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Bureaucrats Are Hell-Bent On Congress Rubber Stamping FISA So They Can Snoop Without Warrants Or Consequences
Federalist, ^ | JUNE 13, 2023 | Jordan Boyd

Posted on 06/13/2023 6:26:51 PM PDT by george76

Section 702 has easily become the security apparatus’ favorite excuse to conduct backdoor, warrantless surveillance on American citizens.

Intelligence agencies, with the help of the current regime, market Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act to Congress as a means to keep Americans safe from foreign threats. Instead, as members of the Senate Judiciary Committee demonstrated on Tuesday, it’s become a proven loophole that lets verifiably corrupt bureaucrats spy on Americans.

Nearly two decades after its inception, Section 702 has easily become the security apparatus’ favorite excuse to conduct backdoor, warrantless surveillance on American citizens. The FBI’s infamous and illegal targeting of 2016 Trump campaign adviser Carter Page is one of the most prominent examples of this trend.

If the Biden administration, the officials in the corrupt agencies that benefit from the statute, and establishment legislators have anything to say about it, the bureaucrats at the center of the weaponization fight could get permission to keep spying on Americans without retribution.

Power Grab..

If anything was made abundantly clear during the course of the hours-long hearing, the last thing bureaucrats responsible for decades of power abuses want to see is the policy that harbors those abuses to die. The high-level FBI, CIA, DOJ, DNI, and NSA witnesses spent most of their testimonies begging Congress to keep Section 702 intact.

Without Section 702, specifically, NSA Deputy Director George Barnes claimed, “our ability to preserve the nation’s security would be significantly impaired.”

“Last year, nearly every item in the presidential[] intelligence priorities list was addressed in some way, shape, or form by 702. It’s not replaceable. NSA could not replicate intelligence from 702 using other authorities,” Barnes asserted. “It’s agile, specific, and efficient.”

Rumblings amongst the establishment wings of the Republican party similarly suggest that some legislators may seek a straight reauthorization of FISA in its current iteration. Among those publicly against assertions that the only way to fix Section 702 is by eliminating it are some of Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell’s closest allies.

Sen. Lindsey Graham opened his line of questioning by trying to sell Americans, who hold a deep distrust of the DOJ and FBI following its partisan actions in recent years, on the idea that foreign adversaries like ISIS, China, and Russia will be unchecked if Congress meddles with Section 702.

“I guess what I’m trying to tell my constituents back home [is] the threats to the country are growing; they’re not lessening,” the South Carolina Republican said.

Sens. John Cornyn and Thom Tillis echoed Graham and the witnesses’ claims that Section 702 is “essential to our national security” and questioned witnesses on whether they would be open to changes designed to address the abuses tainting the Section’s chances of automatic renewal.

Democrats like Durbin and Sen. Mazie Hirono agreed that Section 702 at least needs to be remarkably reformed before getting Congress’ approval.

“I will only support the reauthorization of section 702 if there are significant, significant reforms,” Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Dick Durbin said.

During the hearing, Deputy Director FBI Paul Abbate claimed his agency already began rolling out reforms such as a “three-strike rule” that will carry “rapidly escalating consequences” for those agents who supposedly initiate queries, a process that gives officials warrantless access to data collected under FISA, “unintentionally.”

Some of the intelligence bureaucrats claimed to be open to even more reforms, but that’s contradicted by several of their actions. Months before the hearing, witness Assistant Attorney General Matt Olsen of the DOJ’s National Security Division lobbied for the rubber stamping of Section 702 without any changes.

“What keeps me up at night is thinking about what will happen if we fail to renew Section 702 of FISA,” he said at a Brookings Institution event in February. “This law will expire on December 31st of this year if Congress doesn’t act to reauthorize it. If 702 expires or is watered down, the United States will lose critical insights we need to protect the country.”

Congress Cannot Keep Enabling Corruption..

Even if Olsen’s mind opened up to the possibility of reforms, no self-respecting congressman should approve modifications that they know, when attached to Section 702 in previous years, never took root.

