Senate likely to pass FBI
spying bill after Orlando shooting
Send a link to a friend
[June 22, 2016]
By Dustin Volz
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Senate on
Wednesday is likely to pass a Republican-backed proposal to expand the
Federal Bureau of Investigation's secretive surveillance powers after
the mass shooting at an Orlando gay nightclub last week.
The spying bill is the Republican response to the massacre after a push
for gun-control measures sponsored by both major U.S. parties failed
earlier this week.
The legislation would broaden the type of telephone and internet records
the FBI could request from companies like Alphabet Inc and Verizon
without a warrant. The proposal met opposition from critics who said it
threatened civil liberties and did little to improve national security.
The bill, which the Obama administration has sought for years, “will
allow the FBI to collect the dots so they can connect the dots, and
that’s been the biggest problem that they’ve had in identifying these
homegrown, radicalized terrorists,’” Senator John Cornyn, the chamber’s
No. 2 Republican, said Tuesday.
The vote also represents a bi-partisan drift away from policy positions
that favored digital privacy, which had taken hold in the three years
since former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden revealed
the breadth of government surveillance programs.
The post-Snowden moves included the most substantial reforms to the U.S.
intelligence community since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, and a refusal
to heed the FBI’s call for laws that would undermine encryption.
It is unclear if the House would pass the Senate proposal, given its
alliance between libertarian-leaning Republicans and tech-friendly
Democrats that has blocked past efforts to expand surveillance.
The legislation before the Senate Wednesday, filed as an amendment to a
criminal justice funding bill, would widen the FBI’s authority to use
so-called National Security Letters, which do not require a warrant and
whose very existence is usually a secret.
Such letters can currently compel a company to hand over a user's phone
billing records. Under the Senate's change they could demand electronic
communications transaction records such as time stamps of emails and the
emails' senders and recipients, in addition to some information about
websites a person visits.
[to top of second column] |
A man pays respect at a rainbow flower wall as part of the makeshift
memorial for the Pulse nightclub mass shooting victims last week in
Orlando, Florida, U.S., June 21, 2016. REUTERS/Carlo Allegri
The legislation would also make permanent a provision of the USA Patriot
Act that allows the intelligence community to conduct surveillance on
“lone wolf” suspects who do not have confirmed ties to a foreign
terrorist group. That provision, which the Justice Department said last
year had never been used, is currently set to expire in December 2019.
'KNEE-JERK SOLUTIONS’
Privacy groups and civil liberties advocates accused Republicans this week of
exploiting the Orlando shooting to build support for unrelated legislation.
Senator Ron Wyden, an Oregon Democrat, criticized Senate Republicans for
“pushing fake, knee-jerk solutions that will do nothing to prevent mass
shootings or terrorist attacks.”
Though Republicans invoked the Orlando shooting in support of the bill, FBI
Director James Comey has said Mateen’s transactional records were fully reviewed
by authorities who investigated him twice for possible extremist ties.
Comey said there was “no indication” Mateen belonged to any extremist group and
that it was unlikely authorities could have done anything differently to prevent
the attack.
(Reporting by Dustin Volz; Editing by Jonathan Weber and Andrew Hay)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|