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Bush administration lifts restriction on domestic spying by
FBI
By Jerry Isaacs
31 May 2002
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US Attorney General John Ashcroft Thursday granted the Federal
Bureau of Investigation sweeping powers to carry out domestic
spying against political organizations, religious groups and private
citizens in the United States. The new guidelines, issued in the
name of the Bush administrations war on terrorism,
will allow FBI agents to monitor political gatherings, Internet
sites, electronic chat rooms and bulletin boards, libraries and
churches without providing any evidence of criminal wrongdoing.
The Department of Justices action, which requires no
congressional approval, overturns restrictions imposed on the
FBI in 1976 following the exposure of its massive surveillance
program against anti-war, left-wing and civil rights activists,
including Martin Luther King Jr. Under such programs as Cointelpro
and Cominfil, J. Edgar Hoovers FBI spied on, intimidated
and harassed hundreds of thousands of US citizens and thousands
of domestic groups. The Central Intelligence Agency ran its own
domestic spying programOperation Chaoswhich compiled
personality files on over 7,000 US citizens and files on over
1,000 domestic groups.
The new measures will allow the government to spy on groups
and individuals solely because of their political beliefs. The
change means that political groups, including socialist parties,
workers organizations, civil rights groups or anyone who
speaks out against government policy can be targeted for surveillance
simply because the government designates them as subversive.
Ashcroft first floated plans to lift restrictions on domestic
spying late last year. His decision to take the action now is
bound up with the Bush administrations efforts to deflect
attention from revelations that it was warned about potential
hijackings prior to September 11. The new measures were taken
the day after FBI Director Robert Mueller acknowledged that the
bureaus field agents had gathered evidence that might have
prevented the September 11 terrorist attacks. The White House
is using claims that civil liberties restrictions prevented the
FBI from connecting the dots as the pretext for a
further assault on constitutionally protected democratic rights.
At a press conference Thursday afternoon Ashcroft said FBI
agents in the field are frustrated because many of our internal
restrictions have hampered their efforts to move quickly
on investigations. Referring to the regulations on domestic spying,
Ashcroft said, These restrictions are a competitive advantage
for terrorists.
The attorney generals remarks ignore the fact that it
was not civil liberties considerations, but rather the still unexplained
intervention of top FBI officials, that stopped lower-level agents
from investigating Zaccarias Moussaoui or taking other actions
that might have prevented the hijackings.
Ashcroft denied that the new measures would undermine civil
liberties protections and claimed the new powers would be used
only for the purpose of detecting and preventing terrorism.
He said, The abuses that have been alleged about the FBI
decades ago would not be allowed.
Dismissing the question of democratic rights, FBI Director
Mueller said lifting the domestic spying restriction was an important
step to help remove unnecessary bureaucratic obstacles to the
effective investigation of terrorist cases.
The American Civil Liberties Union denounced the new measures
as a threat to constitutionally guaranteed civil liberties and
an attempt to silence dissent. These new guidelines say
to the American people that you no longer have to be doing something
wrong in order to get that FBI knock at your door, said
Laura Murphy, director of the national office of the ACLU. You
can be doing perfectly legal activity like worshiping or talking
in a chat room; they can spy on you anyway.
Murphy added, The government is rewarding failure. It
seems when the FBI fails, the response by the Bush administration
is to give the bureau new powers, as opposed to seriously looking
at why the intelligence and law enforcement failures occurred.
Margaret Ratner of the Center for Constitutional Rights said,
Apparently Attorney General Ashcroft wants to get the FBI
back in the business of spying on religious and political organizations.
That alone would be unconstitutional, but history suggests the
FBI wont stop at passive information gathering. We fear
a return to the days of Cointelpro.
Under the FBIs old guidelines, agents needed to show
probable cause or information from an informer that crimes were
being committed to begin investigations. Undercover agents could
not be sent to investigate groups that gather at places like mosques
or churches unless investigators could first find probable cause
or evidence that led them to believe someone in the group had
broken the law.
The new guidelines simply state that FBI agents may enter public
places and forums to observe, develop leads and investigate. Agents
will be free to search web sites, online chat rooms and public
databases. Under the old guidelines, surfing the Internet for
the sole purpose of gathering information about organizations
and individuals was prohibited.
The new guidelines will trash a central protection against
government fishing expeditions by ending the requirement that
law enforcement agencies have at least a scintilla of evidenceor
even a hunchof a crime before engaging in certain investigative
activities, an ACLU press statement declared.
According the New York Times, the bureau will also use
commercial data-mining services from companies that
collect, organize and analyze marketing and demographic information
from the Internet to help develop leads on potential crimes, such
as threats to the security of computer networks.
These measures are part of several being implemented to complete
the transformation of the FBI from an organization focused on
criminal investigations and law enforcement into a domestic spy
agency. These include plans to transfer more than 600 agents presently
assigned to investigating narcotics, bank robberies, kidnappings
and other crimes to counterterrorism units. That would put more
than 2,500 of the FBIs 11,500 agents on such duties, compared
with about 1,100 before September 11. Thirteen offices will be
set up to specialize in gathering and analyzing intelligence.
The bureau also plans to hire 900 agents by September, placing
a premium on those with expertise in computers, foreign languages,
internal security, engineering and science.
Particularly significant is a plan to integrate the operations
of the FBI with the Central Intelligence Agency. CIA officers
will be sent to work in FBI field offices and at the FBIs
new Office of Intelligence, which will be headed by a veteran
CIA officer. In the past, at least publicly, the CIA, which had
few legal restraints on its spying, provocation and assassination
operations overseas, was prohibited from spying on US citizens.
Now the FBI and CIA are combining operations in what amounts to
a massive domestic political police force.
See Also:
Bush administration
seeks to relax curbs on FBI domestic spying
[18 December 2001]
Ashcroft defends Bushs
war against the Constitution
Tells Senate hearing that critics aid terrorists
[12 December 2001]
Military tribunals,
monitoring of lawyers: Bush announces new police-state measures
[17 November 2001]
Bushs war at
home: a creeping coup détat
[7 November 2001]
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