Sorry, Wrong Wiretap 166
Rick Zeman writes "CNN is covering a little-mentioned Inspector General's report which mentions that the FBI 'sometimes gets the wrong number when it intercepts conversations in terrorism investigations' due to various reasons, and that 'The FBI could not say Friday whether people are notified that their conversations were mistakenly intercepted or whether wrongly tapped telephone numbers were deleted from bureau records.'"
sounds like... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:sounds like... (Score:1)
Don't ya love FISA and the USAPATRIOT act? (Score:2)
They remind me of the Gestapo and KGB!
FalconRe:sounds like... (Score:5, Insightful)
Right. The problem really is that there USED to be judicial oversight. No more. Supporters of PATRIOT claim it's never been abused, thus it's not a problem.
Re:sounds like... (Score:1)
Doh! I thought it was awful before =(
Supporters of PATRIOT claim it's never been abused (Score:3, Interesting)
thus it's not a problem.
Who's to say it's not being abused, as they work in secrecy? "Just trust us." Not as far as I can throw you!!!
FalconRe:sounds like... (Score:2, Interesting)
Regular wiretaps must still be approved by the local federal district judge.
National security wiretaps must be approved by the The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court [fjc.gov]. I don't see anywhere where one can get by without any judicial oversight, with the possible exception of short-term emergency taps. As far as I know, those still have to be reviewed by the judiciary.
RTFA? (Score:3, Insightful)
Most people don't have to worry until they "accidentally" ask for a tap on your phone, e-mail address, and wireless phone. Even a payphone you might just use! The problem here is FBI "error", which makes me think that the court isn't asking e
Re:sounds like... (Score:2)
Re:sounds like... (Score:3, Informative)
Section I, subsection A. Paragraph 5.
Second, FISA allows a secret court to authorize U.S. intelligence agencies to conduct surveillance using each of the four basic mechanisms listed above....The secret court's role here, however, is quite limited: it is not supposed to "second-guess" the government's certifications or representations. (Unsurprisingly, the secret FISA court has only denied one application in its over twenty-year existence.)
Third party information, b
Re:Supporters of the imPatriot Act... (Score:3, Insightful)
Very simple. Read some history. Read about Hoover's direction of the FBI, McCarthy, COINTELPRO, and REALIZE, that one of the primary roles of the FBI (at least within the past 50 years) has been to trample all over people and freedom in general. Not terrorists, PEOPLE...American citizens...supposedly living in a 'free' country.
Re:Supporters of the imPatriot Act... (Score:2)
IIRC another problem with Hoover's FBI is that they tended to ignore the likes of actual criminals...
Re:sounds like... (Score:2)
Re:sounds like... (Score:1)
Re:sounds like... (Score:2)
No Knock (Score:5, Interesting)
How will Chief Justice Roberts rule on torture [nwsource.com] of "mistakenly" captured people? The Supreme Court Chief Justice controls the secret FISA court [hiwaay.net] which governs domestic spying. Not to mention the Chief Justice's control of whether foreign rulings have legal standing in American courts. When the government tortures to death Harry Buttle instead of Harry Tuttle [wikipedia.org], will Mrs. Buttle even be entitled to a refund?
Re:No Knock (Score:5, Insightful)
Those facts are among the stark facts that make the "we need private guns so we can inhibit the police state" line of propaganda so clearly invalid. The police and army, armed forces of the state, are going to destroy any armed resistance. Widespread armament just escalates the conflict, when it occurs, to ensure people are killed, the state's forces dehumanize the people they're attacking. And that the people kill each other, while they're waiting to defend from the police "takeover". In reality, we have decades of experience in countries around the world showing that nonviolent resistance is a much more effective way to oppose state rule by force. Neither strategy works very well, but "armed resistance" doesn't work at all, and "nonviolent resistance" works more often than not, while preserving the people's life, dignity and organization until a confrontation that the people can win.
