, a
central clearinghouse for the analysis of
telephone records such as those gathered with the
help of "exigent" letters and National Security
Letters. Justice Department and FBI investigators
are trying to determine if any FBI headquarters
officials should be held accountable or punished
for those abuses, and have begun advising agents
of their due process rights during interviews.
The FBI audit will be completed in the coming
weeks, and Congress will be briefed on the
results, officials said. FBI officials said each
potential violation will then be extensively
reviewed by lawyers to determine if it must be
reported to the Intelligence Oversight Board, a
presidential panel of senior intelligence
officials created to safeguard civil liberties.
The officials said the final tally of violations
that are serious enough to be reported to the
panel might be much less than the number turned
up by the audit, noting that only five of the 22
potential violations identified by the Justice
Department's inspector general this spring were
ultimately deemed to be reportable.
"We expect that percentage will hold or be
similar when we get through the hundreds of
potential violations identified here," said a
senior FBI official, who spoke on the condition
of anonymity because the bureau's findings have not yet been made public.
© 2007 The Washington Post Company
URL:
<http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/19215531/from/ET/>http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/19215531/from/ET/
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