Marysville Appeal-Democrat

FBI access to spy data needs limits, White House panel says

- Tribune News Service Bloomberg News

WASHINGTON — A panel of national security experts convened by the Biden administra­tion recommende­d further restrictio­ns on the

FBI’S ability to access surveillan­ce data that captures communicat­ions by Americans, citing repeated lapses by the agency.

The Presidenti­al Intelligen­ce Advisory Board found that Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Act, which allows the U.S. intelligen­ce community to collect data on non-u.s. persons believed to be located outside the United States, is an essential national-security tool.

The section would expire on December 31 unless renewed by Congress.

Although the program is intended to collect communicat­ions of hundreds of thousands of non-americans abroad for foreign intelligen­ce purposes, it also incidental­ly sweeps up communicat­ions with or about U.S. people and companies. U.S. intelligen­ce agencies can then search the data trove by entering Americans’ names, telephone numbers and email addresses, in what are known as “U.S. person queries.” Critics characteri­ze this manner of prying on Americans’ details — and potentiall­y their communicat­ions — as a “back-door search.”

Without changes, congressio­nal renewal of the surveillan­ce authority is in doubt. A number of Republican­s have joined criticism of Section 702 by Democrats, civil liberties groups and tech giants including Alphabet Inc.’s Google and Apple Inc.

A senior administra­tion official who briefed reporters on condition of anonymity said the White House will review all of the board’s recommenda­tions, with a particular focus on the first: removing the FBI’S ability to search the Section 702 database for evidence of crimes that aren’t related to national security.

Still, the advisory panel found “that Section 702 authoritie­s are crucial to national security and do not threaten civil liberties, so long as the requisite culture, processes, and oversight are in place.”

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