Posted on 04/02/2020 7:00:08 AM PDT by Kaslin
The inspector general detailed devastating, systematic FBI failures in executing procedures designed to ensure the accuracy of FISA applications.
On March 31, Inspector General Michael Horowitz released an interim report on his audit of the Federal Bureau of Investigations compliance with procedures to protect Americans civil rights in Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act cases. Horowitzs Management Advisory Memorandum detailed devasting and systematic failures by the FBI in executing the procedures designed to ensure the accuracy of the applications submitted under oath to the FISA court.
Contrary to the lefts spin, the FBIs incompetence in handling more (Most? All?) FISA cases is not a vindication of the Crossfire Hurricane team that illegally surveilled Carter Page and, in turn, the Donald Trump campaign.
Horowitzs memorandum opened by noting that the report he issued in December 2019 concerning the four Page FISA applications, detailed among other things, fundamental and serious errors in the agents conduct of the FBIs factual accuracy review procedures (Woods Procedures) with regard to all four FISA applications. The FBIs failure to comply with the Woods Procedures in the Page FISA applications prompted the IGs office to initiate an audit to examine more broadly the FBIs execution of, and compliance with, its Woods Procedures.
The Woods Procedures, Horowitz explained, were implemented in 2001 following errors in numerous FISA applications submitted to the FISC in FBI counterterrorism investigations. Those procedures sought to minimize factual inaccuracies in FISA applications and to ensure that statements contained in applications are scrupulously accurate.
As part of the procedures, the FBI required a case agent requesting a FISA application to create a Woods File that included: (1) supporting documentation for every factual assertion contained in a FISA application, and (2) supporting documentation and the results of required database searches and other verifications. Prior to seeking a FISA surveillance order, both the case agent and a supervisory special agent were required to verify that the Woods File contained supporting documentation for every factual assertion within the FISA application.
In auditing the FBIs compliance with the Woods Procedures, Horowitzs team focused on FISA surveillance orders issued from October 2014 to September 2019. As part of the audit, Horowitzs team visited eight FBI field offices and selected, from more than 700 applications, a sample of 29 applications relating to U.S. Persons involving both counterintelligence and counterterrorism investigations.
What Horowitz discovered seems to have shocked even him, as he issued yesterdays memorandum and preliminary findings while the audit remains ongoing. Bottom line: We do not have confidence that the FBI has executed its Woods Procedures in compliance with FBI policy, Horowitz wrote.
But the devil is in the details, such as that the IGs office could not review original Woods Files for 4 of the 29 selected FISA applications because the FBI has not been able to locate them and, in 3 of these instances, did not know if they ever existed. Of the 25 files they were able to review, there were errors or inadequately supported facts in all of the 25 applications (emphasis added).
Those errors included facts stated in the FISA application that were: (a) not supported by any documentation in the Woods File, (b) not clearly corroborated by the supporting documentation in the Woods File, or (c) inconsistent with the supporting documentation in the Woods File. While Horowitz noted the review was ongoing, his team had already identified on average of about 20 issues per application, with one application actually having 65 issues.
The IG memorandum also noted that about half of the files reviewed contained facts attributed to Confidential Human Sources, or CHSs, but many of those files, in violation of the Woods Procedures, failed to include a statement from the handling agent regarding the CHSs reliability and background and the accuracy of the information derived from the CHS. The FBI likewise violated the Woods Procedures mandate that case agents re-verify the facts contained in renewal applications. That was not consistently done, and in some instances the case agents stated they only verified newly added statements of facts.
Another outrageous revelation concerned the supposed oversight mechanisms instituted to ensure compliance with the Woods Procedures. One check involves the FBIs chief division counsel (CDC) at each FBI field office to perform an accuracy review of at least one FISA application. The Department of Justices National Security Division (NSD) must also conduct its own accuracy review each year of at least 1 FISA application originating from each of approximately 25 to 30 different field offices.
But, as Horowitz explained, in conducting the accuracy review, the FBIs CDC and the DOJs NSD dont review the Woods Files as created. No, instead they provide the FBI field offices advance notice of the specific FISA application they intend to review and then allow the FBI agents time to compile any documentation necessary to support the FISA application.
Even then, the accuracy reviews uncovered about 390 issues in 42 FISA applications, including unverified, inaccurate, or inadequately supported facts, as well as typographical errors. FBI headquarters, however, failed to use the accuracy reviews in a comprehensive, strategic fashion to help assess the FBIs compliance with its Woods Procedures.
After highlighting these many deficiencies, Horowitz stressed that he would provide the FBI more details concerning the issues his team discovers in the various FISA applications at the completion of the audit. But in the meantime, Horowitz shared a few preliminary recommendations, such as assuring a Woods file actually exists for all pending and current FISA cases.
Yesterdays recommendations come on top of the many recommendations Horowitz made last year when he released his 400-page report on the FISA abuse that targeted Page. But while this is bad news for the FBI (and Americans and civil liberties), the anti-Trump Russian collusion hoaxers found a favorable spin: See, this isnt about Trump, the FBI fudges all their FISA surveillance applications.
Thats quite the goalpost shift from the lefts earlier narrative that FISA surveillance orders are extremely difficult to obtain. (Its also quite the indictment of the resistances hero James Comey, who served as FBI director during the majority of the time period under audit.)
This spin doesnt fly, either. Horowitzs Tuesday memorandum focused on procedure only and the question of whether the FBI had complied with the Woods Procedures. Horowitz expressly stated, more than once, that the IG’s office did not make any materiality judgements and did not confirm FISA application accuracy or identify any relevant omissions. Horowitz also did not speculate as to whether the potential errors would have influenced the decision to file the application or the FISCs decision to approve the FISA application.
Conversely, the IG found the Page FISA surveillance applications contained 17 significant inaccuracies and omissions18 if you include the one the IG missed. Also, the government has already conceded that material errors in two of the four FISA applications made those court surveillance orders invalid.
That the FBI was systematically sloppy in compiling the Woods files for other FISA applications says nothing about the anti-Trump motives and misconduct involved in the Page FISA applications. Were not talking about procedures there. Were talking altering emails and lying to the FISA court about Pages cooperation with the CIA; were talking about using an unverified, Hillary Clinton-funded, salacious dossier to feign probable cause; were talking about an insurance policy, an unnamed and unknown sub-sub-sources; were talking about a dozen other significant errors and omissions; and were talking about stopping that man from getting elected.
“the devil is in the details”
Actually, in my experience as an Air Force JAG for 30 years and now civilian working in Title 50 activities for years, the devil is in the fact that there is nobody on the other side of these FISA court cases. There are prosecutors and there’s the judge. Therefore, there’s not as much need for details, meaning that people (the feds) get lazy and basically say, “Trust me, your honor, this is a bad guy”. Not requiring the rigor of meeting a high burden of proof is largely what allowed these mockeries and travesties to continue.
Colonel, USAF, TJAGCR (Ret)
And bank robbers dont go through proper withdrawal procedures. At least they go to prison.
Thanks to the GOP-e, they have gotten away free.
Call it Ruby Ridge II
Beggars the imagination until you look at the why.
bmk
This is the tip of the iceberg. Until the FBI starts recording interviews, instead of relying on handwritten notes created afterwards, you know that nothing whatsoever has changed about this criminal organization.and retaining those interviesw
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