.
“While we are heartened that Attorney General Barr is acknowledging what has been clear for a long time, that spying did occur in 2016 against the Trump campaign and continued into the transition and then administration, with all due respect to the Attorney General, the question here is not whether there was unauthorized surveillance. The trouble here is that the surveillance was authorized despite the fact that it lacked credible and verified allegations.”…
……………………………..
“FISA Court: We Approve 99% of Wiretap Applications.” NPR, 10/13/2013
……………………………….
No oversight of FISA Court: FISA Court Judge: Contrary to assurances, no oversight exists for US spy operations: August 15, 2013, “Court: Ability to police U.S. spying program limited,“ Washington Post, Carol Leonnig
“The leader of the secret court [FISA] that is supposed to provide critical oversight of the government’s vast spying programs said that its ability to do so is limited and that it must trust the government to report when it improperly spies on Americans. The chief judge of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court said the court lacks the tools to independently verify how
often the government’s surveillance breaks the court’s rules that aim
to protect Americans’ privacy.
Without taking drastic steps, it also cannot check the veracity of the government’s assertions that the violations its staff members report are unintentional mistakes….The court’s description of its practical limitations contrasts with repeated assurances from the Obama administration and intelligence agency leaders that the court provides central checks and balances on the government’s broad spying efforts.”…
For example, Rod
Rosenstein was free to sign a FISA warrant against Trump without
reading it: “Rosenstein Testifies He Doesn’t Need to Read FISA
Applications He Signs,“ CNS News, 6/29/18
……………………
4/11/19, “Of
course spying occurred in 2016 against the Trump campaign by the Obama
administration. What do you think a FISA warrant is for?” DailyTorch.com, Americans for Limited Government, Robert Romano
““I think spying did occur… but the question is whether it was predicated, adequately predicated?”
That was Attorney General William Barr testifying before the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Commerce, Science and Justice on April 10, acknowledging that the Trump campaign was spied on by the Obama administration during the 2016 election campaign. Barr outlined his impending
review of the conduct of the Justice Department, the FBI and U.S.
intelligence agencies in launching surveillance and an investigation of
the Trump campaign for conspiring with Russia to interfere with the 2016 election — a crime we now know was never committed.
And of course spying occurred. The nearly three-year investigation was complete with Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) warrants, approved in federal court, that allowed federal officials to look at Trump campaign emails, listen to phone calls and see other communications.
That’s what a FISA warrant does. It’s for surveillance, which is right in the name of the statute. That is spying.
What’s worse, the months-long surveillance resulted in individuals being prosecuted for unrelated process crimes and otherwise destroyed people’s lives, only to find out later there was no conspiracy or coordination with Russia after an exhaustive probe by Special Counsel Robert Mueller.
As for whether the spying was justified, one need only look to the fact that there was no conspiracy by Trump with Russia, and the basis for the investigation into Trump, his campaign, the transition and then the Trump administration could not have possibly been adequately predicated.
Because it was based on a slew of lies. The dossier that the FISA warrants relied on, by former British spy [and continuing British subject and British business owner] Christopher Steele, was paid for by the Democratic National Committee (DNC) and the Hillary Clinton campaign. But Steele says he never went to Russia”…
[Ed. note: Steele hasn’t been in Russia for over 25 years: He arrived in Russia in late 1990 and left in 1993 to return to the UK. Source: Steele was married in the UK in July 1990 and “was posted to Moscow months later.” Steele left Russia sometime in 1993. In 1999 his name appeared on a UK list of outed spies or former spies, so
there was no chance of his traveling to Russia. His alleged remaining
“contacts” inside Russia obviously risked arrest by communicating with
him, as would be the case in most countries.]
(continuing): “and he has stated in testimony that the allegations needed to be “further corroborated and verified.” He relied on a network of informants.
Right off the bat, it was second-hand and maybe even third-hand information, hearsay that should have never been admissible in a court of law. Steele was not an eye witness to any of the allegations he published and it is not even clear that his sources were, either, since in some cases, the events described never even occurred.
Steele said the sources were Russian but did not name them: Source A was a “former top Russian intelligence officer”; Source B was a “senior Russian Foreign Ministry figure”; Source C was a “senior Russian financial official”; Source D was a “close associate of Trump” (golden showers source); Source E was an “ethnic Russian close associate” of Trump (golden showers source); Source F was a “female staffer of the hotel”; and source G was a “senior Kremlin official”.