Congress attempted to introduce FISA reforms dedicated to advancing “the protection of individual privacy and civil liberties” in 2015. A recently declassified Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court opinion from 2022 confirmed that those were practically worthless because the FBI was still able to use Section 702 to justify what the FISC called a “pattern of conducting broad, suspicionless queries.”

Suddenly, the “agility” and “efficiency” intelligence officials like Barnes brag about really means that the government initiated hundreds of thousands of breaches of Americans’ private information, data, and messages without consent or consequence. Based on that number, Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Dick Durbin estimated that “billions” more “communications are collected and stored on government databases” each year under the same rationale.

As Republican Sen. Mike Lee pointed out on Twitter during the hearing, “That’s unconstitutional!”

...

“Now let me be very clear, that number should not just be going down; that number should be zero,” Lee said during the hearing. “Every ‘non-compliance’ search involving U.S. persons violates an American citizen’s constitutional right, and yet every year, the FBI claims that we should just trust the FBI to fix the problems internally. Well, first, they tell us there are no problems, then they tell us, ‘We will fix them because we’ve got good people and we’ve got new policies.’”

...

“Reforms” have been tried and ultimately failed, which is why some Republicans are harnessing FISA as one of the many ways they could rein in the wayward security state.

The GOP’s Weaponization Fight Isn’t Separate From Biden Bribery..

Justice for the abusive FBI, CIA, NSA, DNI, and DOJ in the form of FISA has been delayed before, but it can’t be delayed any longer.

“The FBI has, right now, an unlimited hubris that you believe you are unaccountable,” Sen. Ted Cruz said during the hearing. “You don’t believe you’re accountable to the United States Congress, and you don’t believe you’re accountable to the American people, and you are doing damage.”

Over and over and over, Republicans on the Senate Judiciary Committee questioned why the FBI covered up the FD-1023 form that details a “highly credible” confidential human source’s allegations that Vice President Joe Biden arranged to receive $5 million from a foreign national in exchange for pushing certain policy positions. One day prior to the Senate Judiciary Hearing, Sen. Chuck Grassley revealed that a Burisma executive is in possession of 17 audio recordings about the Biden family, two of which were between him and President Biden.

“Will you commit to releasing this unclassified document that alleges that the President of the United States, the President of the United States, has taken $5 million or more in bribes from a foreign nation?” Hawley asked.

“Will you release the document to the public?” Hawley continued. “It’s unclassified. Don’t you think the American people have a right to see it?”

Over and over and over again, Abbate failed to answer questions about the FBI’s ongoing cover-up campaign directly. Instead, he focused his efforts on claiming to“reject your assertion that the FBI is politicized.”

It was only after multiple Republicans harped on the FBI mouthpiece that he claimed, “I have no idea if there are recordings or not.”

“There are not two standards of justice. There is only one. It’s applied equally to each and every person,” Abbate insisted.

“You’re back in front of us asking for the reauthorization of extraordinary authorities. Multiple courts have uncovered extraordinary abuses perpetrated by your agency. You are at the same time concealing information about serious allegations made against the president of the United States, even as your institution also targets his chief political opponent in an unprecedented way. Why would we ever give you the blank check that you want to continue surveilling American citizens in an improper manner? Why would we ever do that?” Hawley questioned.

It’s a great question. One that, hopefully, the sworn representatives of Americans who don’t trust the intelligence complex nor the justice system in the U.S. right now will consider before they cast their FISA votes.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Editorial; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: cia; civilliberties; civilrights; deepstate; doj; fbi; fisa; policestate; privacy; section702; spying; surveillance

1 posted on 06/13/2023 6:26:51 PM PDT by george76
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To: george76

EVERY singe alphabet agency created by Congress seeks only to increase and consolidate their power and influence at the expense of our freedoms.


2 posted on 06/13/2023 6:42:21 PM PDT by Blood of Tyrants (It's science and therefore cannot be questioned!)
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To: george76

Reauthorization or the Feds will start on congress like they are Trump. Bank on it.


3 posted on 06/13/2023 6:42:47 PM PDT by blackdog ((Z28.310) My dog Sam eats purple flowers.)
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To: george76

Do not deauthorize at all costs. Defund all departments that act against The Constitution.


