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Ashcroft Seeking to Free F.B.I. to Spy on Groups
NYTimes.com ^ | 11/30/2001 | David Johnston and Don Van Natta Jr.

Posted on 11/30/2001 6:26:23 PM PST by GeneD

WASHINGTON, Nov. 30 — Attorney General John Ashcroft is considering a plan to relax restrictions on the F.B.I.'s spying on religious and political organizations in the United States, senior government officials said today.

The proposal would loosen one of the most fundamental restrictions on the conduct of the Federal Bureau of Investigation and would be another step by the Bush administration to modify civil-liberties protections as a means of defending the country against terrorists, the senior officials said.

The attorney general's surveillance guidelines were imposed on the F.B.I. in the 1970's after the death of J. Edgar Hoover and the disclosures that the F.B.I. had run a widespread domestic surveillance program, called Cointelpro, to monitor antiwar militants, the Ku Klux Klan, the Black Panthers and the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., among others, while Mr. Hoover was director.

Since then, the guidelines have defined the F.B.I.'s operational conduct in investigations of domestic and overseas groups that operate in the United States.

Some officials who oppose the change said the rules had largely kept the F.B.I. out of politically motivated investigations, protecting the bureau from embarrassment and lawsuits. But others, including senior Justice Department officials, said the rules were outmoded and geared to obsolete investigative methods and had at times hobbled F.B.I. counterterrorism efforts.

Mr. Ashcroft and the F.B.I. director, Robert S. Mueller III, favor the change, the officials said. Most of the opposition comes from career officials at the F.B.I. and the Justice Department.

A Justice Department spokeswoman said today that no final decision had been reached on the revised guidelines.

"As part of the attorney general's reorganization," said Susan Dryden, the spokeswoman, "we are conducting a comprehensive review of all guidelines, policies and procedures. All of these are still under review."

An F.B.I. spokesman said the bureau's approach to terrorism was also under review.

"Director Mueller's view is that everything should be on the table for review," the spokesman, John Collingwood, said. "He is more than willing to embrace change when doing so makes us a more effective component. A healthy review process doesn't come at the expense of the historic protections inherent in our system."

The attorney general is free to revise the guidelines, but Justice Department officials said it was unclear how heavily they would be revised. There are two sets of guidelines, for domestic and foreign groups, and most of the discussion has centered on the largely classified rules for investigations of foreign groups.

The relaxation of the guidelines would follow administration measures to establish military tribunals to try foreigners accused of terrorism; to seek out and question 5,000 immigrants, most of them Muslims, who have entered the United States since January 2000; and to arrest more than 1,200 people, nearly all of whom are unconnected to the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, and hold hundreds of them in jail.

Today, Mr. Ashcroft defended his initiatives in an impassioned speech to United States attorneys.

"Our efforts have been deliberate, they've been coordinated, they've been carefully crafted to not only protect America but to respect the Constitution and the rights enshrined therein," Mr. Ashcroft said.

"Still," he added, "there have been a few voices who have criticized. Some have sought to condemn us with faulty facts or without facts at all. Others have simply rushed to judgment, almost eagerly assuming the worst of their government before they've had a chance to understand it at its best."

Under the current surveillance guidelines, the F.B.I. cannot send undercover agents to investigate groups that gather at places like mosques or churches unless investigators first find probable cause, or evidence leading them to believe that someone in the group may have broken the law. Full investigations of this sort cannot take place without the attorney general's consent.

Since Sept. 11, investigators have said, Islamic militants have sometimes met at mosques — apparently knowing that the religious institutions are usually off limits to F.B.I. surveillance squads. Some officials are now saying they need broader authority to conduct surveillance of potential terrorists, no matter where they are.

Senior career F.B.I. officials complained that they had not been consulted about the proposed change — a criticism they have expressed about other Bush administration counterterrorism measures. When the Justice Department decided to use military tribunals to try accused terrorists, and to interview thousands of Muslim men in the United States, the officials said they were not consulted.

Justice Department officials noted that Mr. Mueller had endorsed the administration's proposals, adding that the complaints were largely from older F.B.I. officials who were resistant to change and unwilling to take the aggressive steps needed to root out terror in the United States. Other officials said the Justice Department had consulted with F.B.I. lawyers and some operational managers about the change.

But in a series of recent interviews, several senior career officials at the F.B.I. said it would be a serious mistake to weaken the guidelines, and they were upset that the department had not clearly described the proposed changes.