Re:No Knock (Score:2)
Re:No Knock (Score:2)
Re:No Knock (Score:2)
Re:No Knock (Score:2)
Y
Re:No Knock (Score:2)
And the NRA is hardly an organization of gun owners which can compete with the US Marines.
Really, do you think that all you have to do to make your point is stuff specious remarks into the blank when you get to reply? Your suggestio
Re:No Knock (Score:2)
Re:No guns? Then we can rename the US to China II (Score:2)
Really, yo
Oops, wrong line... (Score:4, Insightful)
Err... nevermind. (Score:1)
Oops, wrong door... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Oops, wrong line... (Score:2)
I'd believe the same train of thought would be applicable to this, a good faith effort to tap the right phone and end up with the wrong one would probably still be admissable in court.
Re:Oops, wrong line... (Score:3, Insightful)
Wiretaps are only given with permission of a court to a specific person (or specific people). Being permitted by a judge to wiretap a suspected bomb plotter and then accidentily tapping the wrong line and overhearing someone doing a drug deal is not a "good faith" effort. You were not making an effort to tap the WRONG phone (how can it be a "good faith" effort to admit into evidence of a phone line you didn't mean to tap?). You were not given permission to tap
Re:Oops, wrong line... (Score:5, Insightful)
No notice to family. No procedures. They just come in grab you and send you off. No phone call to a lawyer. No reasons. Just get hauled off into the gulag for no reason (except to the FBI's whims - say you have a contrarian political view and are deemed a _political_ threat).
The long slope into a blatent facist state we have embarked on.
Not admissable (Score:1, Flamebait)
Re:Not admissable (Score:2, Insightful)
Now that's a fucking lame excuse for breaking my rights.
Re:Not admissable (Score:3, Funny)
Lesson in Logic (Score:2)
Re:Not admissable (Score:2)
And that's the real problem. (Score:2)
They "may" not do so legally, due to the exclusionary rule and various other bits of case law.
However, even though this isn't "supposed" to happen, if a cop who accidentally gains information passes that along to someone else informally, especially someone in a different LEA branch, who then acts on a hunch and star
Re:And that's the real problem. (Score:2)
Actually this is not realy the case. When you are in the public transportation system the police have the right to search you and your property without a warrant. I know, it sounds wrong, but it is true. If you are in an airport, bus station or even on a public road they need no warrant. They can just walk up to you, ask to search your bag o
Because everyone knows (Score:2)
This is just one more reason... (Score:3, Insightful)
The government might be ominous, but its run by humans, and they are too busy tripping on their own resume's to do anything truthfully scary. Its only individuals who are left without oversight that can be scary... groups of people.. pfft! Hitler and Mousolini were individuals... groups of people just don't manage to get it together fast enough or hard enough... self regulating so to speak...
Now, if individuals are doing wiretaps... could be different
Re:This is just one more reason... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:This is just one more reason... (Score:1)
Re:This is just one more reason... (Score:5, Funny)
Good evening citizen, and thanks for granting explicit permission for us to wiretap your internet connection. Now if you'd be so kind as to provide us with your IP address, we can proceed at once.
Yours in freedom,
Federal Bureau of Investigation
Re:This is just one more reason... (Score:3, Interesting)
Not true (Score:5, Insightful)
Governments dont have to be efficient, in fact the incompetence is what is scary. Innocent people will get screwed and the guilty will go free. The commies failed because even though they killed a lot of people, it was not necessarily the people they wanted to get. That's what the lack of oversight brings. The reason oversight is frowned upon is so that mistakes can be covered up.
If you are innocent, beware of inefficient groups of people.
Sadly there are those who dont care if there are innocent people getting screwed, as long as it's not them and they feel safe.
It's cheaper to "sacrifice" some innocents than to find out if their punishment is deserved.
Why do you think people support the idea of not finding out whether a non citizen is guilty before locking them up for life in Gitmo?
I'm keeping my tinfoil hat on. Tight.