4 posted on 06/13/2023 6:44:43 PM PDT by Chgogal (Welcome to Fuhrer Biden's Weaponized Fascist Banana Republic! It's the road to hell.)
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To: george76

The FBI expends most it’s resources as political favor. I’m not really sure what value there is in the continued funding of such an agency?


5 posted on 06/13/2023 6:45:14 PM PDT by blackdog ((Z28.310) My dog Sam eats purple flowers.)
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To: george76

Go Patriot Act! /s


6 posted on 06/13/2023 6:56:40 PM PDT by glorgau
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To: george76

They HATE the Fourth Amendment.


7 posted on 06/13/2023 6:58:33 PM PDT by TBP (Decent people cannot fathom the amoral cruelty of the Biden regime.)
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To: george76

.


8 posted on 06/13/2023 7:01:18 PM PDT by sauropod (“If they don’t believe our lies, well, that’s just conspiracy theorist stuff, there.”)
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To: george76

The republicans will go along in the end. Just like they always do. McCarthy will lead the way.


9 posted on 06/13/2023 7:16:03 PM PDT by Revel
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To: All

Well, on the bright side there WILL eventually be consequences. It may not be in this lifetime, but there will be consequences


10 posted on 06/13/2023 8:07:12 PM PDT by LegendHasIt
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To: george76

Thank you George Bush - like Herpes, the gift that keeps on giving!


11 posted on 06/13/2023 8:41:41 PM PDT by PGR88
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To: george76
Stinking communist bastards continue to run roughshod over the servile & indolent Aamerican sheeple...

There are no limits to tyranny...
There is no end in sight!
So:
Bow down!... Obey!... Snitch!...

12 posted on 06/13/2023 10:09:45 PM PDT by SuperLuminal (Where is the next Sam Adams when we so desperately need him)
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To: Blood of Tyrants

Our whole intelligence/counterintelligence system, laws, tactics and premises need to be overhauled from top to bottom.

We need to define the mission, who are real and potential enemies (I.e. countries who are falling under Red Chinese financial and possible military/diplomatic domination esp. In the Pacific and Africa), the extent of real and possible subversion, New internal MARXIST organizations/fronts, law enforcement deficiencies, funding needs, etc.

Both my late father-in-law and myself have extensive experience in (especially for him) in internal security, foreign counterintelligence operations, and signals intelligence, including Ww2.

His activities are so classified from the Cold War that he bet me I’d never find his name in Government records esp. at the National Archives, and he was right.

I was a special researcher for the government on certain types of military records needed for environmental cleanup operations.

I was also an FBI undercover operative, which led to what appears to be an unknown Soviet atomic spy ring from even pre-WW2, as well as domestic communist operations on behalf of the Soviets, No. Vietnamese, Red Chinese, Red Cuba, etc.

Most of my older friends were OSS, CIA, DIA, Military Intelligence, Police Intelligence and top FBI CIC leaders.

They knew who the enemies of America were and took targeted counter-intelligence operations against them, not loyal citizens of the US.

Reform our intelligence community from top to bottom, or raze it to the ground and rebuild it to face real 21st century threats.

Our very existence as a free and Democratic country depends on it, NOW! We are running out of time!


13 posted on 06/14/2023 12:26:33 AM PDT by MadMax, the Grinning Reaper (Figures )
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To: george76
You know, maybe a Senator should step forward and say:

"No, no approval for section 702.

In exchange, I'll propose legislation that will be separate and will accomplish something similar and give others in this chamber, along with the intelligence apparatus what they apparently really want. The legislation will be called the 'American Surveillance Act'. If we are to put this abuse on the citizens of this country, we should be honest and sign our names to it."

14 posted on 06/14/2023 5:53:16 AM PDT by Tench_Coxe (The woke were surprised by the reaction to the Bud Light fiasco. May there be many more surprises)
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To: george76
Without Section 702, specifically, NSA Deputy Director George Barnes claimed, “our ability to preserve the nation’s security would be significantly impaired.”

I think he means their ability to spy on Trump would be impaired.

15 posted on 06/14/2023 5:55:05 AM PDT by 1Old Pro
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