Did the FBI destroy e-mails involving Osama bin Laden's
network
An internal FBI memo says
agents destroyed evidence gathered in an investigation involving Osama bin Laden's network
after its e-mail wiretap system mistakenly captured information to which the agency was
not entitled.
The FBI software not only picked up the e-mails of its target "but also picked up
e-mails on non-covered targets," said a March 2000 memo to agency headquarters in
Washington. "The FBI technical person was apparently so upset that he destroyed all
the e-mail take, including the take on" the suspect, the memo said.
A Justice Department official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Tuesday night that
the e-mails were not destroyed. The official did not elaborate or try to reconcile the
statement with the memo.
The episode was described in documents made public through a Freedom of Information Act
request filed by the Electronic Privacy Information Center, a Washington advocacy group.
The material was not included in an original release but became public after a federal
judge ordered the bureau to give out more documents.
At issue was an investigation in Denver in which the FBI's bin Laden unit was using the
bureau's Carnivore system to conduct electronic surveillance of a suspect under a Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Act warrant. The suspect's name and other information
identifying details of the investigation were marked out of the letter.
The memo surfaced as the FBI was addressing concerns it mishandled aspects of terrorism
investigation prior to the Sept. 11 attacks. Those concerns include a warning from its
Phoenix office about Arab pilots training in the United States last July.
As an outgrowth of that and other much-criticized FBI actions before the attacks, the
agency is to form a new office of intelligence and strengthen its oversight of
counterterror investigations. Attorney General John Ashcroft and FBI Director Robert
Mueller were expected to outline high-profile changes Wednesday at the FBI's headquarters,
including closer ties to the CIA and an overhaul of the FBI's outdated computer systems.
FBI officials refused on Tuesday to discuss the Carnivore memo or the investigation it
referred to. They did, however, say that the bin Laden unit at FBI headquarters handles
only investigations involving suspected activity by his terror network.
The memo shows FBI agents were worried about the fallout in the Denver case.
The Justice Department's Office of Intelligence and Policy Review was furious after
learning the evidence captured by the e-mail wiretap system was destroyed because of the
glitch, the memo states. "To state that she was unhappy at ITOS (International
Terrorism Operations Center) and the UBL (bin Laden) unit is an understatement," the
memo stated, quoting a Justice official.
The memo said Justice officials worried the destruction of the evidence would signal an
"inability on the part of the FBI to manage" the warrants that are key tools in
espionage and anti-terrorism cases.
Privacy groups and some members of Congress have complained that Carnivore had the
potential to collect more information than allowed by a warrant. "Here's confirmation
of the fact that not only did it do that, but it resulted in a loss of legitimately
acquired intelligence," said David Sobel, general counsel of EPIC.
To allay Congress's concerns, FBI General Counsel Larry Parkinson testified in July 2000,
"We do not deploy (Carnivore) in a way that exceeds the court order." The e-mail
from an unnamed author to M.E. "Spike" Bowman, the FBI's associate general
counsel for national security, said Denver agents installed the e-mail surveillance system
in March 16, 2000, but the device did not work correctly.
Henry Perritt, who led a team authorized by the FBI to review the surveillance system,
said he was surprised the technician deleted the e-mails. "The collection is supposed
to be retained for judicial review," Perritt said. "If an agent simply deleted a
whole bunch of files without the court instructing, that's not the way it's supposed to
work."
Another document released through the privacy group's request explains the bureau's policy
for overcollection on a surveillance warrant. The memo, dated just a week after the Denver
e-mail, says the e-mails should be kept under seal so that senior FBI officials can figure
out how the wiretap went wrong.
The unintended targets of the FBI's snooping may have deserved notification that the
mistake was made, the FBI memo said.
Authorities have used Carnivore-type tools more than 25 times in all types of criminal
cases, to catch fugitives, drug dealers, extortionists and suspected foreign intelligence
agents. Carnivore is now called DCS-1000.
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