In Other News...  reporting wrangled from the best rest of the Web

U.S. News FBI used false info to get surveillance warrants

FBI agents repeatedly provided inaccurate information to win a secret court’s approval of surveillance warrants in terrorism and espionage cases, prompting officials to tighten controls on the way the Bureau uses that powerful anti-terrorism tool, according to Justice Department and FBI officials. The errors were pervasive enough that the chief judge of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, Colleen Kollar-Kotelly, wrote the Justice Department in December 2005 to complain.

An internal FBI review in early 2006 of some of the more than 2,000 surveillance warrants the Bureau obtains each year confirmed that dozens of inaccuracies had been provided to the court. The errors ranged from apparently innocuous lapses, such as the wrong description of family relationships, to more-serious problems, such as citing information from informants who were no longer active, officials said.

Kollar-Kotelly raised the possibility of requiring counterterrorism agents to swear in-person that the information they were providing was accurate, a procedure that could have slowed such investigations drastically.


Main Source: Washington Post


Also...

» Director says FBI didn’t mean to break law  (McClatchy Newspapers)


Wednesday, March 28  | ADD TO EMAIL DIGEST  | PermaLink

Editorial Disclaimer: The NewStandard does not stand by the editorial integrity of the sources used in compiling these bulletins. They are provided as a service to our readers but do not necessarily reflect TNS editorial standards. TNS receives nothing in return for linking to other websites. All sources are chosen on their merits. The summaries presented are not necessarily based strictly on the linked sources, but they are as accurate as TNS editors have been able to determine.

Source Tips: Send tips to inothernews at newstandardnews dot net. Put In Other News in the title of your email, and be sure to include a link and a brief description.


NewStandard Originals

Other Recent U.S. News

More In Other News...