Last updated: February 21, 2008 - 8:23am
FBI SEEKS TO PAY TELECOMS FOR DATA
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Ellen Nakashima]
The FBI wants to pay the major telecommunications companies to retain their customers' Internet and phone call information for at least two years for the agency's use in counterterrorism investigations and is asking Congress for $5 million a year to defray the cost, according to FBI officials and budget documents. The FBI would not have direct access to the records. It would need to present a subpoena or an administrative warrant, known as a national security letter, to obtain the information that the companies would keep in a database, officials said. The proposal has raised concerns by civil libertarians who point to telecom companies' alleged involvement in the government's domestic surveillance program and to a recent Justice Department inspector general's report on FBI abuse of national security letters. In one case, a senior FBI official signed the letters without including the required proof that they were linked to FBI counterterrorism or espionage investigations.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/07/24/AR2007072402479.html
(requires registration)
Related
- Sen. Rockefeller, It's For You
- Bill Would Make ISPs Keep Data On Users
- Democrats Seek to Tighten Oversight of Surveillance Methods
- Enjoying Technology's Conveniences But Not Escaping Its Watchful Eyes
- Bush Wants Phone Firms Immune to Privacy Suits
- FBI going to court more often to get personal Internet-usage data
- Librarians Say Surveillance Bills Lack Adequate Oversight
- New Profiling Program Raises Privacy Concerns
- Clarity Sought on Electronics Searches
- White House Seeks Renewal of Surveillance Laws
- Cybersecurity Plan to Involve NSA, Telecoms
- US Terrorism Agency to Tap a Vast Database of Citizens
- NSA stops collecting some data to resolve issue with court
- For McCain, A Switch On Telecom Immunity?
- US Moves to Ease Limits on Data Use in Terror Analysis
Ratings
Login to rate this headline.

