Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Privacy board recommends changes to surveillan­ce authority

- Tribune News Service Cq-roll Call

WASHINGTON — An independen­t U.S. government board on Thursday recommende­d that Congress make changes to a controvers­ial foreign surveillan­ce authority, concluding that the program is highly valuable in protecting national security but also creates “serious privacy and civil liberties risks.”

The Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight

Board issued the 297page report as the

Biden administra­tion seeks congressio­nal reauthoriz­ation of the surveillan­ce authority known as Section 702, which expires at the end of the year.

Section 702 allows the U.S. government to collect the digital communicat­ions of foreigners who are located outside the country.

But some lawmakers from both parties have lambasted the breadth of the surveillan­ce power and zeroed in on privacy concerns, such as how it allows U.S. authoritie­s to run warrantles­s searches for informatio­n on Americans.

The board’s report recommende­d that Congress add greater oversight for when authoritie­s want to search for informatio­n on Americans. And it said authorizat­ion from the Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Court, or FISC, should be required for those types of searches.

Searches for informatio­n on Americans — along with batch queries, where authoritie­s search with hundreds or thousands of search terms at once — result in “the most serious privacy and civil liberties risks,” the report found.

Congress should also make changes to strengthen the transparen­cy of FISC and its decisions, the report stated.

The board recommende­d that Congress codify some aspects of the program, such as requiring the government to submit to the FISC a random sample of targeting decisions and supporting written justificat­ions from intelligen­ce agencies for a judicial review as part of the annual Section 702 recertific­ation process.

The board also made recommenda­tions for procedures at the intelligen­ce agencies, including the Justice Department, the National Security Agency, the FBI and the CIA, such as an annual Justice Department review of each FBI field office’s compliance with the procedures of Section 702.

The board’s report could bolster arguments by lawmakers who see the expiration of the law this year as a leverage point to demand changes.

Travis Leblanc, a member of the oversight board who voted to approve the report, said in a press release that a key feature of Section 702 is domestic intelligen­ce and criminal law enforcemen­t, even though the authority is touted as a foreign intelligen­ce tool.

“Such a program warrants court approval of individual U.S. person queries, which would reduce compliance errors, promote accountabi­lity, and build public trust in a surveillan­ce program long beleaguere­d by a wide range of privacy and civil liberties threats,” Leblanc said.

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