News and Document archive source
copyrighted material disclaimer at bottom of page

NewsMinesecuritylegislationfbi — Viewing Item


Secret taps

Original Source Link: (May no longer be active)
   http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=542&u=/ap/20020430/ap_on_go_ca_st_pe/terror_wiretaps_1

http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=542&u=/ap/20020430/ap_on_go_ca_st_pe/terror_wiretaps_1

Secret U.S. Court OK'd 934 Warrants
Tue Apr 30, 2:25 PM ET
By TED BRIDIS, Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) - Despite the war on terrorism, the government said Tuesday it requested and won approval for fewer warrants last year for secret wiretaps and searches of suspected terrorists and spies.


The government received court approval for 934 of the secret warrants in 2001 under a powerful U.S. surveillance law, down from 1,003 in 2000. Experts puzzled over the slight decline in one a measure of the war on terrorism inside the United States.

They said the decline probably reflects warrants that covered many surveillance requests under a single investigation — plus increased use by the FBI (news - web sites) of tools other than these warrants, such as subpoenas for a suspect's financial records.

"There's no question the number of investigations went up in 2001 — it's unthinkable it would be otherwise," said Steven Aftergood of the Washington-based Federation of American Scientists.

A brief statement from Deputy Attorney General Larry Thompson did not refer to any investigations. But experts believe many of the warrants approved last year under the 1978 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act were driven by the Sept. 11 attacks and by changes to the law by Congress in the aftermath making it more powerful.

The FBI often uses these specialized warrants to record the telephone calls and e-mails of citizens and immigrants believed to be agents of a foreign power, frequently targets of terrorism or espionage investigations. Authorities also can plant eavesdropping devices in a suspect's home or office or secretly search a suspect's property or luggage.

In one rare case where details have emerged of FBI surveillance under the 1978 law, authorities for more than 18 months secretly tapped the telephones — and planted bugs in the bedroom — of a husband and wife who were convicted in 1998 on espionage charges. An appeals court upheld the FBI's actions.

The government said it asked for 932 warrants for electronic surveillance and physical searches that the court approved in 2001 along with two requests made in December 2000. It said judges modified two warrants and two orders.

The judges have never denied a request outright. But in an unusual flap that became public after Sept. 11, the FBI was unable to gain approval in the weeks before the terror attacks for a surveillance warrant against Zacarias Moussaoui, the only person so far to be indicted as a conspirator in attacks.

FBI Director Robert Mueller has expressed frustration at how well the hijackers managed to evade authorities.

"The hijackers had no computers, no laptops, no storage media of any kind," Mueller said in a speech this month. "They used hundreds of different pay phones and cell phones, often with prepaid calling cards that are extremely difficult to trace. And they made sure that all the money sent to them to fund their attacks was wired in small amounts to avoid detection."

While some experts said the figures offered an unusual glimpse of the scope of the war on terrorism, others said the numbers were too vague to be meaningful.

"It's really difficult to read too much into these figures," said David Sobel of the Washington-based Electronic Privacy Information Center, urging more detailed disclosure about how the warrants were sought and used.

Court records suggest the FBI used the special warrants last year in its espionage investigation of a retired Air Force master sergeant accused of offering to spy for Iraq, China and Libya. U.S. spy-catchers, for example, quietly searched the luggage of Brian Patrick Regan when he flew to Germany from Dulles International Airport last June and said they found glue and packing tape inside.

The Patriot Act, which became law on Oct. 26, broadened the 1978 surveillance law by allowing the FBI to request warrants in investigations that aren't mostly focused on foreign intelligence.

The Patriot Act also expanded the number of U.S. judges who may approve the warrants from seven to 11; at least three of those judges now must live within 20 miles of Washington. All are appointed by the chief justice of the United States for staggered, seven-year terms, and they serve rotating shifts every few weeks to work in a vault-like room inside the Justice Department (news - web sites).

The chief justice has not yet appointed the four judges permitted under the Patriot Act.

The seven U.S. district judges on the court are: Presiding Judge Royce C. Lamberth of Washington; William H. Stafford Jr. of northern Florida; Stanley S. Brotman of New Jersey; Harold A. Baker of central Illinois; Michael J. Davis of Minnesota; Claude M. Hilton of eastern Virginia and Nathaniel M. Gorton of Massachusetts. Lamberth's term expires May 18.




libraries
Bush signs laws extending fbi powers
Carnivore { July 21 2000 }
Dna patriot
Documents show fbi misuse of power { October 24 2005 }
Fbi aligned with mafia killers
Fbi applies new rules to surveillance { December 13 2003 }
Fbi asks powers to seize records without judge { May 24 2005 }
Fbi broad authority { May 31 2002 }
Fbi converts from fighting crime to terrorism { March 10 2005 }
Fbi dna profiles
Fbi doj buried by secret surveillance warrants
Fbi expanding domestic role encroaches on CIA { January 28 2005 }
FBI MCSOTerroristFlyer Back [jpg]
FBI MCSOTerroristFlyer Front [jpg]
Fbi misled judges { August 23 2002 }
Fbi mob coverup dealings
Fbi monitor public { May 31 2002 }
Fbi moved under intelligence agencies czar { June 30 2005 }
Fbi overhaul { June 2 2002 }
Fbi plane surveillance
Fbi prevention
Fbi raid
Fbi seeks expanded search powers { April 5 2005 }
Fbi shift agents { May 29 2002 }
Fbi terror search { June 3 2002 }
Fbi tortures { November 1 2001 }
Fbi underreported use of patriot act
Illegaly spied { October 9 2002 }
Informant made up terror
Lawmakers approve expansion fbi powers { November 20 2003 }
Secret taps
Senate gives fbi more patriot act powers
Small planes monitor terrorists
Spy catching
Supersquad fbi { May 15 2002 }

Files Listed: 35



Correction/submissions

CIA FOIA Archive

National Security
Archives
Support one-state solution for Israel and Palestine Tea Party bumper stickers JFK for Dummies, The Assassination made simple