Re:Not true (Score:4, Insightful)
Ugh! For cryin' out loud, how do comments like this get modded insightful?
They weren't "commies". Communism had little to do with their government, let alone killing millions of people.
Communism is what could be considered the utopia government. Everyone works together and contributes to the whole, and everyone gets an equal and fair share.
But as has been shown in the past, the shiny happy cumbaya governments always fail or turn into something ugly due to the faults in human nature. People get greedy, and things fall apart from there.
All the "communist" regimes I know of (I could be missing some) are more authoratarian or fascist in nature. They claim to be communist but they aren't.
~X~
The problem with communism (Score:3, Insightful)
That opened a much larger window for the evil and violent sociopaths to get to the top and start running the show.
Otherwise, you might just have the run of the mill sociopaths, who would be like those parasites that don't inflict so much harm to their hosts. If you are fortunate some of those sociopaths might actually choose
Hah. (Score:2)
Re:This is just one more reason... (Score:3, Insightful)
Yeah, as long as it's the government itself, and not some human being listening in on you, there's no problem.
Re:This is just one more reason... (Score:2)
There is no such thing as "they".
Everything that is done in our names through government is done by individuals who sometimes act in concert but always act alone. Individuals act and pursue their own values sometimes righteous, sometimes not. Referring to a "government" as doing anything is always just a generalized abstraction for the individuals who are bestowed with power and responsibilities.
Individuals are vindictive, self absorbed, self rig
oh, you KNOW, do you? (Score:2)
Carnivore and storage (Score:2)
If this is true, then there could be one silver lining to all the spam out there...
They're just making excuses... (Score:3, Funny)
For all those times they "accidentally intercept" 1-900 sex lines...
"We had reason to believe Ossama Bin Ladin calls this number frequently."
Re: (Score:1)
Shocking!! The Government Ain't Perfect (Score:4, Insightful)
Police sometimes arrest the wrong people who haven't committed any crime.
Juries someimte convict the wrong person.
The FBI isn't perfect.
This is not exactly earth-shattering news here, unless you believe the government is some evil,perfect conspiracy out to get you. There's very little news value in this story.
Scuttlemonkey, why'd you have to make that dig about saying oops makes it ok? Nobody would say that, so why'd you have to flamebait like a troll? The editors just get worse and worse.
Re:Shocking!! The Government Ain't Perfect (Score:3, Informative)
No! Next you'll be telling me that moderators sometimes label "informative" posts "insightful"
Re:Shocking!! The Government Ain't Perfect (Score:2, Informative)
Yes, but they need either a warrant or a very good reason such as witnessing you committing the crime, finding you covered in blood near a murder scene, etc.. That's the way it used to be with wiretaps. Thanks to the inappropriately named patriot act, they can do it to anyone at any time, without notification.
Re:Shocking!! The Government Ain't Perfect (Score:2)
Re:Shocking!! The Government Ain't Perfect (Score:2)
You can argue about the nature of the harm (in the privacy violation) if you want, but it's still there.
The other important aspect may be that if wiretappers know that they (or someone) has to acknowledge the mistake to the persons involved, they're likely to be more careful in getting it right. Conversely, if they know that any mistakes they make will automatically be covere
You missed the point, idiot... (Score:2)
Re:Shocking!! The Government Ain't Perfect (Score:2)
So can we have some laws which don't assume that the FBI is perfect?
Sorry, Wrong Wiretap (Score:5, Informative)
The FBI could not say Friday whether people are notified that their conversations were mistakenly intercepted or whether wrongly tapped telephone numbers were deleted from bureau records.
Why should they tell people their phones were tapped and conversations recorded? I'd bet that the people involved would get vocal about wiretaps.
use of warrants issued by a court that operates in secret under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act.
They use secret courts so they aren't accountable to the people who pay their salary, the taxpayers.
