FISA Court Judge: Contrary to assurances, no oversight exists for US spy operations:
August 15, 2013, "Court: Ability to police U.S. spying program limited," Washington Post, Carol Leonnig
"The leader of the secret court [FISA] that is supposed to provide critical
oversight of the government’s vast spying programs said that its ability
to do so is limited and that it must trust the government to report when it improperly spies on Americans.
The chief judge of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court
said the court lacks the tools to independently verify how often the
government’s surveillance breaks the court’s rules that aim to protect
Americans’ privacy. Without taking drastic steps, it also cannot check
the veracity of the government’s assertions that the violations its
staff members report are unintentional mistakes....The court’s description of its practical limitations contrasts with
repeated assurances from the Obama administration and intelligence
agency leaders that the court provides central checks and balances on
the government’s broad spying efforts."...
.............................
"James R. Clapper Jr.,
the director of national intelligence, has acknowledged that the court
found the NSA in breach of the Fourth Amendment, which prohibits
unreasonable searches and seizures, but the Obama administration has
fought a Freedom of Information lawsuit that seeks the opinion....The May 2012 audit,
intended for the agency’s top leaders, counts only incidents at the
NSA’s Fort Meade headquarters and other facilities in the Washington
area. Three government officials, speaking on the condition of
anonymity to discuss classified matters, said the number would be
substantially higher if it included other NSA operating units and
regional collection centers."
August 15, 2013, "NSA broke privacy rules thousands of times per year, audit finds," Washington Post, Barton Gellman
"The National Security Agency has broken privacy rules or overstepped
its legal authority thousands of times each year since Congress granted
the agency broad new powers in 2008, according to an internal audit and other top-secret documents.
Most
of the infractions involve unauthorized surveillance of Americans or
foreign intelligence targets in the United States, both of which are
restricted by statute and executive order."...
[Ed. note: On 9/7/2013, shortly after this article was written, the Washington Post reported that since 2011 it's been legal for NSA to spy on Americans without a warrant.]
(continuing): "They range from significant
violations of law to typographical errors that resulted in unintended
interception of U.S. e-mails and telephone calls.
The documents,
provided earlier this summer to The Washington Post by former NSA
contractor Edward Snowden, include a level of detail and analysis that
is not routinely shared with Congress or the special court that oversees
surveillance. In one of the documents,
agency personnel are instructed to remove details and substitute more
generic language in reports to the Justice Department and the Office of
the Director of National Intelligence.
In
one instance, the NSA decided that it need not report the unintended
surveillance of Americans. A notable example in 2008 was the
interception of a “large number” of calls placed from Washington when a
programming error confused the U.S. area code 202 for 20, the
international dialing code for Egypt, according to a “quality assurance”
review that was not distributed to the NSA’s oversight staff.
In
another case, the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, which has
authority over some NSA operations, did not learn about a new collection
method until it had been in operation for many months. The court ruled
it unconstitutional....
NSA report on privacy violations: Read the full report with key sections highlighted and annotated by the reporter.
FISA court finds illegal surveillance
The
only known details of a 2011 ruling that found the NSA was using
illegal methods to collect and handle the communications of American
citizens....
[FISA judge: Ability to police U.S. spying program is limited]
The
Obama administration has provided almost no public information about
the NSA’s compliance record. In June, after promising to explain the
NSA’s record in “as transparent a way as we possibly can,” Deputy
Attorney General James Cole described extensive safeguards and oversight
that keep the agency in check. “Every now and then, there may be a
mistake,” Cole said in congressional testimony.
The NSA audit obtained by The Post,
dated May 2012, counted 2,776 incidents in the preceding 12 months of
unauthorized collection, storage, access to or distribution of legally
protected communications. Most were unintended. Many involved failures
of due diligence or violations of standard operating procedure. The most
serious incidents included a violation of a court order and
unauthorized use of data about more than 3,000 Americans and green-card
holders.
In a statement in response to questions for this article,
the NSA said it attempts to identify problems “at the earliest possible
moment, implement mitigation measures wherever possible, and drive the
numbers down.” The government was made aware of The Post’s intention to
publish the documents that accompany this article online.
“We’re a
human-run agency operating in a complex environment with a number of
different regulatory regimes, so at times we find ourselves on the wrong
side of the line,” a senior NSA official said in an interview, speaking
with White House permission on the condition of anonymity....
There
is no reliable way to calculate from the number of recorded compliance
issues how many Americans have had their communications improperly
collected, stored or distributed by the NSA.
The
causes and severity of NSA infractions vary widely. One in 10 incidents
is attributed to a typographical error in which an analyst enters an
incorrect query and retrieves data about U.S phone calls or e-mails.
But
the more serious lapses include unauthorized access to intercepted
communications, the distribution of protected content and the use of
automated systems without built-in safeguards to prevent unlawful
surveillance.
The May 2012 audit,
intended for the agency’s top leaders, counts only incidents at the
NSA’s Fort Meade headquarters and other facilities in the Washington
area. Three government officials, speaking on the condition of
anonymity to discuss classified matters, said the number would be
substantially higher if it included other NSA operating units and
regional collection centers.
Senate Intelligence Committee
Chairman Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), who did not receive a copy of the
2012 audit until The Post asked her staff about it, said in a statement
late Thursday that the committee “can and should do more to
independently verify that NSA’s operations are appropriate, and its
reports of compliance incidents are accurate.”
Despite
the quadrupling of the NSA’s oversight staff after a series of
significant violations in 2009, the rate of infractions increased
throughout 2011 and early 2012. An NSA spokesman declined to disclose
whether the trend has continued since last year.
One major
problem is largely unpreventable, the audit says, because current
operations rely on technology that cannot quickly determine whether a
foreign mobile phone has entered the United States.
