FBI Practices Need Strict Oversight, ACLU Says (4/23/2008)
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact:
(202) 675-2312 or media@dcaclu.org
Washington, DC – As FBI Director Robert Mueller
appeared before Congress today, the American Civil Liberties Union urged the
House Judiciary Committee to ask him the “hard questions.”
“Director
Mueller has plenty to answer for,” said Caroline Fredrickson, director of the
ACLU Washington Legislative Office. “The FBI’s track record of late has been
dismal. Members of the committee should take this opportunity to push for real
answers to questions about National Security Letters, delays in the
naturalization process and the FBI’s role in torture and anti-terrorism policies
set by the administration.”
Last month
the Office of the Inspector General (OIG) of the Department of Justice released
its second consecutive report outlining the bureau’s rampant misuse of the
National Security Letter (NSL) statute, whose authorities were expanded by the
USA PATRIOT Act. The report reconfirmed widespread abuse of the statute, which
allows for the collection of personal information without court approval and
included a provision that allowed them to gag recipients (that provision was
later found to be unconstitutional).
This month
the ACLU sent a letter to Fine pointing out that the Department of Defense
appeared to be using the FBI to improperly issue NSLs on its behalf. Congress deliberately gave the DOD
limited NSL authority which did not include the authority to access phone and
email communication records. Such authority may only be used by the FBI, and
must be in relation to an authorized investigation. The ACLU noted that the
DOD’s use of the FBI suggests the department was attempting to circumvent the
law and get information it is not entitled to.
The ACLU’s concerns also include
FBI policies regarding the interrogations of detainees in Guantanamo Bay and Iraq. It has been widely reported
that after detainees were harshly interrogated by the CIA, the FBI would then
send in a "clean team" to obtain the evidence that was already beaten out of the
witness in a more legally acceptable fashion.
In
addition, the FBI has contributed to the extreme delays applicants for the
naturalization process have experienced, with specific national origin groups
being disproportionately affected. To ensure the vibrancy of our nation, we need
to be certain that those who hope to contribute to our society receive equal
consideration within a reasonable timeframe.
“Unfortunately, the FBI continues
to have consistent and serious mismanagement issues,” said Michael German, ACLU
National Security Policy Counsel and former FBI Agent. “Between having wiretaps
shut down for truant payments, a terrorist watch list that grows by the minute
and the rampant abuse of its NSL authority, it’s clear the bureau remains
dysfunctional. With recent reports that the FBI is aiming to build a database to
house Americans’ DNA, Congress should reinforce its oversight role before that,
too, becomes another opportunity for misconduct.”
Relevant information can be found
at: www.aclu.org/nsl www.aclu.org/torture www.aclu.org/immigration
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