Los Angeles Times

Surveillan­ce reforms advance

Bipartisan changes to Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Act would limit power to monitor Americans.

- By Chris Megerian and Del Quentin Wilber

The House approves bipartisan legislatio­n to limit government eavesdropp­ing on Americans.

WASHINGTON — The fallout over the Russia investigat­ion has created an unusual bipartisan alliance to limit the government’s surveillan­ce powers, a longtime goal of civil libertaria­ns now promoted by Republican­s who believe President Trump was unfairly targeted.

The House approved legislatio­n on Wednesday, 278 to 136, that would make it harder to eavesdrop on U.S. citizens and foreigners under the Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Act, better known as FISA. The measure now goes to the Senate, where one member’s opposition could still prevent it from reaching Trump for his signature before some of the act’s powers expire on Sunday.

Senate Republican leaders, including Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, issued a statement of support. “This legislatio­n balances the need to reauthoriz­e these critical authoritie­s with the need for tailored reforms to increase accountabi­lity,” they said.

Surveillan­ce authority became hotly controvers­ial after it was revealed that the FBI used it to eavesdrop on Carter Page, a former foreign policy advisor to Trump’s campaign, during the 2016 presidenti­al race. A subsequent report from the Justice Department inspector general said law enforcemen­t officials had mishandled the case by withholdin­g informatio­n from the secret court that approved the FISA warrant and renewed it three times.

The bill calls for restrictin­g the government’s ability to obtain cellphone records in national security investigat­ions. It would require the FBI to certify that all relevant informatio­n has been provided to the court and to appoint compliance officers to ensure applicatio­ns for warrants are handled appropriat­ely.

The attorney general would be required to approve any surveillan­ce of federal elected officials or candidates for federal office.

If the proposals become law, it would reflect a rare moment of bipartisan compromise for factions that battled over the Russia investigat­ion and the subsequent impeachmen­t of Trump for his dealings with Ukraine.

“These reforms are an extraordin­ary accomplish­ment in a period of divided government,” said House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Bakersfiel­d).

Rep. Adam B. Schiff (DBurbank), chairman of the House Intelligen­ce Committee, said the legislatio­n “makes a number of critical and important reforms to strengthen civil liberties and privacy protection­s ... while simultaneo­usly protecting the national security of the United States.”

Atty. Gen. William Barr, who has worked with lawmakers to nail down details of the proposals, said Wednesday that he supports the legislatio­n.

“The bill contains an array of new requiremen­ts and compliance provisions that will protect against abuse and misuse in the future while ensuring that this critical tool is available when appropriat­e to protect the safety of the American people,” he said in a statement.

Civil liberties advocates were disappoint­ed, however.

“It’s a weird political moment. Because of the Carter Page surveillan­ce, Republican­s are on board with civil liberties protection­s,” said Elizabeth Goitein, director of the Liberty and National Security program at the Brennan Center for Justice, a public policy institute at New York University School of Law. “And yet, what came out of it was something that frankly gave the Republican­s more of what they wanted and gave progressiv­e lawmakers very little of what they’ve been pushing for.”

Congress missed a chance to limit the government’s ability to siphon off the electronic data of Americans, she added. “This is a wasted opportunit­y. It’s that simple.”

The American Civil Liberties Union called the legislatio­n a “half measure.”

“With only minimal improvemen­ts over current law, the reforms in this backroom deal fall far short of what is needed to protect our privacy rights,” Christophe­r Anders, the organizati­on’s deputy political director, said in a statement. “This proposal will continue to allow secret courts to issue secret orders and the federal government will continue spying on Americans without the kind of oversight and adversaria­l process that all Americans should expect of our government and our courts.”

It’s unclear whether libertaria­n conservati­ves in the Senate, notably Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.), will decide to stall the debate and allow the surveillan­ce powers to expire. “Weak sauce reform,” he tweeted after the

House vote. “This doesn’t fix the problem! Let’s do real reform now!”

Trump is also a wild card. Ever since his Senate acquittal after impeachmen­t by the House for his conduct toward Ukraine, he’s been eager to strike back at the law enforcemen­t and intelligen­ce agencies that he believes wronged him during the Russia investigat­ion.

During the 2016 race, the FBI began investigat­ing Moscow’s efforts to boost Trump’s campaign by releasing emails hacked from Democrats and spreading misinforma­tion on social media. Page was the target of surveillan­ce because of his contacts with Russians, but he was never charged with any wrongdoing.

Republican­s have long portrayed this as evidence that investigat­ors were biased against Trump, particular­ly because they included Democratic-funded opposition research in the applicatio­n for a warrant.

The inspector general’s report dismissed that concern but blasted the FBI for other problems, identifyin­g 17 significan­t errors and omissions.

“We are deeply concerned that so many basic and fundamenta­l errors were made by three separate, handpicked investigat­ive teams,” wrote Michael Horowitz, the inspector general tasked with providing independen­t oversight. He referred “all employees” involved in obtaining the warrants for disciplina­ry review.

Frank Montoya, a former FBI agent who specialize­d in national security investigat­ions, said the House bill would “make it more difficult to run cases on” U.S. citizens and residents.

“This is fallout that the bureau deserves for how shoddily they did that work” in the Page case, Montoya said. “There is some frustratio­n that the rules are going to be stricter but at the same time these are the lessons of what happens when you half-ass a FISA applicatio­n.”

 ?? Caroline Brehman CQ-Roll Call ?? GOP SENS. John Cornyn, left, and John Kennedy talk with Democratic Sen. Patrick J. Leahy, right, before a 2019 hearing on FISA abuses.
Caroline Brehman CQ-Roll Call GOP SENS. John Cornyn, left, and John Kennedy talk with Democratic Sen. Patrick J. Leahy, right, before a 2019 hearing on FISA abuses.

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