Houston Chronicle

Senator says FBI paid $900,000 for iPhone hacking

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WASHINGTON — Sen. Dianne Feinstein, the top Democrat on the Senate committee that oversees the FBI, said publicly this week that the government paid $900,000 to break into the locked iPhone of a gunman in the San Bernardino, Calif., shootings.

The FBI considers the figure to be classified informatio­n. It also has protected the identity of the vendor it paid to do the work. Both pieces of informatio­n are the subject of a federal lawsuit by news organizati­ons that seeks to force the FBI to reveal them.

An FBI spokeswoma­n declined to comment Friday. Feinstein cited the amount while questionin­g FBI Director James Comey at a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing Wednesday.

“I was so struck when San Bernardino happened and you made overtures to allow that device to be opened, and then the FBI had to spend $900,000 to hack it open,” said Feinstein, D-Calif. “And as I subsequent­ly learned of some of the reason for it, there were good reasons to get into that device.”

Comey hinted at a ballpark range last year, saying the government paid more than he would earn in his remaining seven years on the job, an amount that would have been more than $1 million. He has called the sum “worth it.”

The federal government paid the money as it cut short an extraordin­ary court fight with Apple Inc., which was resisting a magistrate judge’s order to help the Justice Department hack into the phone of Syed Rizwan Farook, who along with his wife killed 14 people in a San Bernardino attack in December 2015. The work phone was found after the shooting.

An unidentifi­ed third party came forward last March, ahead of a muchantici­pated court hearing, with a solution to open the device.

The AP and other news organizati­ons last year filed a public records lawsuit to learn how much the FBI paid, and the identity of the vendor.

The Justice Department has said in court filings that that informatio­n was properly classified. It argued that the informatio­n it withheld, if released, could be seized upon by “hostile entities” that could develop their own countermea­sures.

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