F.B.I. Is Broadening Surveillance Role, Report Shows |
WASHINGTON — Although the government’s warrantless surveillance program is associated with the National Security Agency, the Federal Bureau of Investigation has gradually become a significant player in administering it, a newly declassified report shows.
In
2008, according to the report, the F.B.I. assumed the power to review
email accounts the N.S.A. wanted to collect through the “Prism” system,
which collects emails of foreigners from providers like Yahoo and
Google. The bureau’s top lawyer, Valerie E. Caproni, who is now a
Federal District Court judge, developed procedures to make sure no such
accounts belonged to Americans.
That
information is in a 231-page study by the Justice Department’s
inspector general about the F.B.I.’s activities under the FISA
Amendments Act of 2008, which authorized the surveillance program. The
report was entirely classified when completed in September 2012. But the government has now made a semi-redacted version of the report public in response to a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit filed by The New York Times.
The
Times filed the lawsuit after a wave of declassifications about
government surveillance activities in response to leaks by the former
intelligence contractor Edward J. Snowden.
The
report was delivered late Friday to The Times. In it, the inspector
general, Michael E. Horowitz, concluded that the F.B.I. was doing a good
job in making sure that the email accounts targeted for warrantless
collection belonged to noncitizens abroad.
But
parts of the report remained heavily redacted. For example, there was
only one uncensored reference to the Prism system. It was not clear why
the Justice Department had redacted all the other references to Prism in
the report; the name of that program and many details about it have
been declassified and were discussed in a July 2014 report by the
Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board.
David
McCraw, a Times lawyer, said the newspaper may challenge the redactions
at a later stage in the Freedom of Information Act litigation.
The
report also filled in a gap about the evolving legality of the
warrantless wiretapping program, which traces back to a decision by
President George W. Bush in October 2001 to direct the N.S.A. to collect
Americans’ international phone calls and emails, from network locations
on domestic soil, without the individual warrants required by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, or FISA. The Times revealed that program in December 2005.
After
the article appeared, telecommunications providers that had voluntarily
participated in the program were sued, and a Federal District Court
judge in Detroit ruled that the program was illegal, although that
decision was later vacated. The Bush administration sought to put the
program on more solid legal footing by gaining orders from the Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Court approving it.
In January 2007, the Bush administration persuaded the court’s Judge Malcolm Howard to issue an order to telephone and network companies requiring them to let the security agency target foreigners’ accounts for collection without individual warrants. But in April 2007, when the order came up for renewal before Judge Roger Vinson, he said that it was illegal.
Judge
Vinson’s resistance led Congress to enact, in August 2007, the Protect
America Act, a temporary law permitting warrantless surveillance of
foreigners from domestic network locations. The next year, Congress
replaced that law with the FISA Amendments Act.
Last
month, as a result of separate Freedom of Information Act lawsuits by
The Times and the Electronic Frontier Foundation, the government declassified the identities of the judges
who disagreed in early 2007 and several court filings from that
episode. But it remained unclear what the N.S.A. had done in June and
July of 2007.
The
newly declassified report said Judge Vinson issued an order on May 31,
2007, that allowed existing surveillance to continue by approving
collection on a long list of specific foreign phone numbers and email
addresses. But after that, when the agency wanted to start wiretapping
an additional person, it had to ask the court for permission.
The
report said that “the rigorous nature of the FISA Court’s probable
cause review of new selectors submitted to the various FISA Court judges
following Judge Vinson’s May 31, 2007, order caused the N.S.A. to place
fewer foreign selectors under coverage than it wanted to.” That and
other factors “combined to accelerate the government’s efforts” to
persuade Congress to enact the Protect America Act.
Taken from: nytimes.com
Taken from: nytimes.com
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