<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/09/11/AR2008091103306.html?hpid=topnews>http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/09/11/AR2008091103306.html?hpid=topnews

Rule Changes Would Give FBI Agents Extensive New Powers

By Carrie Johnson
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, September 12, 2008; A02

The Justice Department will unveil changes to FBI 
ground rules today that would put much more power 
into the hands of line agents pursuing leads on 
national security, foreign intelligence and even 
ordinary criminal cases.

The overhaul, the most substantial revision to 
FBI operating instructions in years, also would 
ease some reporting requirements between agents, 
their supervisors and federal prosecutors in what 
authorities call a critical effort to improve 
information gathering and detect terrorist 
threats.

The changes would give the FBI's more than 12,000 
agents the ability at a much earlier stage to 
conduct physical surveillance, solicit informants 
and interview friends of people they are 
investigating without the approval of a bureau 
supervisor. Such techniques are currently 
available only after FBI agents have opened an 
investigation and developed a reasonable 
suspicion that a crime has been committed or that 
a threat to national security is developing.

Authorities say the changes would eliminate 
confusion for agents who investigate drug, gang 
or national security cases.

The overhaul touches on several sensitive areas. 
It would allow, for example, agents to interview 
people in the United States about foreign 
intelligence cases without warrants or prior 
approval of their supervisors. It also would 
rewrite 1976 guidelines established after 
Nixon-era abuses that restrict the FBI's 
authority to intervene in times of civil disorder 
and to infiltrate opposition groups.

"We wanted simpler, clearer and more uniform 
standards and procedures for domestic 
operations," said a senior Justice Department 
official. "We view this as the next step in 
responding to post-9/11 requests that the FBI 
become better at collecting intelligence and 
using that intelligence to prevent attacks."

The move comes a year after the Justice 
Department's inspector general documented 
widespread lapses involving one of the bureau's 
most potent investigative tools, secret "national 
security letters" that FBI agents send to banks 
and phone companies to demand sensitive 
information in terrorism probes.

The revisions are the latest in a series of 
efforts to tear down a wall that, prior to the 
Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, prevented intelligence 
investigators from sharing some information with 
their counterparts working on criminal cases. 
Senior Justice Department and FBI lawyers who 
discussed the proposal yesterday said such powers 
are necessary to continue the transformation of 
the FBI into a proactive organization that can 
prevent terrorist strikes, as recommended by 
several independent commissions that addressed 
intelligence failures after the attacks.

The rule revisions require the approval of 
Attorney General Michael B. Mukasey, who has 
signaled that they will take effect Oct. 1. FBI 
agents already are being trained on the changes, 
though officials said yesterday that they would 
consider making adjustments after receiving 
suggestions from interest groups and lawmakers.

Congressional aides examined the draft guidelines 
behind closed doors last month and FBI and 
Justice lawyers will present them today to an 
array of civil liberties and privacy advocates, 
as well as Arab American groups that have 
expressed concerns about their impact on 
religious and ethnic minorities.

The groups say they fear that agents will use 
ethnicity or religion as the basis for a threat 
assessment. But top Justice Department leaders, 
including the attorney general, noted the 
illegality of racial profiling and said 
investigations will not be opened based "solely" 
or "simply" on a person's race or religion.

Previous changes to FBI operating instructions, 
made by Attorney General John D. Ashcroft in 2002 
and 2003, did not receive a public airing before 
they took effect. Still, civil liberties 
advocates are asking whether protections built 
into the rules will be strong enough.

"It is an extraordinarily broad grant of power to 
an agency that has not proven it uses its power 
in an appropriate manner," said Michael German, 
policy counsel at the American Civil Liberties 
Union.

The revised rules largely eliminate the 
requirement that FBI agents file reports to their 
supervisors on early-stage investigations, in 
favor of audits at bureau field offices by 
lawyers in the Justice Department's National 
Security Division.

Threat assessments and early-stage investigations 
that cover political, religious or media figures 
and full-scale investigations of people in the 
United States, however, are special cases that 
must be flagged for bureau supervisors and 
lawyers, according to both current standards and 
the proposed changes.

Monitoring conversations between informants who 
agree to wear recording devices and subjects of 
investigations, which now requires the permission 
of an assistant U.S. attorney, could occur 
without a prosecutor's approval, except in 
sensitive cases involving state and federal 
officials and judges, as well as federal 
prisoners.

One of the areas still under discussion, 
according to a senior Justice Department 
official, is the standard for the FBI's rare 
involvement in responding to civil disorder. 
Under the current standards, FBI involvement 
requires the approval of the attorney general and 
can last for only 30 days.

The new approach would relax some of those 
requirements and would expand the investigative 
techniques that agents could use to include 
deploying informants. FBI agents monitoring 
large-scale demonstrations that they believe 
could turn dangerous also would have new power to 
use those techniques.

Policy guidance for FBI agents and informants who 
work as "undisclosed participants" in 
organizations is still being written, the 
officials said yesterday.

© 2008 The Washington Post Company
--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to Mark Crispin Miller's 
"News From Underground" newsgroup.

To unsubscribe, send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] OR go to 
http://groups.google.com/group/newsfromunderground and click on the 
"Unsubscribe or change membership" link in the yellow bar at the top of the 
page, then click the "Unsubscribe" button on the next page. 

For more News From Underground, visit http://markcrispinmiller.com
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to