Posted on 05/11/2020 3:42:48 PM PDT by CheshireTheCat
Acting Director of National Intelligence Richard Grenell has sought to declassify a list of former Obama administration officials who were allegedly involved in the so-called unmasking of former national security adviser Michael Flynn in his conversations with the former Russian ambassador during the presidential transition, a senior U.S. official tells ABC News.
Grenell, who remains the U.S. ambassador to Germany along with being the acting DNI, visited the Justice Department last week to request the declassification of the list, according to the official.
(Excerpt) Read more at abcnews.go.com ...
Leaks are real.
The content is fake.
Stoopid fake news media are addicted to leaking, they need a 12 step program
Soros was just interviewed by a German paper.
Der Stürmer?
ROFLMAO!
Yup. ABC is Disney
Allegedly and so called in the same sentence.
Oh, it’s Crying Martha, that sniveling witch who wrote it. Makes sense.
Amen!
Lidsay (”Linda”) Graham seemed like a good idea at the time.
I wouldn’t mind a swapperoo whereby Ratcliffe takes on the FBI and Flynn settles back in as DNI.
‘Slant eyed transgender hedgehog’...Ron Jeremy objects!
ARCHIVED 2019——FBI Violated Americans Rights by Improperly Searching Surveillance Database, Court Finds
Epoch Times | October 8, 2019 | PETR SVAB / FR Posted on 10/9/2019, 8:59:47 AM by gattaca
FBI personnel improperly searched an expansive foreign surveillance database for tens of thousands of phone numbers and/or email addresses that included those of Americansin violation of rules put in place to protect Americans constitutional rights, according to a court ruling.
The FBI procedures, as implemented, have involved a large number of unjustified queries conducted to retrieve information about U.S. persons, said James Boasberg, judge on the secret Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC) in an Oct. 18, 2018 ruling (pdf) that was released with redactions on Tuesday.
The database aggregates data collected under Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), which allows warrantless surveillance of persons reasonably believed to be located outside the United States to acquire foreign intelligence information.
The FBI is allowed to query the database as long as the results are reasonably likely to return foreign-intelligence information or evidence of crime.
But, since April 2017, when the Section 702 surveillance was last certified by FISC, a large number of FBI queries didnt comport to the rules.
The government argued that such queries generally resulted from fundamental misunderstandings by some FBI personnel [about] what the standard reasonably likely to return foreign intelligence information means.
FISC was still holding back on the 2018 certification on July 12 (pdf), saying FBI documentation procedures lack a means to differentiate whether a particular query term relates to a United States person or a non-United States person.
The government has since updated the FBI procedures, which the FISC found sufficient, according to the Office of the Director of National Intelligence.
What Happened There were multiple instances of improper searches of the surveillance database, FISC learned.
It appears that many subjects of those queries were U.S. persons, the judge said, acknowledging it was difficult on the record before the Court to assess to what extent U.S. person information was returned and examined as a result of those queries.
At a minimum, however, the reported querying practices present a serious risk of unwarranted intrusion into the private communications of a large number of U.S. persons, he said.
In 2017, between March 24 and 27, the FBIs [redacted] conducted queries using identifiers for over 70,000 communication facilities associated with persons with access to FBI facilities and systems, the ruling said.
Communication facilities are means of communication, such as an email address or a phone number.
[Redacted] proceeded with those queries notwithstanding advice from the FBI Office of General Counsel (OGC) that they should not be conducted without approval by OGC and the National Security Division (NSD) of the Department of Justice, the ruling says, also noting, though, that the FBI did not examine the results of those queries.
The ruling further says that on Dec. 1, 2017, the FBIs [redacted] conducted over 6,800 queries using identifier of persons [redacted].
Between Dec. 7 and 11, 2017, [redacted] also conducted over 1,600 queries using identifiers of persons [redacted]. The [redacted] who conducted those queries advised he did not intend to run them against raw FISA information, but nonetheless reviewed raw FISA information returned by them.
On Feb. 5 and Feb. 23, 2018, the FBls [redacted] conducted approximately 30 queries regarding potential [redacted] sources, e.g., persons who [redacted] where the subject of a [redacted] investigation was [redacted].
On Feb. 21, 2018, the FBIs [redacted] conducted approximately 45 queries to retrieve information on persons [redacted] under consideration as potential sources of information.
The government also told the FISC that an unspecified FBI unit conducted what may be considered queries against raw FISA-acquired [metadata]
using what appear to be identifiers of approximately 57,000 individuals who work [redacted].
The date of the queries wasnt provided, though it is reported that the FBI informed NSD of them on April 13, 2018, the ruling said.
The government also disclosed to FISC several queries that involved queries that were to return information for just one person, though the names have been redacted.
At some time before March 2015, the FBIs [redacted] conducted a query [redacted].
At some time before May 2016, the FBIs [redacted] conducted a query on [redacted] before serving a classified order on [redacted].
On October 11, 2017, the FBIs [redacted] queried [redacted] to identify cleared personnel on whom to serve process.
On November 11, 2017, the FBIs [redacted] conducted a query on a potential recipient of a FISA order.
Further non-compliant queries included:A small number of cases in which FBI personnel apparently conducted queries for improper personal reasonsfor example, a contract linguist who ran queries on himself, other FBI employees, and relatives.
A number of instances in which FBI personnel inadvertently ran queries against Section 702 information.
A set of queries (overlapping to some extent with the set of inadvertent queries of Section 702 data) apparently intended to return FBI documents or material.
In the courts view, the last three instances do not present the same level of concern as those that evidence misunderstanding of the querying standard.
It would be difficult to completely prevent personnel from querying data for personal reasons, the judge said.
Power maintains she did not request the number of unmasking that is attributed to her. She is claiming someone else used her authority.
As long as he does the job, why does that matter? There *are* gay and lesbian Americans who are more conservative than some of our “rock ribbed conservatives” like Gowdy, Sessions, et al.
That, in and of itself, is worthy of an investigation!
I don’t give a crap about him being gay honestly. What matters is that he’s an American patriot and stands up for American interests abroad and fights deep state corruption at home. We could use several more like that.
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