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From
Bloomberg:
For years, we civil libertarians were told
that our concerns about the secret court that oversees the FBI’s
applications to monitor U.S. citizens were overblown. So what if the
Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court approved more than 99% of all
applications. The bureau and Justice Department must follow an onerous process, we were assured, that protects innocent citizens from being snooped on by their government.
Those
assurances, as it turns out, were not very reliable. On Tuesday, the
Justice Department Inspector General Michael Horowitz issued a new report
that found systematic errors of fact in the FBI’s applications for
warrants under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. The memo does
not speak to the materiality or significance of those errors — but they
are startling nonetheless.
Out of 42 applications, the report says, 39 included major
defects. All told, the inspector general uncovered 390 deficiencies,
including “unverified, inaccurate, or inadequately supported facts, as
well as typographical errors.”
The memo follows the report Horowitz issued in December that
reviewed four FISA warrants for Carter Page, a former foreign policy
adviser to then-candidate Donald Trump’s 2106 presidential campaign. The
bureau suspected him of being a Russian agent, but the report found
that it repeatedly relied on an opposition research dossier to persuade
the secret court to renew the surveillance warrant even after agents
knew the dossier was riddled with errors. Rules that have been in place
for nearly 20 years to verify the accuracy of facts presented in the
warrant and include exculpatory information, known as the Woods
procedures, were ignored.
The December report was a black eye for the bureau. It prompted one judge on the surveillance court to reprimand the agents involved in the Page applications, temporarily barring them from appearing before it. (Read more.)
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