White House Stonewall
Back in May, the Electronic Frontier Foundation (
EFF) filed a Freedom of Information Act
lawsuit against
the Justice Department "demanding the release of a secret legal memo
used to justify FBI access to Americans' telephone records without any
legal process or oversight."
So far, the administration has refused to release the memos.
According
to the civil liberties' watchdogs, a report last year by the DOJ's own
Inspector General "revealed how the FBI, in defending its past
violations of the Electronic Communications Privacy Act (ECPA), had come
up with a new legal argument to justify secret, unchecked access to
private telephone records."
"The Obama administration,"
The Washington Post reports,
has continued "to resist the efforts of two Democratic senators to
learn more about the government's interpretation of domestic
surveillance law, stating that 'it is not reasonably possible' to
identify the number of Americans whose communications may have been
monitored under the statute."
In a
letter to
Wyden and Senator Mark Udall (D-CO), Kathleen Turner, the director of
legislative affairs for the Office of the Director of National
Intelligence (ODNI), claimed that a "joint oversight team" has not
uncovered evidence "of any intentional or willful attempts to violate or
circumvent the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act or FISA, which was
amended in 2008."
Turner went on to say that "with respect to FAA" [FISA Amendments
Act of 2008, the statute that "legalized" Bushist surveillance programs
and handed retroactive immunity to spying telecoms like AT&T], "you
[Wyden] asked whether any significant interpretations of the FAA are
currently classified. As you are aware, opinions of the FISA Court
usually contain extensive discussions of particularly sources, methods
and operations and are therefore classified."
Throwing the onus back on political grifters in the House and
Senate, Turner wrote: "Even though not publicly available, by law any
opinion containing a significant legal interpretation is provided to the
congressional intelligence committees."
With circular logic Turner claims that because "FISA Court opinions
are so closely tied to the facts of the application under review that
they cannot be made public in any meaningful form without compromising
the sensitive sources and methods at issue."
At best, her statement is disingenuous. After all, it is precisely
that secret interpretation of the law made by the White House Office of
Legal Counsel that Wyden and others, including EFF, the Electronic
Privacy Information Network (
EPIC) and journalists are demanding the administration clarify.
Justice Department Shields NSA's Private Partners
The
FBI isn't the only agency shielded by the Justice Department under
cover of bogus "state secrets" assertions by the Obama administration.
On July 13, EPIC
reported that a U.S. District Court Judge issued an opinion in their lawsuit (
EPIC v. NSA),
"and accepted the NSA's claim" that it can "neither confirm nor deny"
that the agency "had entered into a relationship with Google following
the China hacking incident in January 2010."
The privacy watchdogs sought documents under FOIA "because such an
agreement could reveal that the NSA is developing technical standards
that would enable greater surveillance of Internet users."
According
to EPIC, the administration's "Glomar response" to "neither confirm nor
deny" a covert relationship amongst giant media corporations such as
Google and secret state agencies "is a controversial legal doctrine that
allows agencies to conceal the existence of records that might
otherwise be subject to public disclosure."
This issue is hardly irrelevant to internet users.
CNET News reported
last week that "Google's Street View cars collected the locations of
millions of laptops, cell phones, and other Wi-Fi devices around the
world, a practice that raises novel privacy concerns."
And given the government's penchant to vacuum-up so-called
"transactional data" without benefit of a warrant, would media giants
such as Google, high-tech behemoths such as Apple or Microsoft, beholden
to the federal government for regulatory perks, resist efforts by the
feds demanding they cough-up users' locational data?
Investigative journalist Declan McCullagh found that the cars "were
supposed to collect the locations of Wi-Fi access points. But Google
also recorded the street addresses and unique identifiers of computers
and other devices using those wireless networks and then made the data
publicly available through Google.com until a few weeks ago."
According to CNET, "the French data protection authority, known as
the Commission Nationale de l'Informatique et des Libertés (CNIL)
recently contacted CNET and said its investigation confirmed that Street
View cars collected these unique hardware IDs. In March, CNIL's probe
resulted in a fine of 100,000 euros, about $143,000."
