FBI "technically violated" wiretap laws for years

DSC_4600 “Technically vio­lated” the law? Is that a defense?

The FBI ille­gally col­lected more than 2,000 U.S. tele­phone call records between 2002 and 2006 by invok­ing ter­ror­ism emer­gen­cies that did not exist or sim­ply per­suad­ing phone com­pa­nies to pro­vide records, accord­ing to inter­nal bureau memos and inter­views. FBI offi­cials issued approvals after the fact to jus­tify their actions.

FBI gen­eral coun­sel Valerie Caproni said in an inter­view Monday that the FBI tech­ni­cally vio­lated the Electronic Communications Privacy Act when agents invoked nonex­is­tent emer­gen­cies to col­lect records.

via FBI broke law for years in phone record searches — wash​ing​ton​post​.com.

Still, at least the FBI seems to be com­ing (rel­a­tively) clean on this, and says the vio­la­tions ended in 2007 with changes to the sys­tem used. Considering how loose “after the fact” approval is — even when stay­ing within the law — the basis for these wire­taps must have been pretty flimsy.

Related articles
  1. Image credit: "DSC_4600" by Flickr user Ghost_Bear, used under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 2.0 license