Santa Fe New Mexican

Watchdog finds new problems with FBI wiretap applicatio­ns

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WASHINGTON — The Justice Department inspector general has found additional failures in the FBI’s handling of a secretive surveillan­ce program that came under scrutiny after the Russia investigat­ion, identifyin­g problems with dozens of applicatio­ns for wiretaps in national security investigat­ions.

The audit results, announced Tuesday by Inspector General Michael Horowitz, suggest that FBI errors while eavesdropp­ing on suspected spies and terrorists extend far beyond those made during the investigat­ion into ties between Russia and the 2016 Trump campaign. They come as the FBI has scrambled to repair public confidence in how it uses its surveillan­ce powers and as lawmakers uneasy about potential abuses have allowed certain of its tools to at least temporaril­y expire.

The new findings are on top of problems identified last year by the watchdog office, which concluded the FBI had made significan­t errors and omissions in applicatio­ns to eavesdrop on former Trump campaign adviser Carter Page during the early months of the Russia investigat­ion. Those mistakes prompted internal changes within the FBI and spurred a congressio­nal debate over whether the bureau’s surveillan­ce tools should be reined in.

After the Russia report was submitted last December, Horowitz announced a broader audit of the FBI’s spy powers and the accuracy of its applicatio­ns before the secretive Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Court.

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