U.S. senators say CIA data collection has been hidden from public,
lawmakers
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[February 12, 2022]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Two U.S.
senators claim the Central Intelligence Agency is running a secret
program aimed at scooping up massive amounts of data and has been
shielding it from Congressional oversight, they said in a letter
released on Friday.
In the letter dated April 13, 2021, Senators Ron Wyden, of Oregon, and
Martin Heinrich, of New Mexico, warned top U.S. intelligence officials
that an unspecified "bulk collection" program was operating "entirely
outside the statutory framework that Congress and the public believe
govern this collection."
The Democrats said that even lawmakers on the Senate's Intelligence
Committee were unaware of the nature of the program until the
dissemination of a secret report by U.S. intelligence oversight
authorities in March of 2021.
The letter to Director of National Intelligence Avril Haines and CIA
Director William Burns was partially redacted and lacked several key
details, notably the nature of the CIA program and the kind of data it
collected. It referred instead to a cache of newly declassified
documents from the U.S. intelligence watchdog known as the Privacy and
Civil Liberties Oversight Board.
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People are silhouetted as they pose with laptops in front of a
screen projected with binary code and a Central Inteligence Agency
(CIA) emblem, in this picture illustration taken in Zenica October
29, 2014. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/File Photo
When contacted for comment, a Wyden
staffer referred Reuters to a joint statement released by the
senators saying the recently declassified documents "reveal serious
problems associated with warrantless backdoor searches of
Americans."
Messages seeking comment from a staffer for Heinrich, the Oversight
Board and the CIA were not returned.
A Feb. 10, 2022 statement from the CIA released along with the
declassified material said agency officials are required to "take
reasonable steps to limit the information collected to only that
which is necessary to achieve the purpose of the collection."
Privacy protections are "embedded in these foundational procedures,"
it added.
(Reporting by Raphael Satter; Editing by Richard Chang)
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