FalconRe: Sorry, Wrong Wiretap (Score:2)
Re: Sorry, Wrong Wiretap (Score:2)
Quite right, they shouldn't. If they accidentally overheard my conversation without intending to, they need not tell me so as long as they destroy the data. Why? Beacuse I was not harmed in any way and I do not need to know that FBI is performing wiretaps somewhere in my area. Maybe they meant to wiretap my neighbor (and they have the warrants and believe he is, say, a serial killer), but telling me about their accidental wiretapping would make me tell my neighbor about this, just as something interesting t
Oh No! ... (Score:1)
Not just the FBI (Score:1, Interesting)
cough cough [gwu.edu]
Deleted? Yeah, right. (Score:3)
Re:Deleted? Yeah, right. (Score:3, Funny)
The slashdot view (Score:3, Insightful)
When you make a mistake on your taxes in your favor ?
When the cable company is accidentally giving you free porn ?
What would be the actual upshot of the FBI reporting these errors ? We'd have another source of employment for lawyers and another way to waste limited law enforcement resources.
The pursuit of criminal and or investigations is both a legitimate and neccesesary function of the government. The prople that complain most about the government doing its job are the same people that get the most upset when something untoward occurs.
Re:The slashdot view (Score:5, Insightful)
With power comes responsibility. If the FBI could get away with wiretapping the wrong person, how long before they wiretap anyone?
The question shouldn't be why not allow the police to do something, but should they be allowed to do something with the approiate oversight?
Just because I don't have anything to hide doesn't mean I shouldn't hide my life, using encryption and such.
Re:The slashdot view (Score:2)
Hence the concept of "high crimes". However it too often appears that such people are held to lower standards than members of the public, especially when it comes to breaking the law.
Re:The Free Country view (Score:2)
There's something called the U.S. Constitution (and the accompanying Bill of Rights), and there's something called Due Process. When you combine these you get a certain set of restrictions that detail what the government can and cannot do in order to enforce the law. Amendment IV of the Constitution is very clear about unreasonable search and seizure - the entire premize is founded on the idea that you're *suspected* of *having committed* a crime (thereby giving law enforcement the right to search), whereas
Re:The slashdot view (Score:2)
Every one of these "errors" could have equalled a real terrorist getting away with murder. That's the real waste of law enforcement resources here.
Without accountability there is no reason to improve other than an inner desire to be better, and if the FBI had that, we wouldn't have various stories of agents abusing wiretap resources for insider trading purposes, and they might have taken the extra 15 seconds to confirm the phone number in each of these
Re:The slashdot view (Score:2)
Re:The slashdot view (Score:5, Insightful)
Remember that we're all presumed innocent. To take an example of encryption, just because I'm using encryption does not mean that I am plotting nefarious schemes against my fellow citizens. I may be discussing confidential business things, for example. Y'know, dare I say it, I might actually work from home in an effort to not drive my car around and burn gas, hurt the environment, etc., etc.
These sorts of mistakes can be dangerous. Imagine the above example--I'm some bigshot business-guy. I own a publicly traded company. The FBI inadvertently taps my phone and learns that someone at the company I work for has just invented something that will make the company a ton of money. Do you really think those agents aren't going to call up their stock-brokers and say, "BUY! BUY! BUY!" (Or, assume the other direction, if you prefer)
Frankly, yes. I want to make it difficult for the government to wiretap it's citizens. I want somebody to look at the evidence that has been accumulated and act as my representative to say, "Hey, wait. Just because he encrypts his phone calls doesn't mean he's a terrorist." I want somebody to second-guess these guys.
The story of the gutsy cop who goes against procedure to nab the bad guys before they enact their evil deeds is a great movie. But it's not real life--remember, in most cases we get the see the bad guys planning their acts in the movies so we know who the bad guy is. Reality is not that cut-and-dried.
In short, I'm more worried about the government abusing it's power than of the terrorists blowing up a building. That happens alot more often.
Re:The slashdot view (Score:2)
These things aren't even mutually exclusive. Governments quite frequently support terrorists, even those acting against their own citizens.
