FBI Pushing For Legislation That Will Legalize Its National Security Letter Abuses
from the fighting-terrorism-means-never-having-to-say-you're-sorry dept
One of the more interesting things to sneak out around the edges of the FBI's redaction bars in Yahoo's document dump of National Security Letters was the sheer amount of information the agency was demanding. The FBI -- using letters it writes and approves with no outside oversight -- wants all of the following in exchange for a piece of paper backed by nothing but the FBI's "national security" claims.
In preparing your response to this National Security Letter, you should determine whether your company maintains the following types of information which may be considered by you to be an electronic communications transactional record in accordance with Title 18 United States Code § 2709.
Subscriber name and related subscriber information
Account number(s)
Date the account opened or closed
Physical and or postal addresses associated with the account
Subscriber day/evening telephone numbers
Screen names or other on-line names associated with the account
All billing and method of payment related to the account including alternative billed numbers or calling cards
All e-mail addresses associated with the account to include any and all of the above information for any secondary or additional e-mail addresses and or user names identified by you as belonging to the targeted account in this letter
Internet Protocol (IP) addresses assigned to this account and related e-mail accounts
Uniform Resource Locator (URL) assigned to the account
Plain old telephone{s) (POTS), ISDN circuit(s), Voice over internet protocol (VOIP), Cable modem service, Internet cable service, Digital Subscriber Line (DSL) asymmetrical/symmetrical relating to this account
The names of any and all upstream and providers facilitating this account's communications
This is odd because the FBI is not entitled to all of this information when using NSLs, as Gabe Rottman of CDT points out.
There are a few statutes that authorize the issuance of NSLs, but the most important—and the one with the greatest potential for abuse—is 18 U.S.C. § 2709, titled “Counterintelligence Access to Telephone Toll and Transactional Records.” As the name suggests, the authority was meant to be limited to phone records. It allows the FBI to issue NSLs to telecommunications companies to secure “the name, address, length of service, and local and long distance toll billing records of a person or entity” if the FBI certifies that they are relevant to a terrorism or espionage investigation. (The statute does mention the phrase “electronic communication transactional records,” but it still limits the types of covered records to name, address, length of service, and billing records–i.e., the equivalent of phone records.)
So, the FBI is asking for far more than it's allowed to get with an NSL. It's apparently hoping some NSL recipients won't know they're not required to turn over all of this information. Certainly, Yahoo knows, having battled the FBI (and the FISA court) over government demands for information. But the FBI issues thousands of these every year, and not every recipient is going to know what it does or doesn't have to turn over to the feds.
This perhaps explains the push to expand the FBI's NSL capabilities. Secret language in the Senate's secret intelligence bill looks to add email metadata and possibly browsing history to the list of records the FBI can acquire with NSLs. FBI Director James Comey has been stumping for this change, claiming the only thing standing between the FBI and records it always should have had access to in the first place is a typo.
On top of that, Sen. John Cornyn is attempting to "fix" the ECPA… by making even more of a mockery of the words behind the acronym: Electronic Communications Privacy Act. This is what Cornyn wants to give the FBI warrantless access to:
Name, physical address, email address, telephone number, instrument number, and other similar account identifying information.
Account number, login history, length of service (including start date), types of service, and means and sources of payment for service (including any card or bank account information).
Local and long distance toll billing records.
Internet Protocol (commonly known as ‘IP’) address or other network address, including any temporarily assigned IP or network address, communication addressing, routing, or transmission information, including any network address translation information (but excluding cell tower information), and session times and durations for an electronic communication.
As you can see, some of those records are already being requested by the FBI with NSLs, even though it has no legal basis to do so. It appears the FBI is pushing for codification of practices it already uses. That's the intelligence community way: it's better to ask for legislative fixes than permission. It's a forgiveness that pardons past behavior and permanently shields the agency from future legal challenges.
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Filed Under: ecpa, ecpa reform, emails, fbi, national security letters, nsls
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So, standard US policing techniques, then.
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We're just rounding out our mission statement
Anything else we can add to the FBI's job description?
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Re: We're just rounding out our mission statement
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It's silly for either side to even try to enact statutes on this topic.
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Re: It's silly for either side to even try to enact statutes on this topic.
It's significance comes from Patriots willing to do something when the government ignores the will of the people. Right now the government is NOT ignoring the will of the people.
Right now it is the will of the people through socialism that is asking.... no begging the government to step in and protect us from our paper cuts, salt addiction, and a few people in turbans.
Odds are you will die from your car, your doctor, your police officer, or your home before you would a terrorist. People are running in fear and are currently unable to think rationally.
You can bet the government... "any government", will be willing to remove your rights to save you from yourself!
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Default Position
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Treason (Hoover Sucked, literally)
Yet, the congress critters are too busy with their agendas to care, much less act.
