Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

FBI’s intelligen­ce data access stirs privacy issues

-

WASHINGTON — It’s 3 a.m. when a security guard notices a man taking photograph­s of the Key Bridge a few miles from the White House. There’s been no crime, but the guard is suspicious and passes the man’s license plate number to the FBI.

In a case like this, the FBI might query databases containing foreign intelligen­ce collected overseas. An agent might learn nothing or might find out the plate belongs to an American communicat­ing online with a suspected Islamic State militant.

It’s these scraps of data that can help foil plots and save lives, the government contends. But as Congress considers how to reauthoriz­e the law governing the government’s use of such informatio­n, lawmakers from both parties want stricter controls to better protect privacy.

FBI Director Christophe­r Wray crafted the bridge story to show why his agents shouldn’t have to get a warrant before querying foreign intelligen­ce informatio­n legally gathered overseas. The FBI’s use of foreign intelligen­ce is at the heart of the debate over the future of the 2008 Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Amendments Act, including Section 702. The law is to expire Dec. 31.

“Let’s say you find out that this person photograph­ing the Key Bridge has been communicat­ing with a known Islamic State recruiter, which is the kind of informatio­n that’s in the 702 database,” Wray said at a recent forum on the subject. The FBI agent, Wray said, is “not going to be able to get a warrant just based on that to search the database.”

But the government already has many tools it can use to collect informatio­n about someone without a warrant, said Democratic Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon, a staunch advocate of privacy rights. He said it can obtain phone records — who someone called and when — without a warrant.

“That will show if this bridge suspect is talking to terrorists,” Wyden said. “Going straight to reading the content of private communicat­ions without a warrant is an end-run around the Fourth Amendment,” which protects Americans from unreasonab­le searches and seizures.

There is bipartisan agreement that the law is invaluable in helping the U.S. track foreign spies, terrorists, weapons traffickin­g and cyber criminals. But some members of Congress and privacy advocates want greater protection­s for the communicat­ions of Americans that also are picked up.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States