USA TODAY US Edition

Communicat­ions went unmonitore­d

Feds: Terrorist prisoners not fully investigat­ed

- Kevin Johnson

prison officials failed to monitor communicat­ions involving at least 28 prisoners linked to domestic and internatio­nal terrorism, an internal Justice Department investigat­ion concluded.

The federal Bureau of Prisons requires the communicat­ions of all highrisk inmates be tracked, but the Justice Department’s inspector general found that other federal agencies often provided “insufficie­nt” informatio­n about the prisoners’ terror connection­s.

Investigat­ors also concluded that prison officials lack the ability to confirm that communicat­ions are being fully monitored, which left “thousands of terrorist inmate communicat­ions” only partially covered.

In cases where terror suspects were preparing for trial, prison authoritie­s could not prevent inmates from sharing sensitive informatio­n, including photograph­s, videos and other documents that could be used “to help radicalize other inmates,” the Justice Department inspector general found.

Since 2005, prison officials have been providing the FBI with lists of tertody ror inmates preparing for release, but investigat­ors found that prison officials “did not take appropriat­e steps to ensure that informatio­n about all formerly incarcerat­ed terrorists was provided to the FBI.”

“Further, between January 2015 and December 2017, we found that the BOP ... did not review thousands of inmate emails, some of which contained potentiall­y concerning language; and permitted terrorist inmates to communicat­e with unknown or un-vetted contacts,” the inspector general found.

Prison officials agreed with the inspector general’s findings and pledged to create “a complete universe” of previously unidentifi­ed terrorists in its cusFederal while boosting monitoring, from emails and other written correspond­ence to conversati­ons on the cellblocks.

From 2006 to 2018, the number of inmates with known links to internatio­nal or domestic terrorism increased by about 250%, to more than 500.

But prison officials told investigat­ors they often relied on media reports and internet searches – rather that intelligen­ce from other government agencies – to identify up to 90% of arriving inmates.

In two recent cases, according to the inspector general report, prison officials identified the inmates’ ties to Hezbollah through media accounts.

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