Thursday, January 10, 2008

Wiretaps shut down over unpaid bills


This certainly undercuts the "patriotism" argument in favor of telecom immunity, no?

Telephone companies have cut off FBI wiretaps used to eavesdrop on suspected criminals because of the bureau's repeated failures to pay phone bills on time.

A Justice Department audit released Thursday blamed the lost connections on the FBI's lax oversight of money used in undercover investigations. Poor supervision of the program also allowed one agent to steal $25,000, the audit said.

In at least one case, a wiretap used in a Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act investigation ''was halted due to untimely payment,'' the audit found. FISA wiretaps are used in the government's most sensitive and secretive criminal investigations, and allow eavesdropping on suspected terrorists or spies.

''We also found that late payments have resulted in telecommunications carriers actually disconnecting phone lines established to deliver surveillance results to the FBI, resulting in lost evidence,'' according to the audit by Inspector General Glenn A. Fine.
The telecoms wave the flag in our faces to obscure the ugly truth about warrantless wiretaps, but apparently legal surveillance gets shut down over dollars and cents.

"Patriotic corporate citizens"? I think not.

photo © Michael Jastremski for openphoto.net CC:Attribution-ShareAlike

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