Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

FBI considers easing entry to draw top talent

- By Eric Tucker

WASHINGTON — Aspiring federal agents who can hack a computer with ease but have trouble shooting a gun could soon find the FBI to be more welcoming.

In a series of recent speeches, FBI Director James Comey has hinted the bureau may adjust its hiring requiremen­ts to attract top-notch cyber recruits, the better to compete with private sector companies who can lure the sharpest technical minds with huge salary offers.

He’s floated the idea of scrapping a requiremen­t that agents who leave the FBI but want to return after two years must re-enroll in the bureau’s storied but arduous Quantico, Va., training academy. He’s also lamented, half-jokingly, that otherwise qualified applicants may be discourage­d from applying because of a fondness for marijuana.

“We will find people of integrity who are really smart, who know cyber — and can’t do a pushup. Or we’ll find people, maybe they can do a pushup, they’re smart and they can do cyber — but they want to smoke weed on the way to the interview,” the FBI director has said.

The rethinking on recruitmen­t comes as the FBI confronts increasing­ly complex cyber challenges, including crippling statespons­ored attacks, and as it’s racing to develop more sophistica­ted techniques for combating internetba­sed threats.

Law enforcemen­t has struggled to break into encrypted cellphones of criminal suspects, and the Justice Department sued Apple last year after agents could not access a locked iPhone used by a mass shooter in San Bernardino, Calif. Though an unidentifi­ed third party ultimately came forward with a tool to open the phone, law enforcemen­t officials remain concerned about electronic terrorism recruitmen­t that occurs through encrypted channels and out of sight of investigat­ors.

Even crimes that investigat­ors have tackled for decades, like child pornograph­y, have grown more complicate­d as suspects trade images through hidden internet browsers that shield their locations and identities. The Justice Department has been developing ways through bulk hacking to uncover the users’ locations, though defendants have repeatedly — and with some success — challenged the use of that tactic.

“The world’s not coming back. The old-school stuff that I did 20, 30 years ago in the State Police and the FBI, all those crimes nowadays have a major cyber component to it,” said Robert Anderson, a retired FBI executive assistant director.

Comey has suggested the FBI may need to build its own university to groom cyber talent. He’s also questioned whether every member of a cyber squad needs to be a gun-carrying agent.

“Our minds are open to all of these things because we are seeking a talent — talent in a pool that is increasing­ly small. So, you’re going to see us experiment with a number of different approaches to this,” Comey said last week at a gathering of the Intelligen­ce and National Security Alliance.

He’s floated different possible solutions, but he’s returned several times to the idea of waiving the requiremen­t that people who want to return to the FBI after two years outside the bureau re-enroll in Quantico.

“Our people leave, go to the private sector, discover it’s a soulless, empty way to live — and then they realize, ‘My life is empty, I need moral content in my work,’ ” Comey said lightheart­edly and to laughter in a recent speech at the University of Texas at Austin.

He added: “I gave the creds for the second time to a 42-year-old cyber agent, and I said, ‘So, how was Quantico?’ He said, ‘It was a nightmare, it was a nightmare.’ And so we’re trying to figure out, are there ways we should approach this differentl­y to recognize the challenge we have in attracting talent?”

Comey made headlines on the topic in 2014 when, in response to a question, he said that a prospectiv­e candidate who had previously smoked marijuana should apply anyway. FBI rules disqualify applicants who have smoked marijuana within the last three years, and there’s been no sign that that policy will change.

He was chastised at a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing by then-Sen. Jeff Sessions, now the United States attorney general and Comey’s boss, about whether he understood that those comments could “be interprete­d as one more example of leadership in America dismissing the seriousnes­s of marijuana use.”

Comey replied that he had tried to be “both serious and funny” and was merely remarking on the FBI’s challenges in developing a cyber workforce at a time when “more and more” young people were trying marijuana. He pronounced himself “absolutely deadset against using marijuana” and noted that he had not said that he would change the FBI’s policy.

Anderson said, “Anything new in the government is like getting your wisdom teeth pulled out. Anything new takes a while for the culture of the FBI to adjust to it.” But, he added, “If the strategic vision is to create a mecca for cyber, we’re going to have to change.”

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