Los Angeles Times

SURVEILLAN­CE CONFUSION

Disclosure of inadverten­t spying on Trump team stokes confusion

- By David S. Cloud david.cloud@latimes.com

The disclosure by Rep. Devin Nunes about the inadverten­t surveillan­ce of members of President Trump’s transition team raises questions that could take months to answer.

WASHINGTON — The disclosure by Rep. Devin Nunes (R-Tulare), chairman of the House Intelligen­ce Committee, that communicat­ions by Trump transition members were inadverten­tly picked up by U.S. surveillan­ce legally collecting foreign intelligen­ce raises questions that are likely to consume Congress and the White House for months.

Among them:

Who in the Trump transition team was captured by the sur veillance?

That’s not clear. Nunes gave no names other than to say it was possible that then-President-elect Trump might have been mentioned in classified intelligen­ce reports written at the time.

Numerous transition officials may have communicat­ed with foreign ambassador­s or others in the U.S. who were under courtautho­rized surveillan­ce for counterint­elligence purposes — and thus inadverten­tly had their communicat­ions monitored by U.S. intelligen­ce. White House Chief of Staff Reince Priebus, White House aide Stephen Miller, Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner and Trump’s adult children all played formal roles in Trump’s transition, along with many other Trump associates and former government officials. Nunes himself was a member of the transition executive committee. Who were Trump transition members talking to?

Again, Nunes didn’t say, except to note that the surveillan­ce was not part of an ongoing FBI investigat­ion into whether the Trump campaign coordinate­d with Russian authoritie­s who were meddling in the election. In addition to foreign diplomats or other obvious contacts, the U.S. intelligen­ce dragnet could include almost any person in the United States under court-approved surveillan­ce who was in contact with transition officials or who claimed to have been in contact with Trump transition members.

What were they talking about?

Again, Nunes didn’t say. But it’s most likely that the classified intelligen­ce reports that Nunes cited discussed either attempts to influence the incoming Trump administra­tion or policy changes that a foreign government was considerin­g in response to Trump’s election. It’s also possible that the surveillan­ce picked up discussion­s about business deals, though that is unlikely to generate intelligen­ce reports unless the communicat­ions suggested a crime was being committed.

Was the sur veillance done under a Foreign Intelligen­ce Sur veillance Act warrant?

Nunes said it was, which suggests that the communicat­ions occurred between Trump transition officials and other people in the U.S., not overseas, since the National Security Agency doesn’t need a warrant to conduct eavesdropp­ing overseas.

What are the requiremen­ts for getting a FISA warrant?

The FBI asks a special federal court that conducts its proceeding­s in secret for such a warrant when it has reason to believe someone in the U.S. is acting as an agent of a foreign power — in the worst-case scenario, conducting espionage against the United States. But it’s also possible to get FISA warrants to intercept routine communicat­ions by ambassador­s and other foreign officials in the United States, which seems to be how Trump’s former national security advisor, Michael Flynn, was detected on phone calls with Russia’s ambassador last year.

Aren’t the identities of U.S. persons who are picked up inadverten­tly by sur veillance supposed to be protected under the FISA law?

Yes. But senior intelligen­ce officials can decide to include their names or other identifyin­g informatio­n in classified intelligen­ce reports if they decided that doing so is important for understand­ing the intelligen­ce, or if it shows clear evidence of a potential crime. This process, known as unmasking, could have happened with the Trump transition team. Nunes said it had, but Rep. Adam B. Schiff (D-Burbank) said in most cases he had been told the identities were not unmasked but were obvious. So far, Flynn is the only member of Trump’s team known to have been picked up by the surveillan­ce.

How did Nunes get the informatio­n?

He said he got it from intelligen­ce sources but did not identify them.

Does this mean President Trump was correct to claim on Twitter that he was wiretapped by President Obama?

No. There is no evidence of a wiretap at Trump Tower — as FBI Director James B. Comey confirmed in public testimony this week — and the intercepts were not aimed at Trump or his aides. They targeted foreign intelligen­ce figures with whom Trump transition team members apparently were communicat­ing.

What’s the impact of all this?

At a minimum, it has disrupted the House Intelligen­ce Committee’s efforts to conduct a bipartisan investigat­ion into Russia’s role in the election. Schiff, the ranking Democrat, was furious that Nunes held a news conference and then briefed the president Wednesday without sharing the informatio­n with the committee. On Thursday, a committee aide said Nunes had apologized “for not sharing informatio­n about the documents he saw with the minority before going public” and that he “pledged to work with them on this issue.”

 ?? Mark Wilson Getty Images ??
Mark Wilson Getty Images
 ?? Mark Wilson Getty Images ?? HOUSE INTELLIGEN­CE COMMITTEE Chairman Devin Nunes (R-Tulare) apologized for going public with his startling revelation before sharing that informatio­n with the full committee, a panel aide said.
Mark Wilson Getty Images HOUSE INTELLIGEN­CE COMMITTEE Chairman Devin Nunes (R-Tulare) apologized for going public with his startling revelation before sharing that informatio­n with the full committee, a panel aide said.

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