FBI Opens Internal Investigation Into One Of Its Own Twitter Accounts Because Good Lord This Year Is So Stupid
from the great-year-for-comas dept
There's nothing the FBI loves more than an investigation. It's right in the name. The on-again, off-again inspection of Hillary Clinton's emails have given director James Comey a chance to really strut his stuff. It's embarrassing stuff -- stuff his underlings wish he'd stop strutting, but there it is. The White House itself actually weighed in on Comey's latest blurt (which was followed shortly thereafter by tons of controlled leaking) and basically called him a loudmouth.
Because this election season couldn't get any weirder, a long-dormant FBI Twitter bot suddenly came to life and began spewing links to FBI documents about tangentially-related investigations -- like FBI files on the Clinton Foundation. This only raised more questions about the FBI's political leanings. Sure, the FBI has won over parties in both camps thanks to its investigation of Hillary Clinton, but it has infuriatingly chosen to periodically invert the narrative, leaving both parties unsure of how to feel about their new partner in electioneering.
The unexpected burst of activity suggested the FBI was again meddling with the electoral process. Not actually news, of course. The documents had been there all along, but the Twitterbot had failed to inform the public in a timely fashion. It was suppposed to send out a tweet any time the agency dumped something into its FOIA "reading room," but had failed to do so for months.
It was enough to suggest nefarious intent. Because the FBI is nothing if not well-funded, it will be taking a much closer look at its malfunctioning Twitter account. (via Slashdot)
Candice Will, Assistant Director for the FBI’s Office of Professional Responsibility, said she was referring the matter to the FBI’s Inspection Division for an “investigation.” Upon completion of the investigation, the findings will be referred back to the the Office of Professional Responsibility for “adjudication.”
There's a reason for this investigation -- one that will likely find nothing more damning than coding hiccups.
Federal law and FBI policy prohibit employees from using the power of the department to attempt to influence elections.
Odd. It would appear James Comey is unfamiliar with these laws and policies. The social media bot only does what it's told to do. And no one, apparently, is able to tell Comey what to do. Or not to do. But it's the pile of code that will be facing greater scrutiny than James "Rogue One" Comey.
A statement and a preliminary conclusion have already made their appearance. The statement issued by the FBI says that the Twitterbot, like everything else the FBI does (including unlawful deployment of malware), was totally lawful in its spectacularly-timed tweetstorm.
"Per the standard procedure for FOIA, these materials became available for release and were posted automatically and electronically to the FBI’s public reading room in accordance with the law and established procedures,” the FBI said in a statement.
A more innocuous explanation for the ill-timed tweeting is this one:
An FBI official told Motherboard that the FBI Records Vault Twitter account had been dormant for more than a year because of a bug in the FBI.gov content management system (CMS) that links the website where the documents are posted and the social media account. On Sunday, according to the official, the FBI’s IT team pushed a patch to the CMS and fixed the bug, causing the flood of tweets, which had been scheduled over the last few months, to go out on October 30.
Whatever the explanation is, the FBI is pretty much a walking catastrophe at this point -- at least as far as maintaining distance from the electoral process is concerned.
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Filed Under: fbi, foia, leaks, politics, releases, social media
Reader Comments
The First Word
“Mountains out of Mole-hills
This is a perfectly reasonable explanation and serves to highlight the troubles of the modern IT wo--
What. No. NO. This is a valid explanation. There was a bug in the CMS. IT fixed it. You can't possibly claim to start pointing fingers at IT people for doing their jobs.
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Last I heard, Comey was perfectly content to let status quo ante sit as it was, until things got out of his hands. Over 100 agents were so disgusted by the whole "yeah, she totally broke the law but no reasonable prosecutor would prosecute her for totally breaking the law" stunt that they threatened to resign en masse unless he actually did his job, so he reopened the investigation.
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No political slant here people--move along.
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I'm inclined to believe that if any actual conspiracy had occurred, both parties would have been far more competent about it, and gone to some effort not to be discovered meeting. Hanlon's razor.
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Since the time during investigations are closed for the public, it is not much different from how any other "controlled democracy" acts... We are reaching towards the Kafka methods in "The Trial".
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Mountains out of Mole-hills
This is a perfectly reasonable explanation and serves to highlight the troubles of the modern IT wo--
What. No. NO. This is a valid explanation. There was a bug in the CMS. IT fixed it. You can't possibly claim to start pointing fingers at IT people for doing their jobs.
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Re: Mountains out of Mole-hills
Their job is, explicitly, not to influence elections. Ergo, they did not do their jobs.
You know what I do when I'm working on something and I see that someone has told me to do something that violates professional ethics (such as set up an unencrypted e-mail form that prompts users for a credit card number or SSN)? I tell my supervisor.
If the IT guys didn't look at what was waiting in the queue before they fixed the CMS, then they didn't do their job.
If the IT guys did look at what was waiting in the queue before they fixed the CMS, and did it anyway, they didn't do their job.
If the IT guys looked at what was waiting in the queue before they fixed the CMS, reported it to a supervisor, and expressed concern about it, and then the supervisor said publish it anyway, then I'm a lot more sympathetic to the IT guys and a lot less sympathetic to the supervisor. But if it were me and my supervisor told me to do something unethical, I'd appeal it all the way up the chain.
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It is if they're working for a government organization where the release of certain information at certain times is a violation of professional ethics (and possibly laws).
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Mountains out of Mole-hills
The information was already released. The Twitter bot just pointed out where it was. That it happened to be tangentially related is unfortunate and entirely benign.
Even better, the Twitter bot was supposed to have already sent this information out. So if anything, the 'violation of professional ethics (and possibly laws)' is on anyone who didn't initially release it.
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fbi
lets see now, um, um, the FBI, investigating the FBI? Oh man, this is a tuff one! I wonder how it will turn out? Daaaaaa!
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It looks like who ever gets in you guys (americans) are screwed. What I can't understand is why you are not more upset about the candidates that have been handed or forced on you (depending on your take).
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I'd say most people are pretty upset.
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Prior to the rise of Donald Trump, I had committed myself to voting third-party even if it meant the election of the Republican candidate (which it wouldn't, I'm in a heavy blue state).
In the primaries, I supported Bernie Sanders.
Donald Trump had managed the difficult feat of getting me to *look forward to* voting for Hillary Clinton.
After the last week or so, I'm no longer looking forward to that, but she's still by far the better choice than the catastrophe that would be a Trump presidency.
A Hillary Clinton presidency would almost certainly not be good. However, it would also almost certainly not be catastrophic; at worst, it would be some approximation of "more of the same".
A Trump presidency *might* do *some* good things, as part of a general sort of iconoclasm. It would also almost certainly do *many* *bad* things, to the point where I'm not sure we'd recognize our country afterwards.
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Which would be relevant if we were talking about the release of any actual dirt, instead of just vague suggestions that there may, possibly, be some information that may, at some indeterminate time in the future, potentially turn out to involve dirt, maybe.
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2. The article isn't blaming IT, it's blaming the lack of FBI processes in reviewing what they publish in these situations, the FBI is a public figure in a spotlight, any release of information should be reviewed, there should be a review process when things like this occur as well.
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http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/obama-james-comey-surveillance_us_5814f125e4b0390e69d0aa65
He also found her guilty of mishandling classified email but did not recommend prosecution.
Nice try though...
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The FBI director does not "find people guilty" of things.
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Russia hacked into the FBI so they could patch the CMS system so FOIA process would work?
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