Listen - Sponsor - Stations


Return Home
Future & Past Guests
Affiliate Syndication
About Bryant McGill
Meet Your Co-Hosts
Friends of McGill Live
Event Photographs
Program Archives
OUR COMMUNITY
Request an Interview
Sponsor Information
Apply to be a Guest
Guestbook & Comments
Contact Us
McGill's Online Works
Featured Treaty Signers
Vision Board
Int'l Photo Journal
Universality of Suffering
Books by Guests
Night Riders Magazine
Xammon Magazine
GUEST WEBSEARCH
Media Links
Top News Stories
World News Archives
Bryant's Official Site
The Goodwill Treaty
McGill Charities
Candle Vigils
Give Yourself
No Secrets, No Fear


Carmen Electra
Michael Jackson
Matt Damon
Montel Williams
Ray Romano
Evander Holyfield
Me & Cheech
Ray Lewis
Boomer



Light a Candle
Heal the World



Interesting World News



Discuss this Article | Post Another Article for Discussion

FBI Given More Latitude

New Surveillance Rules Remove Evidence Hurdle
May 30, 2002; Page A01
By Susan Schmidt and Dan Eggen, Washington Post Staff Writers

New Justice Department guidelines to be unveiled today will give FBI agents latitude to monitor Internet sites, libraries and religious institutions without first having to offer evidence of potential criminal activity, officials said yesterday.

The changes, part of the Justice Department's effort to mount a proactive war on terror, will mark a significant change for the FBI. While agents have been permitted in the past to conduct such surveillance if they had specific information, they have been loath to do so because of confusion about what was actually permitted, law enforcement officials said.

Justice Department and FBI officials said the guidelines will remove serious barriers to the prevention of terrorism.

"The concern is when we're confronted with people like [Zacarias] Moussaoui, or even some of the hijackers, who are known to spend substantial periods of time in mosques or other similar situations, it is very difficult to find out what they're up to," said one senior law enforcement official.

Terrorist organizations operating in this country have sometimes used mosques as recruiting grounds and gathering places. Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman, the blind Egyptian cleric now imprisoned for his role in the 1993 attack on the World Trade Center, built a radical following with links to al Qaeda while preaching at mosques in Brooklyn and Jersey City, for example.

But as word of the new guidelines circulated yesterday, some civil liberties groups expressed fears of a Big Brother government monitoring its citizens.

"The FBI is now telling the American people, 'You no longer have to do anything unlawful in order to get that knock on the door,' " said Laura Murphy, director of the American Civil Liberties Union's Washington office. "You can be doing a prefectly legal activity like worshiping or talking in a chat room, they can spy on you anyway."

The new guidelines state simply that FBI agents may enter public places and forums, including publicly accessible Internet sites, to observe, develop leads and investigate. The guidelines do not specifically mention religious institutions, but a senior Justice Department official said last night that the impact of the changes will be dramatic in allowing the FBI to open a window on extremist activity in mosques.

"These are open places," he said. Now, "just because they are FBI agents, they don't have to turn a blind eye to activities visible to other people."

Under guidelines that have been in place for several decades, the FBI has not been permitted to send investigators into religious settings unless the agents can establish they are following a lead, or conducting an investigation or preliminary inquiry. As a practical matter, the Justice Department official said, "agents mistakenly think they have to stop at the church door."

In a written description of the guideline changes made available yesterday, Attorney General John D. Ashcroft stated that the department needs to be able to "proactively draw on available sources of information to identify terrorist threats and activities." In the past, he said, the FBI has been a reactive body, and the guidelines "generally barred the FBI from taking the initiative unless leads as to possible criminal activity or even more substantial evidence of crimes happened to come to the FBI from external sources."

The new rules will allow agents to surf the Internet for Web sites that might give hints to terrorist activity, according to the description. The new guidelines will allow investigators to seek out and "identify sites and forums in which bomb-making instructions, preparations for cyberterrorism, child pornography, and stolen credit card information are openly traded and disseminated."

Under the existing policy, agents could pursue online searches only when they could characterize them as checking leads or otherwise furthering an ongoing investigation.

"Pure surfing or searching for the purpose of initially developing leads was not allowed, even in relation to publicly available information that anyone else is free to access and observe," according to the new policy statement.

Agents will also be permitted to do topical research not directly related to a specific crime under the new guidelines, such as research on a biological agent.

The ACLU's Murphy said, however, that the new guidelines could open the door to the same kind of problems evident in the FBI's aggressive surveillance and harassment of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.

Several other aspects of the new guidelines, disclosed earlier this week, will move some decision-making authority from FBI headquarters to field offices around the country. FBI Director Robert S. Mueller III acknowledged yesterday that changes must be made to counter bureaucratic inertia at headquarters that led to missed clues in the Sept. 11 attacks.

Under the new guidelines, field office directors will be allowed to launch terrorism investigations and undercover probes without clearance from headquarters.

The guidelines are an outgrowth of privacy laws that prohibit the government from collecting information except for law enforcement purposes. In the past, the government developed information on specific cases but now needs broader intelligence to prevent terrorist acts.

