Houston Chronicle Sunday

Official who probed reporters reassigned

- By Shane Harris

WASHINGTON — A senior Department of Homeland Security official whose office compiled “intelligen­ce reports” about journalist­s and protesters in Portland, Ore., has been removed from his job, according to three people familiar with the matter.

Brian Murphy, the acting undersecre­tary for intelligen­ce and analysis, was reassigned to a new position elsewhere in the department, the people said, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss a personnel matter.

Acting homeland security secretary Chad Wolf made the decision on Friday, one person said.

Murphy’s removal follows revelation­s in The Washington Post that the Intelligen­ce and Analysis Office (I & A) at DHS compiled Open Source Intelligen­ce Reports about the work of two journalist­s who had published leaked department documents. In a separate intelligen­ce report, the office also analyzed the communicat­ions of protesters in Portland.

Wolf ordered I & A to stop collecting informatio­n on journalist­s after The Post article was published on Thursday.

Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., the chairman of the House Intelligen­ce Committee, said Saturday that he was concerned Murphy “may have provided incomplete and potentiall­y misleading informatio­n to Committee staff ” during a recent briefing about the office’s activities in Portland. After news reports that DHS had expanded some of its authoritie­s to monitor protesters, the committee had demanded a broad range of documents and informatio­n.

“We will be expanding our oversight even further in the coming days,” Schiff said in a statement.

Murphy had previously told staff on the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee his office did not collect, analyze or exploit informatio­n on the electronic devices or accounts of protesters. On Friday, Democratic senators sent Murphy a letter asking him to confirm that was true.

Murphy is a former FBI agent who worked on the bureau’s efforts to combat radicaliza­tion. Current and former colleagues have described him as hard-charging and driven and said he has a history of defying managers and bosses.

Some current officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to speak candidly, said Murphy has earned a reputation at DHS for aggressive­ly trying to expand the operations of the intelligen­ce office. Although it is technicall­y an element of the broader intelligen­ce community, I & A publishes reports largely based on unclassifi­ed or public sources and is not designed to engage in clandestin­e operations like the FBI or the CIA.

Murphy tried to fashion the office into more of an operationa­l player, akin to those larger agencies, and drew scrutiny and criticism internally over his efforts, some officials said. One noted that I & A’s collection of informatio­n involving journalist­s was effectivel­y the last straw and led to his ouster.

Officials have also worried Murphy was misapplyin­g the authoritie­s of I & A.

For example, the intelligen­ce reports about the journalist­s’ work appeared to justify collecting the informatio­n under a standing requiremen­t for intelligen­ce about cybersecur­ity threats. It was unclear how tweets by journalist­s constitute­d a threat to cybersecur­ity, which the department usually interprets as hackers trying to disable critical infrastruc­ture or break into classified computers.

Recently, Murphy tried to broaden the definition of violent protesters in Portland, in a way that some officials felt was intended to curry favor with the White House.

In an internal memo, Murphy announced that the label “violent opportunis­ts,” which his office had used to describe people who were attacking law enforcemen­t personnel and property, would be changed to “violent antifa anarchists inspired,” according to an internal memo.

Murphy argued that the violent protesters were not merely taking advantage of a moment but had “overwhelmi­ngly” been linked to radical ideologies “driving individual­s toward violence.” That conclusion was undercut by an earlier DHS analysis that found there was not enough informatio­n about the Portland protesters for the department to know how they might be connected to anti-fascist or anarchist groups and what precisely was motivating them. Many of the protests in Portland have been peaceful and in response to police violence around the country.

 ??  ?? Brian Murphy’s office compiled intelligen­ce reports on journalist­s.
Brian Murphy’s office compiled intelligen­ce reports on journalist­s.

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