Well, they have proven they can't be trusted, now what?
Justice Dept.: FBI misused Patriot Act - Yahoo! News
So the Justice Department confirmed what many suspected. They removal of constitutional freedoms are being used against U.S. citizens who are NOT terrorists and many who are not even criminal.
Justice Dept.: FBI misused Patriot Act - Yahoo! News
The audit released Friday found that the number of national security letters issued by the FBI skyrocketed in the years after the Patriot Act became law.Oh, I feel better already now that Congress is going to "perhaps limit" the abuses on our freedom. The Patriot Act has to be the most misnamed bill there ever was.
In 2000, for example, the FBI issued an estimated 8,500 letters. By 2003, however, that number jumped to 39,000. It rose again the next year, to about 56,000 letters in 2004, and dropped to approximately 47,000 in 2005.
Over the entire three-year period, the audit found the FBI issued 143,074 national security letters requesting customer data from businesses.
The FBI vastly underreported the numbers. In 2005, the FBI told Congress that its agents in 2003 and 2004 had delivered only 9,254 national security letters seeking e-mail, telephone or financial information on 3,501 U.S. citizens and legal residents over the previous two years.
Additionally, the audit found, the FBI identified 26 possible violations in its use of the national security letters, including failing to get proper authorization, making improper requests under the law and unauthorized collection of telephone or Internet e-mail records.
Of the violations, 22 were caused by FBI errors, while the other four were the result of mistakes made by the firms that received the letters.
The FBI also used so-called "exigent letters," signed by officials at FBI headquarters who were not authorized to sign national security letters, to obtain information. In at least 700 cases, these exigent letters were sent to three telephone companies to get toll billing records and subscriber information.
"In many cases, there was no pending investigation associated with the request at the time the exigent letters were sent," the audit concluded.
The letters inaccurately said the FBI had requested subpoenas for the information requested — "when, in fact, it had not," the audit found.
Senators outraged over the conclusions signaled they would provide tougher oversight of the FBI — and perhaps limit its power.
So the Justice Department confirmed what many suspected. They removal of constitutional freedoms are being used against U.S. citizens who are NOT terrorists and many who are not even criminal.
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