On Friday,
CNET reported that Microsoft too, is in on the geolocation spy game.
Declan McCullagh wrote that "Microsoft has collected the locations
of millions of laptops, cell phones, and other Wi-Fi devices around the
world and makes them available on the Web."
A security researcher
confirmed that the "vast database available through Live.com publishes
the precise geographical location, which can point to a street address
and sometimes even a corner of a building, of Android phones, Apple
devices, and other Wi-Fi enabled gadgets."
Such information in the hands of government snoops would prove
invaluable when it comes to waging War On Terror 2.0, the so-called
"cyber war." Which is why the administration is fighting tooth and nail
to keep this information from the public.
On the cyber front, EPIC is suing the White House to obtain the top secret
National Security Presidential Directive that
sets out the "NSA's cyber security authority," and is seeking
clarification from the agency about so-called internet vulnerability
assessments, "the Director's classified views on how the NSA's practices
impact Internet privacy, and the NSA's 'Perfect Citizen' program."
As
Antifascist Calling previously
reported, "Perfect Citizen" is a $100 million privacy-killing program
under development by the agency and defense giant Raytheon. Published
reports informed us that the program will rely on a suite of sensors
deployed in computer networks and that proprietary software will
persistently monitor whichever system they are plugged into.
While little has been revealed about how Perfect Citizen will work,
it was called by a corporate insider the cyber equivalent of "Big
Brother," according to an email obtained last year by
The Wall Street Journal.
New Report Highlights "Transparency" Fraud
The
refusal by the White House to divulge information that impact
Americans' civil liberties and privacy rights, along with their
expansion of repressive national security and surveillance programs
launched by the Bush regime, underscores the fraudulent nature of
Obama's so-called "transparency administration."
A new report published by the American Civil Liberties Union,
Drastic
Measures Required: Congress needs to Overhaul U.S. Secrecy Laws and
Increase Oversight of the Secret Security Establishment, documents how "out-of-control secrecy is a serious disease that is hurting American democracy."
Authors Jay Stanley and former FBI undercover agent turned
whistleblower, Michael German, write that "we are now living in an age
of government secrecy run amok."
According to the report,
"reality has not always lived up to the rhetoric" of the Obama regime.
Since the administration took office, the White House:
• Embraced the Bush administration's tactic of using
overbroad "state secrets" claims to block lawsuits challenging
government misconduct.
• Fought a court order to release photos
depicting the abuse of detainees held in U.S. custody and supported
legislation to exempt these photos from FOIA retroactively. Worse, the
legislation gave the Secretary of Defense sweeping authority to withhold
any visual images depicting the government's "treatment of individuals
engaged, captured, or detained" by U.S. forces, no matter how egregious
the conduct depicted or how compelling the public's interest in
disclosure.
• Threatened to veto legislation designed to reform congressional notification procedures for covert actions.
•
Aggressively pursued whistleblowers who reported waste, fraud and abuse
in national security programs with criminal prosecutions to a greater
degree than any previous presidential administration.
• Refused to declassify information about how the government uses
its authority under section 215 of the Patriot Act to collect
information about Americans not relevant to terrorism or espionage
investigations. (Mike German and John Stanley, Drastic Measures Required, Washington, D.C., The American Civil Liberties Union, July 2011, pp. 7-8)
Amongst other findings in the report we learn that more than 2.4
million personnel, "official" denizens of the secret state which
include the 16 agencies of the so-called "Intelligence Community" and
outsourced private contractors hold top secret and above security
clearances.
Although the Government Accountability Office (
GAO)
disclosed that the Intelligence Authorization Act of 2010 "required
required the Director of National Intelligence (DNI) to calculate and
report the aggregate number of security clearances for all government
employees and contractors to Congress by February 2011," as of this
writing "the DNI has so far failed to produce this data."