Were these sources even real? Was it Russian disinformation that the FBI then acted on? Was the FISA judge ever advised about Steele’s own doubts about the allegations?
In fact, almost none of the principal allegations panned out. Former Trump campaign advisor Carter Page [a confidential FBI asset from 2013 through May 2016 at successful conclusion of FBI’s case against Buryakov, the FBI’s primary witness through May of 2016, whose status as confidential FBI witness “Male-1” in U.S.A. v. Evgeny Buryakov, Igor Sporyshev, and Victor Podobnyy was illegally disclosed (page 2, from his 5/7/2017 9 page letter to Senate Intel. Committee), and who has never met Trump (Dec. 2016 subhead)] was never charged with any crime, let alone committing espionage in league with Russia to hack the DNC and put the emails on Wikileaks while on a business trip to Moscow in July 2016. Former Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort was brought up on unrelated bank and tax charges predating the campaign. Former Trump Organization attorney Michael Cohen never traveled to Prague
in his entire life, let alone in August or September of 2016 as the
dossier alleged, and so he very well could not have been there meeting
with Russian agents to mop up the fallout of the hacks and Wikileaks
publications.
Later it was contended that the basis for the investigation was not the Steele dossier or Carter Page, but former Trump campaign advisor George Papadopoulos, who was [allegedly] promised Hillary Clinton private server emails by
Joseph Mifsud [a professor from the Commonwealth country of Malta,
(was) a professorial fellow at the University of Stirling in Scotland,
but is (was) based in London]. But Papadopoulos is now contending in his new book, “Deep State Target,” that the meetings he participated in were set up, not by Russian intelligence, but Western intelligence agencies to create the appearance that he was coordinating with Russia. In short, that it was some sort of sting operation. Barr needs to explore those allegations, too, even if they reveal that [so-called] U.S. allies”…
[Ed. note: “All the action in this case takes place not in Moscow but in southern England."…UK was
already indebted to Obama who secretly gave them $137 million in free
spy equipment between 2009 and 2012 with the understanding that UK would
deliver services to Obama when needed: UK spy agency “GCHQ seems desperate to please its American benefactor [Obama]….Another pitch to keep the US happy involves reminding Washington that the UK is less regulated than the US. The British agency described this as one of its key “selling points”.”…For example, US agencies aren’t allowed to examine private communications of American citizens without warrants. So British spies say they played an early crucial role in alerting US counterparts in 2015
to alleged Trump-Russia connections. The alleged intelligence was
passed by UK to US counterparts as part of a routine exchange of
information.…UK sources say FBI director James Comey became much more concerned about Trump after he won the 2016 election. UK Guardian: “Comey’s apparent shift may have followed a mid-October [2016] decision by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) court to approve a secret surveillance order. The order gave permission for the Department of Justice to investigate two banks suspected of being part of the Kremlin’s undercover influence operation. According to the BBC, the justice department’s [FISA warrant] request came after a tipoff from an intelligence agency in one of the Baltic states. This is believed to be Estonia.”…April 13, 2017, “British spies were first to spot Trump team’s links with Russia,” UK Guardian, Luke Harding, Stephanie Kirchgaessner, Nick Hopkins]
(continuing): “were intimately involved with the operation to spy on the Trump campaign. Papadopoulos deserves his reputation back.
For his part, Barr is promising that his review of the investigation
will cover all bases. He stated, “I feel I have an obligation to make sure that government power is not abused. I mean, I think that’s one of the principal roles of the Attorney General.” [Outside of monarchies and dictatorships, persons on the public payroll are subject to oversight.]
Barr explained, “I think spying on a political campaign is a big deal, it’s a big deal. The generation I grew up in, which was the Vietnam War period, people were all concerned about spying on anti-war people
and so forth by the government. And there were a lot of rules put in
place to make sure that there’s an adequate basis before our law enforcement agencies get involved in political surveillance.”
Here, Barr is spot on in his implied reference to the select committee led by the late Sen. Frank Church (D-Idaho), convened in 1975 to investigate the revelations of Seymour Hersh’s report to the New York Times on Dec. 22, 1974 that the CIA had been engaged a mass, domestic surveillance program against anti-war protestors, members of Congress and other political figures. The committee led to the adoption of FISA in 1978, which was supposed to prevent this sort of political spying from ever occurring again. [The reverse happened].