© 2002 The Washington Post Company
Link to Article Source


Universal 7 Radio | gtbroadcasting.com | GlobalEnquirer.com | Comment


  News in NWO
  1. Big Brother Will Be Watching You
  2. Pentagon Plans Computer System that Would Peek at Personal Data of Americans
  3. Artifact No Go Logo
  4. Russia to Create Different Kind of New World Order
  5. Big Brother Average American Caught on Camera 8 - 10 Times a Day
  6. Traffic Cameras Could Help Solve Crimes
  7. 1984 Privacy Issues Comes Under Tech Gun
  8. Airports Poised to Begin Traveler ID Program
  9. Big Brother May Expand SpyTraffic Cams Throughout DC
  10. Senators FBI Grabbing More Wiretap
  11. The Hidden Data In Your Drivers License
  12. Britain Leads Way In Eroding Privacy
  13. Chirac Backs Globalisation Tax
  14. Delaware Police Compile Photo Database Of
  15. Patriot Act Setback
  16. NASA Plans To Read Terrorists Minds At Airports
  17. Camps for Citizens Ashcrofts Hellish Vision
  18. Body Trains Capable of Embalming 800 an Hour
  19. Japan Launches Compulsory ID Network Amid
  20. Bush, Ridge Look at Suspending 1878
  21. Banks Share Private Consumer Information
  22. Foundations in Place For Martial Law
  23. National ID Card An American Horror Story
  24. Local Governments to Inspect Inside Homes
  25. Global Eye - Strange Fruit
  26. Ashcroft Touts Citizen Vigilance Plan - Tries to Reassure TIPS Wont Morph into Operation Snoops
  27. Sen Joseph Biden Backs Letting Soldiers
  28. Will Military Enforce US Domestic Laws
  29. Justice Dept Forges Ahead With Tips, Despite Ban by House Majority Leader Dick Armey
  30. Globalists Glum as Lawmakers Reject
  31. Postal Officials Change Stance on Operation TIPS
  32. Switch on for UK State Snooping
  33. Postal Service Wont Join Peeping Tom Program
  34. Who Says the Communists Lost
  35. Globalist Senators Back-Stab US Troops
  36. Citizen Spying Elicits 1984 Fears
  37. A Nation of Peeping Toms
  38. Anger at War Crimes Court Compromise
  39. UN Agrees to US Peacekeeper
  40. Your Confidential Medical Records Are an Open Book Without Your Say-So
  41. Spy Cams Launched in Virginia
  42. Forget Big Brother -
  43. Europeans Blast US Over Global Court
  44. US Will Not Join World Court
  45. US Challenges New Hague Court146s Right to Judge
  46. Euro-police to Patrol UK
  47. Dark Side Of Supermarket Savings Cards
  48. Australia Joins Global Court
  49. Let Europe Rise
  50. Europe Police to Spy on all Emails
  51. UN Wants to Register Worlds Children at Birth
  52. Ashcroft New FBI Plan Protects Rights
  53. FBI Given More Latitude
  54. Ashcroft Announces New Snooping Power
  55. Big Brother in Your Mailbox
  56. How the Feds Steer Your Career
  57. Big Brother Is Watching, Listening
  58. How Big Brother Plans Your Career
  59. Sex Issues Prove Divisive At UN Childrens Summit
  60. Press Coverage Of Implanted Chips Distorted
  61. Bill Would Push Drivers License With Chip
  62. Senators Blame Oil Firms for Price Spikes
  63. Secret US Court OKd 934 Warrants
  64. Surfing the Net and Getting Wet
  65. The Latest Way to Pay is at our Fingertips
  66. Americans Dependence on Government Empowers Feds
  67. Be Afraid - The New World Orders Fascist Pedigree
  68. Chemtrails - Peanut Butter And Barium Sandwiches
  69. Bring Forth Martial Law
  70. The Fourth Reich Nazi Symbols Creeping Up in
  71. Nobel Laureate Thinks Gobally On Currency
  America General
  Asian Anxiety
  Cosmic
  Earth Changes
  Espionage
  Europe
  Financial
  Genetics
  Global
  Mars
  Mexico
  Mideast
  Nukes
  NWO
  Persecution
  Precious Metals
  Prophetic
  Signs
  Strange Stuff
  Technology
  Terrorism
  The Pale Horse
  Unrest
  Yellowstone

FAIR USE NOTICE. Many of the stories on this site contain copyrighted material whose use has not been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. We are making this material available in its efforts to advance the understanding of environmental issues and sustainability, human rights, economic and political democracy, and issues of social justice. We believe this constitutes a 'fair use' of the copyrighted material as provided for in Section 107 of the US Copyright Law. If you wish to use such copyrighted material for purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use'...you must obtain permission from the copyright owner. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. For more information go to: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml



Where applicable, U.S. & Int'l Copyrights by Bryant McGill. All Rights Reserved. Notices and Fair Use. McGill Trademark Licensed from the House of Gill, Corp Sole.