Spy agency post-9/11 data sidetracked FBI - NY Times (Reuters) Updated: 2006-01-17 15:35
In the months following the Sept. 11 attacks, the US National Security Agency
sent a torrent of names, phone numbers and e-mail addresses to the FBI that
swamped the agency but led in virtually every case to dead ends or innocent
Americans, The New York Times reported on Monday.
FBI officials complained repeatedly to the secretive spy agency, which was
collecting much of the data by eavesdropping on the international phone and
Internet communications of targeted Americans.
The unfiltered data swamped FBI investigators, the newspaper reported on its
Web site in an article written for its Tuesday editions.
Some FBI officials and prosecutors also thought the checks, which sometimes
involved interviews by agents, were pointless intrusions on the privacy of
law-abiding Americans.
The bureau's then-director, Robert Mueller, raised concerns about the legal
basis for the eavesdropping program, which did not seek court warrants, the
Times reported, citing an unidentified government official. Mueller asked senior
administration officials "whether the program had a proper legal foundation,"
but ultimately deferred to the Justice Department legal opinions.
The 1978 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act makes it illegal to spy on
U.S. citizens in the United States without the approval of a special, secret
court.
President George W. Bush has said he ordered the domestic eavesdropping
operation to fight terrorism after the Sept. 11 attacks and that his actions
were within the law.
Citing interviews with more than a dozen current and former law enforcement
and counterterrorism officials, the Times said the flood of NSA tips led to few
potential terrorists inside the country they did not know of from other sources
-- and diverted agents from work they viewed as more productive.
Judith Emmel, a spokeswoman for the office of the director of national
intelligence, took issue with the FBI officials' assessment, the Times reported,
citing a statement last month by Gen. Michael Hayden, the country's
second-ranking intelligence official and director of the NSA.
"I can say unequivocally that we have gotten information through this program
that would not otherwise have been available," the Times quoted Hayden as
saying.
Several of the unidentified law enforcement officials interviewed by the
Times acknowledged they might not know of arrests from intelligence activities
overseas that grew out of the domestic spying program.
Some of the officials said the eavesdropping program might have helped
uncover people with ties to al Qaeda in Portland, Oregon, Minneapolis and
Albany, New York.
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