Author Topic: Misuse of the Patriot Act! Say it isn't so!  (Read 1256 times)

p12

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Misuse of the Patriot Act! Say it isn't so!
« on: March 09, 2007, 09:13:44 AM »
http://www.breitbart.com/news/2007/03/09/D8NOQI202.html

Justice Dept.: FBI Misused Patriot Act

Mar 09 1:34 PM US/Eastern

   
By LARA JAKES JORDAN
Associated Press Writer

      
         

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The FBI improperly and, in some cases, illegally used the USA Patriot Act to secretly obtain personal information about people in the United States, a Justice Department audit concluded Friday.

And for three years the FBI underreported to Congress how often it forced businesses to turn over the customer data, the audit found.

FBI Director Robert Mueller said he was to blame for not putting more safeguards into place.

"I am to be held accountable," Mueller said. He told reporters he would correct the problems and did not plan to resign.

"The inspector general went and did the audit that I should have put in place many years ago," Mueller said.

The audit by Justice Department Inspector General Glenn A. Fine found that FBI agents sometimes demanded personal data on individuals without proper authorization. The 126-page audit also found the FBI improperly obtained telephone records in non-emergency circumstances.

The audit blames agent error and shoddy record-keeping for the bulk of the problems and did not find any indication of criminal misconduct.

Still, "we believe the improper or illegal uses we found involve serious misuses of national security letter authorities," the audit concludes.

Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, who oversees the FBI, said the problems outlined in the report involved no intentional wrongdoing. In remarks prepared for delivery to privacy officials late Friday, Gonzales said: "There is no excuse for the mistakes that have been made, and we are going to make things right as quickly as possible."

At issue are the security letters, a power outlined in the Patriot Act that the Bush administration pushed through Congress after the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks. The letters, or administrative subpoenas, are used in suspected terrorism and espionage cases. They allow the FBI to require telephone companies, Internet service providers, banks, credit bureaus and other businesses to produce highly personal records about their customers or subscribers _ without a judge's approval.

About three-fourths of the national security letters were issued for counterterror cases, and the other fourth for spy investigations.

Fine's annual review is required by Congress, over the objections of the Bush administration.

The audit released Friday found that the number of national security letters issued by the FBI skyrocketed in the years after the Patriot Act became law.

In 2, for example, the FBI issued an estimated 8,500 letters. By however, that number jumped to 39,000. It rose again the next year, to about 56,000 letters in 2004, and dropped to approximately 47,000 in 2005.

Over the entire three-year period, the FBI reported issuing 143,074 national security letters requesting customer data from businesses, the audit found. But that did not include an additional 8,850 requests that were never recorded in the FBI's database, the audit found.

Also, Fine's audit noted, a 2006 report to Congress showing that the FBI delivered only 9,254 national security letters during the previous year _ on 3,501 U.S. citizens and legal residents _ was only required to report certain types of requests for information. That report did not outline the full scope of the national security letter requests in nor was it required to, Fine's office said.

Additionally, the audit found, the FBI identified 26 possible violations in its use of the national security letters, including failing to get proper authorization, making improper requests under the law and unauthorized collection of telephone or Internet e-mail records.

Of the violations, 22 were caused by FBI errors, while the other four were the result of mistakes made by the firms that received the letters.

The FBI also used so-called "exigent letters," signed by officials at FBI headquarters who were not authorized to sign national security letters, to obtain information. In at least 700 cases, these exigent letters were sent to three telephone companies to get toll billing records and subscriber information.

"In many cases, there was no pending investigation associated with the request at the time the exigent letters were sent," the audit concluded.

In a letter to Fine, Gonzales asked the inspector general to issue a follow-up audit in July on whether the FBI had followed recommendations to fix the problems.

"To say that I am concerned about what has been revealed in this report would be an enormous understatement," Gonzales said in remarks prepared for delivery to the privacy officials. "Failure to adequately protect information privacy is a failure to do our jobs."

Senators outraged over the conclusions signaled they would provide tougher oversight of the FBI _ and perhaps limit its power.