Last year, The Washington Post's
"Top Secret America" series
revealed that "some 1,271 government organizations and 1,931 private
companies work on programs related to counterterrorism, homeland
security and intelligence in about 10,000 locations across the United
States," and that "the privatization of national security" has been made
possible by a "nine-year 'gusher' of money."
The Post's reporting on
America's security outsourcing mania echoed critical investigations by
other journalists, including those by Tim Shorrock, who has reported
extensively on intelligence privatization in his essential book
Spies For Hire and by James Bamford in
The Shadow Factory, which explored how NSA was turned loose on the American people.
In a follow-up
piece last
December, investigative journalists Dana Priest and William M. Arkin
described how "the United States is assembling a vast domestic
intelligence apparatus to collect information about Americans, using the
FBI, local police, state homeland security offices and military
criminal investigators."
"The government's goal," Priest and Arkin wrote, "is to have every
state and local law enforcement agency in the country feed information
to Washington to buttress the work of the FBI, which is in charge of
terrorism investigations in the United States."
As the Post reported,
"technologies and techniques honed for use on the battlefields of Iraq
and Afghanistan have migrated into the hands of law enforcement agencies
in America."
This is a pernicious development. As I
reported three
years ago, one such program were efforts by the Department of Homeland
Security, partnering-up with the Pentagon, to train America's fleet of
top secret surveillance satellites on the American people.
That program, since killed by DHS, the
National Applications Office,
would have provided state and local authorities access to geospatial
intelligence gleaned from military spy satellites and would have done so
with no congressional oversight or privacy controls in place and would
have handed over this sensitive data to selected law enforcement
partners.
Local Police Control Ceded to the FBI
Along
with intrusive techniques and highly-classified programs, Priest and
Arkin wrote that the FBI has built "a database with the names and
certain personal information, such as employment history, of thousands
of U.S. citizens and residents whom a local police officer or a fellow
citizen believed to be acting suspiciously."
What constitutes "suspicious behavior" of course, is in the eye of
the beholder, and can constitute anything from taking photographs on a
public street to organizing and participating in protests against
America's endless wars.
Just recently, the
San Francisco Bay Guardian revealed
that local cops "assigned to the FBI's terrorism task force can ignore
local police orders and California privacy laws to spy on people without
any evidence of a crime."
Investigative journalist Sarah Phelan discovered that even after a
"carefully crafted" set of rules on intelligence gathering had been in
place "since police spying scandals of the 1990s," were "bypassed
without the knowledge or consent of the S.F. Police Commission."
John Crew, a police practices expert with the American Civil Liberties Union of Northern California told the Bay Guardian that
the 2007 Memorandum of Understanding by S.F. cops and the FBI means
that "Police Commission policies do not apply" and that it "allows San
Francisco police to circumvent local intelligence-gathering policies and
follow more permissive federal rules."
Despite serious concerns over the Bureau's long-standing practice of
spying on political dissidents and its "War On Terror" racial profiling
policies, in a follow-up piece the
Bay Guardian reported
that Police Commission President Thomas Mazzucco, a former federal
prosecutor, seemed "more concerned about defending federal practices and
officials ... than worrying about the role and authority of the
civilian oversight body he now represents."
The ACLU's Crew noted that when the FBI came to the SFPD with a new
MOU, "there was no review by the City Attorney, and no notice to the
police commission."
"Now, we didn't know about that MOU because
it was kept secret at the insistence of the FBI for four years," Crew
told Sarah Phelan. Crew also noted that "when ACLU and ALC [Asian Law
Caucus] met with the SFPD in 2010, they were suddenly told that the
police department couldn't talk about these issues without FBI
permission.
"That set off a warning sign," Crew observed, "noting that in early
April, when the ACLU and ALC finally got the MOU released, their worst
suspicions were confirmed."
"There was no public discussion of
transforming the SFPD into a national intelligence gathering
association," ALC attorney Veena Dubal told the Bay Guardian. "The problem is that the FBI changed the deal, and the SFPD signed it, without telling anyone."