One fibber troll asks: what have they (we) done that was/is illegal? How about murder, coups, coverups, yada yada (like, where have you been for the past 60 years)?
We are doomed. The pretend system is beyond redemption.
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Re: Treason (Hoover Sucked, literally)
As things stand right now... America has a bad case of defeatism right now and are letting the parties tell them who they can have.
This is one of the primary reasons that Drumpf has such a following. The only thing I like about Trump is that his election might help destroy the republican party and I really like that idea.
Hillary and Bernie are just more of the same "Destroy America" crowd that has been fucking America up.
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Telling actions...
If someone is going to claim that they are acting within the law, or according to the law, and then later on attempt to change the law to cover what they were/are doing it's pretty clear that they know full well that they are not in fact operating according to the law, and are trying to legalize their actions after the fact.
An 'admission' like this should be grounds for a hefty benchslap or other form of punishment, and yet instead more often than not you have tools masquerading as politicians falling over themselves to fix the 'minor oversight in the law' and retroactively legalize what wasn't legal before, because 'National Security: Be Afraid' trumps all and they don't want to be seen as not 'tough on (unauthorized) crime'.
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Electronic Communications Piracy Act
Of course, we are assured, neither the FBI nor any other intelligence agency would willfully exceed the limits of the law. They would be prosecuted....oh, wait...
So, the FBI is asking for far more than it's allowed to get with an NSL. It's apparently hoping some NSL recipients won't know they're not required to turn over all of this information.
This is not true: the FBI doesn't care whether recipients know it or not. It is the whole reason the FBI so savagely pursued cases against people who even talked to their attorneys, much less asked a court to rule on the need for a given NSL; or the right to publish an NSL. What was that demand again? Oh, right, $250,000 per day, doubled weekly until Yahoo succumbed. That's dictatorship, not judicial remedy--not negotiation.
(Possibly, Yahoo is a little miffed and that's why they're doing a document dump?)
Electronic Communications Privacy Act
They really should call it the Electronic Communications Piracy Act.
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FBI NSL Equal King George Writ of Assistance
What was the original impetuous behind the US governments use of national security letters beginning in 1978?
Investigating non-US persons/entities involved in terrorism or espionage.
From the Wikipedia page titled National secutiry letter:
The oldest NSL provisions were created in 1978 as a little-used investigative tool in terrorism and espionage investigations to obtain financial records. Under the Right to Financial Privacy Act (RFPA), part of the Financial Institutions Regulatory and Interest Rate Control Act of 1978), the FBI could obtain the records only if the FBI could first demonstrate the person was a foreign power or an agent of a foreign power. Compliance by the recipient of the NSL was voluntary, and states' consumer privacy laws often allowed financial institutions to decline the requests.[5] In 1986, Congress amended RFPA to allow the government to request disclosure of the requested information. In 1986, Congress passed the Stored Communications Act (SCA), part of the Electronic Communications Privacy Act of 1986), which created provisions similar to the RFPA that allowed the FBI to issue NSLs. Still, neither act included penalties for failing to comply with the NSL. A 1993 amendment relaxed the restriction regarding "foreign powers" and allowed the use of an NSL to request information about persons not under direct investigation. In 2001, section 505 of the USA PATRIOT Act expanded the use of the NSLs.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_security_letter
In 2015 alone thousands of NSL's were directed at US persons and as such were used as a method for "law enforcement" to circumvent the Constitution and judicial oversight (all to often a rubber stamp) during investigations.
According to a Reuters report dated 2May16 there were over 48,000 NSL's issued in 2015.
From Reuters:
U.S. spy court rejected zero surveillance orders in 2015: memo
The majority of NSL requests, 31,863, made in 2015 sought information on foreigners, regarding a total of 2,053 individuals, the memo stated.
The FBI made 9,418 requests for national security letters in 2015 for information about U.S. citizens and legal immigrants, regarding a total of 3,746 individuals, it showed.
The FBI also made 7,361 NSL requests for only "subscriber information," typically names, addresses and billing records, of Americans and foreigners regarding 3,347 different people.
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-cybersecurity-surveillance-idUSKCN0XR009
NSL's are ripe for abuse and serve no purpose other than further degrading the law in the name of expediency.
From CATO Institute:
These tools are fundamentally not about spying on terrorists. The government has always had ample power to do that. They’re about authority to spy on the innocent.
http://www.cato.org/blog/record-number-americans-targeted-national-security-letters
PS J. Edgar Comey is a clown who has completely forsworn his oath to the Constitution and seeks only to accumulate greater powers for the national security state at the expense of all Americans liberties.
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Re: FBI NSL Equal King George Writ of Assistance
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Precedent because of Citizens' Ignorance?
Banking on that lack of information, or misinformation?
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