"The report indicates abuse of the authority" Congress gave the FBI, said Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy, D-Vt. "You cannot have people act as free agents on something where they're going to be delving into your privacy."

The committee's top Republican, Pennsylvania Sen. Arlen Specter, said the FBI appears to have "badly misused national security letters." The senator said, "This is, regrettably, part of an ongoing process where the federal authorities are not really sensitive to privacy and go far beyond what we have authorized."

Sen. Russ Feingold, D-Wis., another member on the panel that oversees the FBI, said the report "proves that 'trust us' doesn't cut it."

The American Civil Liberties Union said the audit proves Congress must amend the Patriot Act to require judicial approval anytime the FBI wants access to sensitive personal information. "The Attorney General and the FBI are part of the problem and they cannot be trusted to be part of the solution," said Anthony D. Romero, the ACLU's executive director.

___

On the Net:

The report is at: http://www.usdoj.gov/oig/reports/FBI/index.htm

Justice Department: http://www.usdoj.gov

FBI: http://www.fbi.gov/


Imagine that. angry

Manedwolf

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Re: Misuse of the Patriot Act! Say it isn't so!
« Reply #1 on: March 09, 2007, 09:19:43 AM »
And even more ironically, they were so sloppy that a good possibility exists that, via an insider, actual terrorists could get hold of sensitive information via one of these requests, and nobody would know for quite some time.



Sindawe

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Re: Misuse of the Patriot Act! Say it isn't so!
« Reply #2 on: March 09, 2007, 09:33:30 AM »
Governments abusing their power and authority?  Wow.  Next thing you know people will be saying its a BAD thing to give bottles of whiskey and car keys to teenagers.
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SpookyPistolero

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Re: Misuse of the Patriot Act! Say it isn't so!
« Reply #3 on: March 09, 2007, 10:11:17 AM »
What?? Power corrupts?Huh? This is too bizzare for words... oh wait...

How's it go? 'To late to fix the system from the inside and too soon to shoot the bastards', or something like that.
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mtnbkr

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Re: Misuse of the Patriot Act! Say it isn't so!
« Reply #4 on: March 09, 2007, 10:24:20 AM »
waiting for the PA apologists...

Chris

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Re: Misuse of the Patriot Act! Say it isn't so!
« Reply #5 on: March 09, 2007, 12:50:51 PM »
What do you mean they abused the PA?  I thought the whole purpose of it was to enslave us to a 2-way, Big Brother viewing screen in our homes.  Isn't this what Bush/Cheney/Bin Laden/The Rabbi intended it for? 

DJJ

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Re: Misuse of the Patriot Act! Say it isn't so!
« Reply #6 on: March 09, 2007, 02:45:13 PM »
Yep, 11-M. I'd say the FBI has been slacking, if there's only been 26 violations.

HForrest

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Re: Misuse of the Patriot Act! Say it isn't so!
« Reply #7 on: March 09, 2007, 03:45:06 PM »
Quote
I thought the whole purpose of it was to enslave us to a 2-way, Big Brother viewing screen in our homes.  Isn't this what Bush/Cheney/Bin Laden/The Rabbi intended it for?
You're right. The fact that the Patriot Act hasn't led to complete totalitarianism as of March 2007 proves that it never will, and all concerns regarding the law are invalid.

Eleven Mike

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Re: Misuse of the Patriot Act! Say it isn't so!
« Reply #8 on: March 09, 2007, 04:00:09 PM »
Quote
I thought the whole purpose of it was to enslave us to a 2-way, Big Brother viewing screen in our homes.  Isn't this what Bush/Cheney/Bin Laden/The Rabbi intended it for?
You're right. The fact that the Patriot Act hasn't led to complete totalitarianism as of March 2007 proves that it never will, and all concerns regarding the law are invalid.

I'm just saying that the choice of words is ironic.  If the PA is the violation of civil rights that some believe it is, then the act isn't being abused, just used for its intended purpose.  Or if the PA will lead to violations of civil rights, why is that that system appears to be correcting itself?  Could it be that the PA is not more open to abuse than other laws? 