Neither the Bay Guardian nor
the ACLU of Northern California have released the 2007 Memorandum of
Understanding. However, the secrecy-shredding web site
Public Intelligence has posted a sample
MOU that makes for interesting reading indeed.
According to the document, local police agencies who participate in
JTTFs will adhere to loose rules covered by the "Attorney General's
Guidelines for Domestic FBI Operations." As
Antifascist Calling reported
last month, those rules will soon be loosened even further by
"constitutional scholar" Barack Obama's Justice Department.
But here's the kicker; local police participating in JTTFs will be
subject to rules crafted in Washington. State and municipal policies
which sought to limit out-of-control spying on local activists by
notorious police "Red Squads," are annulled in favor of "guidance on
investigative matters handled by the JTTF" that "will be issued by the
Attorney General and the FBI."
Such "guidance" we're told governs everything from "the Use of
Confidential Informants" to "Guidelines Regarding Disclosure to the
Director of Central Intelligence and Homeland Security Officials of
Foreign Intelligence Acquired in the Course of a Criminal
Investigation."
In other words, police participating in JTTFs become the CIA's eyes on the ground!
We
are informed that "in order to comply with Presidential Directives, the
policy and program management of the JTTFs is the responsibility of FBI
Headquarters (FBIHQ)." As readers are well aware, more often than not
those "Presidential Directives" arrive with built-in poison pills in the
form of top secret annexes concealed from the public.
Such questions are not academic exercises.
More than three years ago, author and researcher Peter Dale Scott wrote in
CounterPunch that
"Congressman Peter DeFazio, a member of the House Homeland Security
Committee, told the House that he and the rest of his Committee had been
barred from reviewing parts of National Security Presidential Directive
51, the White House supersecret plans to implement so-called
'Continuity of Government' in the event of a mass terror attack or
natural disaster."
"The story," Scott wrote, "ignored by the mainstream press, involved
more than the usual tussle between the legislative and executive
branches of the U.S. Government. What was at stake was a contest between
Congress's constitutional powers of oversight, and a set of policy
plans that could be used to suspend or modify the constitution."
Should something go wrong, the onus for civil or criminal penalties
resulting from lawsuits for illegal acts by JTTF officers rests solely
with local taxpayers who may have to foot the bill. This is clearly
spelled out: "The Participating Agency acknowledges that financial and
civil liability, if any and in accordance with applicable law, for the
acts and omissions of each employee detailed to the JTTF remains vested
with his or her employing agency."
Got that? You violate someone's rights and then get caught, well, tough luck chumps.
Intelligence Spending, No End in Sight
While
the administration and their troglodytic Republican allies in Congress
are planning massive cuts in social spending as a result of a
manufactured "deficit crisis," the President's fiscal year 2012 budget
proposes a five-year freeze for "all discretionary spending outside of
security."
Indeed, according to the
Associated Press,
the Defense Department will reap a windfall some $727.4 billion and DHS
$44.3 billion. But these numbers only tell part of the story.
Back in March,
Secrecy News disclosed
that figures provided by ODNI and the Secretary of Defense "document
the steady rise of the total U.S. intelligence budget from $63.5 billion
in FY2007 up to last year's total of $80.1 billion."
Americans are told they face "hard choices" when it comes to
America's fiscal house of cards and that they--and they alone--not the
capitalist thieves who destroyed the economy, must shoulder the burden.
But as economist Michael Hudson warned last week
Global Research, the American people are "being lead to economic slaughter."
Hudson writes that "whenever one finds government officials and the
media repeating an economic error as an incessant mantra, there always
is a special interest at work. The financial sector in particular seeks
to wrong-foot voters into believing that the economy will be plunged
into crisis if Wall Street does not get its way--usually by freeing it
from taxes and deregulating it."
However, when it comes to the secret state and the corporate interests they serve,
regulators, in the form of congressional oversight or the public,
seeking answers about illegal government programs, need not apply.
After all, as ODNI securocrat Kathleen Turner told the Senate, "the
questions you pose ... are difficult to answer in an unclassified
letter."
And so it goes...