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03/09/07
FBI broke law in prying out Americans' personal info, attorney
general, FBI head say
By LARA JAKES JORDAN
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) -- The nation's top two law enforcement officials
acknowledged Friday the FBI broke the law to secretly pry
out personal information about Americans. They apologized
and vowed to prevent further illegal intrusions.
Attorney General Alberto Gonzales left open the possibility
of pursuing criminal charges against FBI agents or lawyers
who improperly used the USA Patriot Act in pursuit of suspected
terrorists and spies.
The FBI's transgressions were spelled out in a damning 126-page
audit by Justice Department Inspector General Glenn A. Fine.
He found that agents sometimes demanded personal data on people
without official authorization, and in other cases improperly
obtained telephone records in non-emergency circumstances.
The audit also concluded that the FBI for three years underreported
to Congress how often it used national security letters to
force businesses to turn over customer data. The letters are
administrative subpoenas that do not require a judge's approval.
"People have to believe in what we say," Gonzales
said. "And so I think this was very upsetting to me.
And it's frustrating."
"We have some work to do to reassure members of Congress
and the American people that we are serious about being responsible
in the exercise of these authorities," he said.
Under the Patriot Act, the national security letters give
the FBI authority to demand that telephone companies, Internet
service providers, banks, credit bureaus and other businesses
produce personal records about their customers or subscribers.
About three-fourths of the letters issued between 2003 and
2005 involved counterterror cases, with the rest for espionage
investigations, the audit reported.
Shoddy record-keeping and human error were to blame for the
bulk of the problems, said Justice auditors who were careful
to note they found no indication of criminal misconduct.
Still, "we believe the improper or illegal uses we found
involve serious misuses of national security letter authorities,"
the audit concluded.
FBI Director Robert S. Mueller said many of the problems were
being fixed, including by building a better internal data
collection system and training employees on the limits of
their authority. The FBI has also scrapped the use of "exigent
letters," which were used to gather information without
the signed permission of an authorized official.
"But the question should and must be asked: How could
this happen? Who is accountable?" Mueller said. "And
the answer to that is, I am to be held accountable."
Mueller said he had not been asked to resign, nor had he discussed
doing so with other officials. He said employees would probably
face disciplinary actions, not criminal charges, following
an internal investigation of how the violations occurred.
The audit incensed lawmakers in Congress already seething
over the recent dismissals of eight U.S. attorneys. Democrats
who lead House and Senate judiciary and intelligence oversight
panels promised hearings on the findings. Several lawmakers
-- Republicans and Democrats alike -- raised the possibility
of scaling back the FBI's authority.
"It's up to Congress to end these abuses as soon as possible,"
said Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., who sits on the Senate
Judiciary Committee. "The Patriot Act was never intended
to allow the Bush administration to violate fundamental constitutional
rights."
Rep. Pete Hoekstra, top Republican on the House Intelligence
Committee, said the audit shows "a major failure by Justice
to uphold the law."
"If the Justice Department is going to enforce the law,
it must follow it as well," said Hoekstra, of Michigan.
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 ACLU's executive director, Anthony D. Romero.
Both Gonzales and Mueller called the national security letters
vital tools in pursuing terrorists and spies in the United
States. "They are the bread and butter of our investigations,"
Mueller said.
Gonzales asked the inspector general to issue a follow-up
audit in July on whether the FBI had followed recommendations
to fix the problems.
Fine's annual review is required by Congress, over the objections
of the Bush administration. It concluded that the number of
national security letters requested by the FBI skyrocketed
in the years after the Patriot Act became law. Each letter
issued may contain several requests.
In 2000, for example, the FBI issued an estimated 8,500 requests.
That number peaked in 2004 with 56,000. Overall, the FBI reported
issuing 143,074 requests for national security letters between
2003 and 2005.
But that did not include an additional 8,850 requests that
were never recorded in the FBI's database, the audit found.
A sample review of 77 case files at four FBI field offices
showed that agents had underreported the number of national
security letter requests by about 22 percent.
Additionally, the audit found, the FBI identified 26 possible
violations in its use of the letters, including failing to
get proper authorization, making improper requests under the
law and unauthorized collection of telephone or Internet e-mail
records.
The FBI also used exigent letters to quickly get information
-- sometimes in non-emergency situations _ without going through
proper channels. In at least 700 cases, these letters were
sent to three telephone companies to get billing records and
subscriber information, the audit found.
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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/
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