Investigation Into Illegal Spying On Kim Doctom Reveals NZ Intelligence Illegally Spied On 85 People

from the oops dept

Remember how the New Zealand intelligence organization GCSB (Government Communications Security Bureau) had to admit that it had illegally spied on Kim Dotcom? That kicked off an investigation that has now revealed that the GCSB illegally spied on somewhere around 85 people.
GCSB director Ian Fletcher said in February that his agency did not illegally spy on anyone else on behalf of law enforcement agencies.

But the Kitteridge report contradicts this - questioning the lawfulness of GCSB surveillance involving 85 New Zealanders. The agency is forbidden from spying on anyone with citizenship or permanent residence here.

The illegal spying was conducted between April 2003 and September last year and done on behalf of the Security Intelligence Service, the domestic spy agency.
But wait... there's more. The report also found that it's likely GCSB violated other laws as well, including the Privacy Act and the Defence Act. Not surprisingly, the report also finds a mess of an agency with terrible management, poor record-keeping and little oversight. Shocking, isn't it, that such conditions would lead to abuse of power and illegal surveillance, huh?
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Filed Under: gcsb, kim dotcom, new zealand, spying, surveillance


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  • icon
    rw (profile), 9 Apr 2013 @ 2:02pm

    Are you sure this wasn't in the US?

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Anonymous Coward, 9 Apr 2013 @ 3:08pm

      Re:

      Yes, that's a completely different bunch of alphabet-soup agencies.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      Alana (profile), 9 Apr 2013 @ 3:13pm

      Re:

      Take the number, multiply it by 100,000 roughly, and you have the US.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Anonymous Coward, 9 Apr 2013 @ 3:44pm

      Re:

      In the US, you wouldn't know about until it was too late to prosecute and the perpetrators had obtained cushy outside jobs.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    el_segfaulto (profile), 9 Apr 2013 @ 3:13pm

    Why All The Hate?

    Oh Mike. Laws, due process, and individual rights are for those who hate freedom. You don't hate freedom...do you?

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 9 Apr 2013 @ 3:23pm

    It's OK for governments to break good laws, in the name of protecting corporate profits. But when citizens harmlessly break bad or victimless laws (ie: IP laws), laws designed to protect corporate profits, then the govt will be all over you.

    IP laws are not that important. Laws protecting citizens from oppressive government are far more important. Yet the penalty structure built into our laws, and how penalties are applied, are completely backward.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    David Swanson, 9 Apr 2013 @ 3:27pm

    The way to do it

    Poor NZ.
    In Australia, we'd just get the military to do it under the Defence power in our constitution.
    As long as it's for a Defence purpose, legally they can spy on anyone they want, any time they want, anywhere they want, any way they want.
    It's a very helpful loophole we use all the time.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      DannyB (profile), 10 Apr 2013 @ 5:54am

      Re: The way to do it

      Hey now, we have the Patriot act, see? So we're catching up. It's not our fault that Australia didn't patent it first.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      Bryan (profile), 10 Apr 2013 @ 8:55am

      Re: The way to do it

      Warrantless spying by the government that violates an individual's security. You really consider that a benefit? I hope you have no skeletons in your closet.

      Bryan

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    Divide by Zero (profile), 9 Apr 2013 @ 3:56pm

    And their solution? To change the law to allow the GCSB to spy on citizens. This government is completely out of control and seem to be taking their instructions from their american overlords like good little lapdogs.

    At least we can thank Kim Dotcom for being the reason this all came to light. Maybe now we can do something about it.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Fentex, 9 Apr 2013 @ 5:59pm

    In Australia, we'd just get the military to do it under the Defence power in our constitution


    That is the likely outcome of this review. The government will just conclude, as their mouth pieces are currently arguing, that the GCSB is our eavesdropping tool so ought be allowed to assist others in doing their eavesdropping.

    What happened was there was a law change that made it clear GCSB should not spy on NZ citizens in it's capacity as our signals intelligence service.

    GCSB ignored that when requested to help other agencies that are allowed to do it because they think that's also their job - to wear a different hat and provide such abilities to others, and they didn't think themselves responsible when asked by other agencies to do the eavesdropping.

    There's also a lot of uncovered lax behaviour that's typical of spooks that have no effective over-sight due to their secrecy.

    What'll happen is the government will swear it's all cleaned up, pass legislation allowing GCSB to provide eavesdropping capabilities to over agencies and business will proceed as usual.

    What they won't, but should do, is instigate real effective accountability.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Corrupt NZ government, 9 Apr 2013 @ 9:30pm

    Corrupt NZ government

    If the NZ government doesn't go after those who broke its laws on spying and prosecute them, they have no right passing any laws. Something tells me nothing will be done; meanwhile if you or I did the same thing, we'd be in prison. Sounds like a corrupt NZ government, including their Attorney General.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 10 Apr 2013 @ 1:42am

    ' Shocking, isn't it, that such conditions would lead to abuse of power and illegal surveillance, huh?'

    cant imagine who else is in mind.

    what this shows more than anything is that governments and law enforcement agencies think they have the right to do whatever they please, whenever they please, against whomsoever they please and will not get called out for that behaviour, let alone anything else. they have the opinion that they are answerable to no one and the people do not matter. every country in the so-called democratic world is within a whisker of being a Police State that it is absolutely terrifying! the power that corporations and industries have over governments is equally as terrifying if not even more so!!

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    Ninja (profile), 10 Apr 2013 @ 4:24am

    It's amusing that by trying to destroy Dotcom they got a lot of dirt revolved and scrutinized and are looking much worse than the evil racketeer child molester Dotcom they tried to paint to the public.

    link to this | view in chronology ]


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