Re:The slashdot view (Score:2)
Sic transit gloria America.
Re:The slashdot view (Score:2)
At best evesdropping on random people does nothing to prevent harm. At worst those doing the evesdropping are harming members of the public.
Do you really want to make that harder than it needs to be ?
What makes you think that giving government lots of special powers and privileges, without any oversight, will ensure that they will do a decent job of protecting anyone from anything? In practice y
Re:The slashdot view (Score:2)
A
Re:The slashdot view (Score:2)
You should probably be suprised if there wern't. Since that would have made the CIA about the only "intelligence service" on the planet to have suck to it's public mandate. (Either by policy or by being lucky enough to have no criminal members.)
Re:The slashdot view (Score:3, Insightful)
The "patriot" act was around for at least 4 years before 9-11 bec
Re:The slashdot view (Score:2)
Do you really think AlQuaeda should be able to hide behind being a religous organi
Mistakes?? (Score:1)
Official Notification (Score:4, Funny)
In Soviet America... (Score:2)
Backlog (Score:3, Insightful)
Radicode
Re:Backlog (Score:2)
Erm, that's 4 years divided by the number of microphones that they have recording stuff. So, it may only be a week old, there's just lots of bandwidth.
It would take 4 years to listen to it all if you only had one person listening to it. How many people do you suppose they have on staff?
Re:Backlog (Score:2)
For all we know that could be a week's worth. We don't know how much they record each day or how many people they have listening to it.
One day... (Score:3, Interesting)
Oblig. bash.org quote (Score:5, Funny)
<Stormrider> I should bomb something
<Stormrider>
<Stormrider> Just in case the FBI ever needs anything on me
<Elzie_Ann> I'm sure they can just get it from someone who DOES log chats.
*** FBI has joined #gamecubecafe
<FBI> We saw it anyway.
*** FBI has quit IRC (Quit: )
Re:One day... (Score:2)
What about the Constitution? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:What about the Constitution? (Score:3, Insightful)
Most people in the US would rather wipe their ass with it than try to read and comprehend it.
And then the people elect officials with the same view. Over the past few years "We The People..." have sat idly by as all those flag wavers in raped and pillaged the founding document of this country.
We let them do it. We encouraged them to do it. And some seem so shocked when they hear about it.
It's comedi
Re:What about the Constitution? (Score:2)
If the wiretap leads to other evidence, that probably wouldn't have been found without the knowledge gained from the tap, is the other evidence also tainted enough to get thrown out? What if it would've been found out, but now there's no way of knowing? The loophole might be that
Re:What about the Constitution? (Score:2)
1) "Notification of crime before investigation" is not in the Constitution. You're thinking of notification of crime upon arrest.
2) Somebody else posted about Habeas Corpus - not what you thought.
3) "No one has a right to listen to the conversation" is nothing to do with anything. Any public conversation is free game, wiretaps, searches etc. are normally supposed to be the result of a warrant from a judge.
4) You are not free fro
Re:What about the Constitution? (Score:2)
Part of the blame .... (Score:2, Insightful)
But, you do bring up a point that a lot of folks have been asking- especially after Katrina.
There was advanced warning of a disaster, and there still was a lack of coordination and a delayed response. If TSA and local authorities couldn't get their act together with advanced warning, what are they going to do if we get attacked? And you're exactly right: How is it that these billions of dollars are being spent just to get what we saw these
Re:Who cares? (Score:5, Insightful)
Or better : (Score:2)
A better way would be "show me a pedestrian which never broke the law by crossing outside Zebra (white stripped) line and..." But it does not come as insightful or funny
Re:Inspector General? (Score:2)
Unfortunately... (Score:2)
Maybe we need a constitutional amendment to allow only "draft picks" to appear on ballots?
Groucho Marx said: "I refuse to join any club that would have me as a member"
Maybe we'd be better off if we said "I don't want to vote for anyone who wants to run".