"People are furious right now — very, very angry," one of them said. "They just assume they know everything. When you don't consult with anybody, it sends the message that you assume you know everything. And they don't know everything."

Still, some complaints seem to stem from the F.B.I.'s shifting status under Mr. Ashcroft. Weakened by a series of problems that predated the Sept. 11 attacks, the F.B.I. has been forced to follow orders from the Justice Department — a change that many law enforcement experts thought was long overdue. In the past, the bureau leadership had far more independence and authority to make its own decisions.

Several senior officials are leaving the F.B.I., including Thomas J. Pickard, the deputy director. He was the senior official in charge of the investigation of the attacks and was among top F.B.I. officials who were opposed to another decision of the Bush administration, the public announcements of Oct. 12 and Oct. 29 that placed the country on the highest state of alert in response to vague but credible threats of a possible second terrorist attack. Mr. Pickard is said to have been opposed to publicizing threats that were too vague to provide any precautionary advice.

Many F.B.I. officials regard the administration's plan to establish military tribunals as an extreme step that diminishes the F.B.I.'s role because it creates a separate prosecutorial system run by the military.

"The only thing I have seen about the tribunals is what I have seen in the newspapers," a senior official complained.

Another official said many senior law enforcement officials shared his concern about the tribunals. "I believe in the rule of law, and I believe if we have a case to make against someone, we should make it in a federal courtroom in the United States," he said.

Several senior F.B.I. officials said the tribunal system should be reserved for senior Al Qaeda members apprehended by the military in Afghanistan or other foreign countries.

Few were involved in deliberations that led to the directive Mr. Ashcroft issued this month to interview immigrant men living legally in the United States. F.B.I. officials have complained that the interview plan was begun before its ramifications were fully understood.

"None of this was thought through, a senior official said. "They just announced it, and left it to others to figure out how to do it."

The arrests and detentions of more than 1,200 people since Sept. 11 have also aroused concerns at the F.B.I. Officials noted that the investigations had found no conspirators in the United States who aided the hijackers in the Sept. 11 attacks and only a handful of people who were considered Al Qaeda members.

"This came out of the White House, and Ashcroft's office," a senior official said. "There are tons of things coming out of there these days where there is absolutely no consultation with the bureau."

Some at the F.B.I. have been openly skeptical about claims that some of the 1,200 people arrested were Al Qaeda members and that the strategy of making widespread arrests had disrupted or thwarted planned attacks.

"It's just not the case," an official said. "We have 10 or 12 people we think are Al Qaeda people, and that's it. And for some of them, it's based only on conjecture and suspicion."


TOPICS: Breaking News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: michaeldobbs
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To: Fred25
Add a little sneak and peak searches under the "UNpatriotic ACT", and a bunch of anti-4th amendment grabs, and bye bye constitution.

Who said they are just going to go after 'foreign terrorists?". What if pro-life groups, pro-gun groups, and FR will be called terrorists.

I judge every proposal like the worst people in the world are going to enforce it.

This reminds me of 1928 Germany. Bush/Ashcroft are the Wiemar Republic. Then there is 2004, and whoever wins there(I have no idea who) will have all these powers. Do you want John Edwards with this power?

21 posted on 11/30/2001 6:48:57 PM PST by Dan from Michigan
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Comment #22 Removed by Moderator

To: GeneD
I have by-in-large supported the administrations' recent proposals regarding "terrorist" but this one is troubling.

The following is the traditon: the F.B.I. cannot send undercover agents to investigate groups that gather at places like mosques or churches unless investigators first find probable cause, or evidence leading them to believe that someone in the group may have broken the law

This is the new reasoning: Since Sept. 11, investigators have said, Islamic militants have sometimes met at mosques — apparently knowing that the religious institutions are usually off limits to F.B.I. surveillance squads. Some officials are now saying they need broader authority to conduct surveillance of potential terrorists, no matter where they are.

It seems obvious that if someone is an "Islamic militant" that needs to be watched there is obviously "probable cause" to do so. Why would you need the new "relaxation" unless you just wanted to keep tabs on those that don't politically agree with you.

I smell a hidden agenda here and am concerned.

23 posted on 11/30/2001 6:51:20 PM PST by Amerigomag
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To: sinkspur
Dan, have you turned pus*y like the rest of this crowd?