I really don't know enough about the legal issues to have a settled opinion on the PA.  Unlike some people, I'm willing to admit that. 

thebaldguy

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Re: Misuse of the Patriot Act! Say it isn't so!
« Reply #9 on: March 09, 2007, 05:03:37 PM »
Wow. I can't believe that the Patriot Act was misused. I thought we were told none of our rights would be violated...

Eleven Mike

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Re: Misuse of the Patriot Act! Say it isn't so!
« Reply #10 on: March 09, 2007, 08:00:03 PM »
Wow. I can't believe that the Patriot Act was misused. I thought we were told none of our rights would be violated...

And that misuse is an abuse of the Patriot Act, so is the Patriot Act to blame? 

CypherNinja

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Re: Misuse of the Patriot Act! Say it isn't so!
« Reply #11 on: June 21, 2007, 04:26:34 PM »
http://blog.wired.com/27bstroke6/2007/06/judge_orders_fb.html



Quote
Judge Orders FBI to Turn Over Thousands of Patriot Act Abuse Documents
By Ryan Singel EmailJune 15, 2007 | 3:52:04 PMCategories: Sunshine and Secrecy 

Just one day after a news that an internal audit found that FBI agents abused a Patriot Act power more than 1,000 times, a federal judge ordered the agency Friday to begin turning over thousands of pages of documents related to the agency's use of a powerful, but extremely secretive investigative tool that can pry into telephone and internet records.

The order for monthly document releases commencing July 5 came in response to a government sunshine request by a civil liberties group, which sued in April over the FBI's foot-dragging on its broad request.

The April request from the Electronic Frontier Foundation asked the FBI to turn over documents related to its misuse of National Security Letters, self-issued subpoenas that don't need a judge's approval and which can get financial, phone and internet records.  Recipients of the letters are forbidden by law from ever telling anyone other than their lawyer that they received the request.  Though initially warned to use this power sparingly, FBI agents issued more than 47,000 in 2005, more than half of which targeted Americans. Information obtained from the requests, which need only be certified by the agency to be "relevant" to an investigation, are dumped into a data-mining warehouse for perpetuity.

An Inspector General report in March found rampant errors in the small sample of NSLs examined and systemic underreporting of the powers usage to Congress.  The report also found that agents issued more than 700 "expedited" letters, some containing materially false sworn statements.  These letters had no legal basis and essentially asked companies to turn over data by pretending there was an emergency in order to get the data necessary to get a proper NSL.  One former FBI agent says its clear the FBI violated the law.

Now the Justice Department must turn over 2,500 pages of documents a month to the EFF, including information on cozy surveillance contracts between the FBI and telephone companies and information on how data captured by NSLs were put into the FBI's massive data mining warehouse.

The Justice Department told the court that there were more than 100,000 potentially responsive documents and that ten people are working full time on filling the request for documents. Look out for a run on thick, black magic markers in D.C.
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Mabs2

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Re: Misuse of the Patriot Act! Say it isn't so!
« Reply #12 on: June 21, 2007, 04:52:16 PM »
Rather, I'd say it's being used exactly as intended.
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stevelyn

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Re: Misuse of the Patriot Act! Say it isn't so!
« Reply #13 on: June 21, 2007, 06:46:24 PM »
Wow. I can't believe that the Patriot Act was misused. I thought we were told none of our rights would be violated...

And that misuse is an abuse of the Patriot Act, so is the Patriot Act to blame? 


Uhhhhh........................... Yeah. It was written in a manner in which it could be abused by the agencies authorized to use it. I hope you really didn't think that OUR Govt had high enough morals and integrity not to abuse it. angry

That's probably one of the reasons the Alaska legislature passed a law forbidding AK LE from participating in PATRIOT Act investigations.
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Tallpine

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Re: Misuse of the Patriot Act! Say it isn't so!
« Reply #14 on: June 22, 2007, 06:27:08 AM »
Just wait untill Hellary gets into the White House ....   rolleyes

Remember how the Clintons had the IRS audit anybody that they didn't like?
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