Santa Fe New Mexican

Rep. says FBI wrongly searched his name

Ill. lawmaker accuses agency of looking him up in foreign surveillan­ce data during House hearing

- By Nomaan Merchant and Eric Tucker

WASHINGTON — A Republican lawmaker on Thursday accused the FBI of wrongly searching for his name in foreign surveillan­ce data, underscori­ng the challenges ahead for U.S. officials trying to persuade Congress to renew their authoritie­s to collect huge swaths of communicat­ions.

Rep. Darin LaHood, R-Ill., did not say why the FBI may have searched his name in informatio­n collected under a provision of the Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Act known as Section 702, and a spokesman for the lawmaker did not respond to a request for further clarificat­ion.

At a hearing of the House Intelligen­ce Committee, LaHood pressed FBI Director Chris Wray to acknowledg­e that his agency and others had at times violated the rules on the use of data collected through electronic snooping.

“We clearly have work to do, and we’re eager to do it with this committee, to show that we can be worthy stewards of these important authoritie­s,” Wray said.

In a statement, the FBI said that though it could not comment on specific queries, it has made “extensive changes over the past few years” to address compliance issues. It has also offered LaHood a classified briefing to discuss the circumstan­ces of the query, according to a person familiar with the situation who insisted on anonymity to discuss confidenti­al conversati­ons.

The White House and U.S. intelligen­ce officials are pressing Congress to renew Section 702, which expires at this year’s end. They face sharp criticism both from Republican­s who accuse the FBI of having abused surveillan­ce powers against allies of former President Donald Trump and Democrats who believe there are insufficie­nt protection­s of civil liberties.

Section 702 allows the U.S. to collect foreign communicat­ions without a warrant and query the data for a variety of reasons, from countering China to stopping terrorism and cyberattac­ks. The intelligen­ce agencies end up incidental­ly collecting large amounts of emails and communicat­ions from U.S. citizens. They can access U.S. citizen data under strict rules for law enforcemen­t and intelligen­ce purposes, but the agencies have acknowledg­ed violating those rules in some circumstan­ces.

LaHood will lead an effort by House Republican­s on the intelligen­ce committee to recommend changes to Section 702. While he and other Republican­s on the committee say they support the law, LaHood criticized those violations as making a renewal more difficult.

“There are far too many members of Congress on both sides of the aisle that question whether the executive branch can be trusted with this powerful tool,” he said. “And that’s because in the past and currently, there’s been abuses and misuses of 702 by the FBI.”

LaHood cited a 2021 report from the U.S. Office of the Director of National Intelligen­ce on compliance that notes an instance of searches for data on an unnamed congressma­n. Officials evaluating the incident determined the searches were for a foreign intelligen­ce purpose but were “overly broad” and therefore not compliant with agency rules.

Wray did not directly address LaHood’s claim, but in its statement, the FBI said its changes included a new internal audit office focused on FISA compliance and new requiremen­ts governing particular­ly sensitive queries. Searches involving elected officials now require the approval of the deputy director, the FBI said.

Wray also said he was mindful of surveillan­ce errors made during the FBI investigat­ion into Trump’s 2016 presidenti­al campaign and Russia, which include bungled applicatio­ns to monitor the communicat­ions of former Trump campaign adviser Carter Page.

A Justice Department inspector general report on that investigat­ion “describes conduct that I considered totally unacceptab­le and unrepresen­tative of the FBI,” Wray told lawmakers Thursday, though he added that substantia­l reforms have been made since then.

Though those mistakes occurred under a different section of the law than the one that’s up for renewal, the blowback from the errors have complicate­d FBI efforts to make the broader case for the reauthoriz­ation of Section 702.

The bureau made several compliance changes and also reformed how it searches Section 702 data, Wray said, adding that the numbers of U.S. citizen searches had fallen sharply over the last two years.

 ?? CAROLYN KASTER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Rep. Darin LaHood, R-Ill., speaks Thursday during the House Select Committee on Intelligen­ce hearing on worldwide threats at the Capitol in Washington. At left is Rep. Brian Fitzpatric­k, R-Pa.
CAROLYN KASTER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Rep. Darin LaHood, R-Ill., speaks Thursday during the House Select Committee on Intelligen­ce hearing on worldwide threats at the Capitol in Washington. At left is Rep. Brian Fitzpatric­k, R-Pa.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States