No, I'm standing my ground. I ripped Klinton and Reno for trying for this in May of 2000, and I'm ripping on Janet Ashcroft for the same thing. Those that trade liberty for security deserve neither. I don't trust Ashcroft. I don't trust power. Absolute power corrupts absolutely.

Ashcroft is returning the FBI to its Hoover status,

I agree. That's not a good thing.

24 posted on 11/30/2001 6:52:28 PM PST by Dan from Michigan
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To: Dan from Michigan
Damn, Dan. Couldn't have said it better myself. Thanks.

BTW, I'm not certain that Ashcroft is evil--the evidence is mounting, however. I think he's dumb.

25 posted on 11/30/2001 6:52:46 PM PST by jammer
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To: Fred25
FDR. The worst president in American History.
26 posted on 11/30/2001 6:53:00 PM PST by Dan from Michigan
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To: ChareltonHest
"I have said it before: My prediction is that this "Anti-Terrorism" Legistlation stuff is going to be used against the militia groups first, then, someday, against 2nd Amd defenders."

And don't forget pro-life groups. Any organization that could somehow be even remotely linked to the "terrorist bombing" of an abortion clinic will be suspect.

27 posted on 11/30/2001 6:53:15 PM PST by sheltonmac
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To: Dan from Michigan
He is a moron and needs to be fired asap.
I think he wants more power than the Nazi had.

Time to email the GOP to tell them stop the Police State.

28 posted on 11/30/2001 6:54:15 PM PST by KQQL
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Comment #29 Removed by Moderator

To: mrsmith
There are a lot of people jumping to a whole lot of conclusions because Don Van Natta told them too.
30 posted on 11/30/2001 6:54:35 PM PST by Jean S
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To: Dan from Michigan
Better duck! Here comes Fred25 and the rest of the G-Men.
31 posted on 11/30/2001 6:55:31 PM PST by jammer
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To: ouroboros; Snuffington; Inspector Harry Callahan; Greg4TCP; Loopy; cva66snipe; Askel5; ppaul...
BUMP (Sorry for any repeat pinging.)
32 posted on 11/30/2001 6:55:31 PM PST by sheltonmac
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To: jammer
I don't think he's evil. I think he's a yesman. He's changed an AWFUL lot from his senate days.

I hold W just as responsible, and I voted for him. I still don't regret that vote because Gore would have been worse, but I don't know who I'm backing in 2004 though.

33 posted on 11/30/2001 6:56:11 PM PST by Dan from Michigan
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To: GeneD
This article is much ado about nothing, the fact that we are talking about relaxing administrative guidelines for foreign "visitors" who may be undertaking terrorist activities makes sense to me. The is really just another example of the FBI senior level incompetence and whininess, as evidenced by the following snippet from the article:

Many F.B.I. officials regard the administration's plan to establish military tribunals as an extreme step that diminishes the F.B.I.'s role because it creates a separate prosecutorial system run by the military.

Now what the heck are the FBI "officials" commenting on the use or non-use of military tribunals? Its not their decision and their input is irrelavent, this is up to the President and the Department of Justice, not the FBI.

34 posted on 11/30/2001 6:56:27 PM PST by Enlightiator
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To: babylonian; 2sheep; Elle Bee
"Director Mueller's view is that everything should be on the table for review," the spokesman, John Collingwood, said.

Oh great, now the feds are targeting the churches.

35 posted on 11/30/2001 6:57:27 PM PST by Fred Mertz
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To: JeanS
More like Tom Dashale and George W Bush told me to...when THEY WROTE the unpatriotic ACT.
36 posted on 11/30/2001 6:57:50 PM PST by Dan from Michigan
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Comment #37 Removed by Moderator

To: sheltonmac
Ashroft wants the US to become a police state.

What a shame this is being done under a GOP adminstration.

If Reno did , we all would have cried foul.

Time to write to eveyone and tell them to stop taking our rights away......

38 posted on 11/30/2001 6:59:05 PM PST by KQQL
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To: sinkspur
Ashcroft is returning the FBI to its Hoover status, and away from the good-ole-boy-we'll-do-whatever-the-hell-we-want cowboys that have been in charge for the last ten years.

Ah, excuse me. What do you think Hoover did?

39 posted on 11/30/2001 6:59:37 PM PST by Protect the Bill of Rights
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Comment #40 Removed by Moderator


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