Kuwait Times

FBI releases iPhone files of shooter

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The FBI on Friday released 100 pages of heavily censored documents related to its agreement with an unidentifi­ed vendor to hack into an iPhone used by one of the San Bernardino, California, shooters, but it did not identify whom it paid to perform the work or how much it cost. The records were provided in response to a federal lawsuit filed against the FBI by AP, Vice Media and Gannett, the parent company of USA Today.

The media organizati­ons sued in September to learn how much the FBI paid and who it hired to break into the phone of Syed Rizwan Farook, who along with his wife killed 14 people at a holiday gathering of county workers in December 2015. The FBI for weeks had maintained that only Apple Inc. could access the informatio­n on its phone, which was protected by encryption, but ultimately broke or bypassed Apple’s digital locks with the help of an unnamed third party.

The FBI, in its records release Friday, censored critical details that would have shown how much the FBI paid, whom it hired and how it opened the phone. The files had been marked “secret” before they were turned over under the lawsuit. The files make clear that the FBI signed a nondisclos­ure agreement with the vendor. The records also show that the FBI received at least three inquiries from companies interested in developing a product to unlock the phone, but none had the ability to come up with a solution fast enough for the FBI.

The FBI also said in contractin­g documents that it did not solicit competing bids or proposals because it thought widely disclosing the bureau’s needs could harm national security. The lawsuit was filed months after the FBI’s sudden announceme­nt in March that it had purchased a tool from an unidentifi­ed third party to open Farook’s phone. The disclosure aborted a court fight that began when a federal judge had directed Apple to help the FBI break into the phone. The suit by the media organizati­ons argued there was no legal basis to withhold the informatio­n and challenged the adequacy of the FBI’s search for relevant records. — AP

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