In what
appears to be one of the most serious violations, the NSA diverted large
volumes of international data passing through fiber-optic cables in the
United States into a repository where the material could be stored
temporarily for processing and selection.
The operation to obtain
what the agency called “multiple communications transactions” collected
and commingled U.S. and foreign e-mails, according to an article in SSO
News, a top-secret internal newsletter of the NSA’s Special Source
Operations unit. NSA lawyers told the court that the agency could not
practicably filter out the communications of Americans.
In
October 2011, months after the program got underway, the Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Court ruled that the collection effort was
unconstitutional. The court said that the methods used were “deficient
on statutory and constitutional grounds,” according to a top-secret
summary of the opinion, and it ordered the NSA to comply with standard
privacy protections or stop the program.
James R. Clapper Jr.,
the director of national intelligence, has acknowledged that the court
found the NSA in breach of the Fourth Amendment, which prohibits
unreasonable searches and seizures, but the Obama administration has
fought a Freedom of Information lawsuit that seeks the opinion.
Generally,
the NSA reveals nothing in public about its errors and infractions. The
unclassified versions of the administration’s semiannual reports to
Congress feature blacked-out pages under the headline “Statistical Data
Relating to Compliance Incidents.”
Members of Congress may read
the unredacted documents, but only in a special secure room, and they
are not allowed to take notes. Fewer than 10 percent of lawmakers employ
a staff member who has the security clearance to read the reports and
provide advice about their meaning and significance.
The limited portions of the reports that can be read by the public acknowledge “a small number of compliance incidents.” Under NSA auditing guidelines, the incident count does not usually disclose the number of Americans affected.
“What
you really want to know, I would think, is how many innocent U.S.
person communications are, one, collected at all, and two, subject to
scrutiny,” said Julian Sanchez, a research scholar and close student of
the NSA at the Cato Institute.
The documents provided by Snowden
offer only glimpses of those questions. Some reports make clear that an
unauthorized search produced no records. But a single “incident” in
February 2012 involved the unlawful retention of 3,032 files that the
surveillance court had ordered the NSA to destroy, according to the May
2012 audit. Each file contained an undisclosed number of telephone call
records.
One of the documents sheds new light on a statement by
NSA Director Keith B. Alexander last year that “we don’t hold data on
U.S. citizens.”
Some Obama administration officials, speaking on
the condition of anonymity, have defended Alexander with assertions
that the agency’s internal definition of “data” does not cover
“metadata” such as the trillions of American call records that the NSA
is now known to have collected and stored since 2006. Those records
include the telephone numbers of the parties and the times and durations
of conversations, among other details, but not their content or the
names of callers.
The NSA’s authoritative definition of data
includes those call records. “Signals Intelligence Management Directive
421,” which is quoted in secret oversight and auditing guidelines,
states that “raw SIGINT data . . . includes, but is not
limited to, unevaluated and/or unminimized transcripts, gists,
facsimiles, telex, voice, and some forms of computer-generated data,
such as call event records and other Digital Network Intelligence (DNI)
metadata as well as DNI message text.”
In the case of the
collection effort that confused calls placed from Washington with those
placed from Egypt, it is unclear what the NSA meant by a “large number”
of intercepted calls. A spokesman declined to discuss the matter.
The
NSA has different reporting requirements for each branch of government
and each of its legal authorities. The “202” collection was deemed
irrelevant to any of them. “The issue pertained to Metadata ONLY so
there were no defects to report,” according to the author of the secret
memo from March 2013.
The large number of database query
incidents, which involve previously collected communications, confirms
long-standing suspicions that the NSA’s vast data banks— with code
names such as MARINA, PINWALE and XKEYSCORE — house a considerable
volume of information about Americans. Ordinarily the identities of
people in the United States are masked, but intelligence “customers” may
request unmasking, either one case at a time or in standing orders.
In
dozens of cases, NSA personnel made careless use of the agency’s
extraordinary powers, according to individual auditing reports. One team
of analysts in Hawaii, for example, asked a system called DISHFIRE to
find any communications that mentioned both the Swedish manufacturer
Ericsson and “radio” or “radar” — a query that could just as easily have
collected on people in the United States as on their Pakistani military
target.
The NSA uses the term “incidental” when it sweeps up the records of
an American while targeting a foreigner or a U.S. person who is believed
to be involved in terrorism. Official guidelines for NSA personnel say
that kind of incident, pervasive under current practices, “does not
constitute a . . . violation” and “does not have to be
reported” to the NSA inspector general for inclusion in quarterly
reports to Congress. Once added to its databases, absent other
restrictions, the communications of Americans may be searched freely.
In
one required tutorial, NSA collectors and analysts are taught to fill
out oversight forms without giving “extraneous information” to “our FAA
overseers.” FAA is a reference to the FISA Amendments Act of 2008, which
granted broad new authorities to the NSA in exchange for regular audits
from the Justice Department and the Office of the Director of National
Intelligence and periodic reports to Congress and the surveillance
court.
Using real-world examples, the “Target Analyst Rationale
Instructions” explain how NSA employees should strip out details and
substitute generic descriptions of the evidence and analysis behind
their targeting choices.
“I realize you can read those words a
certain way,” said the high-ranking NSA official who spoke with White
House authority, but the instructions were not intended to withhold
information from auditors. “Think of a book of individual recipes,” he
said. Each target “has a short, concise description,” but that is “not a
substitute for the full recipe that follows, which our overseers also
have access to.”"
............
George Soros gave Ivanka's husband's business a $250 million credit line in 2015 per WSJ. Soros is also an investor in Jared's business.
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- I'm the daughter of a World War II Air Force pilot and outdoorsman who settled in New Jersey.
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