It failed. Whether that was because it was violated or, worse, is so permissive of domestic spying that it allowed the Russia collusion hoax to be perpetrated on the American people is an important question that needs to be answered. But that is only the beginning of the work that must be done.
Barr said of FISA in his testimony, “I’m not suggesting those rules were violated but I think it’s important to look at that.” Later in his testimony, he couched his description of the spying he would be reviewing, saying, “I want to make sure there was no unauthorized surveillance.”
Certainly, if there was any unauthorized spying, we need to know that. But, says Americans for Limited Government President Rick Manning in a statement, the problem is that much of the surveillance we know about in some instances, including the FISA warrants, is that they were authorized: “While we are heartened that Attorney General Barr is acknowledging what has been clear for a long time, that spying did occur in 2016 against the Trump campaign and continued into the transition and then administration, with all due respect to the Attorney General, the question here is not whether there was unauthorized surveillance. The trouble here is that the surveillance was authorized despite the fact that it lacked credible and verified allegations.”
Barr himself might be leaning on a theory of where the fault may lie, pointing to leaders in the Justice Department,
“To the extent that there were any issues at the FBI, I do not view it
as a problem that is endemic to the FBI. I think there was a failure among a group of leaders there at the upper echelon.” [All of whom as employees of US taxpayers are subject to oversight].
Meaning, what we may learn at the end of the day is that FISA is not up to the task of preventing these types of abuses of power. But we’ll see how this goes. Maybe shady accounts like the Steele dossier, that is, the use of unverified, raw intelligence is commonplace when officials go in to request FISA warrants.
A common refrain is that these tools are necessary to stop terrorists and other bad guys. But if innocent Americans can be portrayed as enemies of state and targeted for surveillance, that’s a huge problem.
Barr and the Justice Department do indeed have an obligation to identify and prevent these sorts of abuses. Courts depend on the officers of the court as reliable sources of information but these probable cause [FISA Court] hearings amount to little more than rubber stamps. Probable cause has been watered down to mere “reasonable” possibilities. Good luck showing an application was constitutionally defective, and if the FISA warrants were unconstitutional, courts generally allow the evidence to still be used if the officers acted in “good faith.” The rules are so stacked in the prosecution’s favor that abuses like those seen with the Russia collusion hoax are truly probable. And innocent people
are going to be targeted again if we don’t figure this out.
But even
after the Edward Snowden disclosures of mass surveillance by government
agencies were revealed, and almost nothing changed, there is little hope
it will ever be reined in. Indeed, this type of spying has been going
on for generations.
Barr did point to ongoing investigations by the
Justice Department Inspector General Michael Horowitz that are reviewing
these very questions and the nation patiently awaits those findings. But Barr has his work cut out for him, and there are very good reasons to be cynical about the ultimate outcome. The deck is hopelessly stacked. The bottom line is that if the spying that happened here is not against the law, it needs to be. This was a trial run for tyranny. Unfortunately, Congress has proven time and again that it has no intention of stopping mass surveillance. We live in a police state.”
Robert Romano is the Vice President of Public Policy at Americans for Limited Government.
…………………………
Added: UK spy operations were desperate to please Obama: “UK’s biggest fear is that “US perceptions of the…partnership diminish, leading to loss of access, and/or reduction in investment…to the UK". When GCHQ does supply the US with valuable intelligence, the agency boasts about it….GCHQ [NSA equivalent] seems desperate to please its American benefactor….Another pitch to keep the US happy involves reminding Washington that the UK is less regulated than the US. The British agency described this as one of its key “selling points”.” 8/1/2013, “Exclusive: NSA pays £100m in secret funding for GCHQ,” UK Guardian, Nick Hopkins, Julian Borger
………………………………………
Added: More on Mr. Steele: Christopher Steele is a British subject and British business owner. In 2016 he was an FBI informant providing alleged anti-Trump material while at the same time an operative for Mrs. Clinton’s presidential campaign. Mr. Steele thought the US election was too important to be decided by US voters and taxpayers.
Unlike Mr. Steele, US citizens aren’t subjects of a monarchy and an EU so
aren’t accustomed to people in our midst behaving as if they’re more
entitled than we are to decide things like US elections.
.................
Friday, April 12, 2019
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