FBI fails to pay telephone bill; loses wiretap

bokmeow

Ned's Ninja Academy Dropout
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...

Sources close to the FBI suggest that the agency's failure to pay for the telephone bill is due to maxing out their credit cards :emb:

Associated Press said:
FBI Wiretaps Dropped Due to Unpaid Bills

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published: January 10, 2008
Filed at 6:08 p.m. ET

WASHINGTON (AP) -- 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. In one office alone, unpaid costs for wiretaps from one phone company totaled $66,000.

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 and intelligence 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.

More than half of 990 bills to pay for telecommunication surveillance in five unidentified FBI field offices were not paid on time, the report shows.

Assistant FBI Director John Miller said wiretaps were dropped only a few times because of the backed-up billing, which he said didn't significantly set back the investigations under way. He said the FBI ''will not tolerate financial mismanagement, or worse,'' and is working to fix the problems.

''While in a few instances, late-payment of telephone bills resulted in interruptions of monitoring, these interruptions were temporary and in our assessment, none of those cases were significantly affected,'' Miller said in a statement Thursday evening.

The report released Thursday was a highly edited version of Fine's 87-page audit that the FBI deemed too sensitive to be viewed publicly. It focused on what the bureau admitted was an ''antiquated'' system to track money sent to its 56 field offices nationwide for undercover work. Generally, the money pays for rental cars, leases and surveillance, the audit noted.

The American Civil Liberties Union called on the FBI to release the entire, unedited audit. The group, which has been critical of some of the government's wiretapping programs, also took a swipe at telecommunication companies that allowed the eavesdropping -- as long as they are getting paid.

''It seems the telecoms, who are claiming they were just being 'good patriots' when they allowed the government to spy on us without warrants, are more than willing to pull the plug on national security investigations when the government falls behind on its bills,'' said former FBI agent Michael German, the ACLU's national security policy counsel. ''To put it bluntly, it sounds as though the telecoms believe it when FBI says warrant is in the mail but not when they say the check is in the mail.''

The audit also found that some field offices paid for expenses on undercover cases that should have been financed by FBI headquarters. Out of 130 undercover payments examined, auditors found 14 cases of at least $6,000 each where field offices dipped into their own budgets to pay for work that should have been picked up by headquarters.

The faulty bookkeeping was blamed, in large part, on an FBI employee who pleaded guilty in June 2006 to stealing $25,000 for her own use, the audit noted.

''As demonstrated by the FBI employee who stole funds intended to support undercover activities, procedural controls by themselves have not ensured proper tracking and use of confidential case funds,'' it concluded.

Fine's report offered 16 recommendations to improve the FBI's tracking and management of the funding system, including its telecommunication costs. The FBI has agreed to follow 11 of the suggestions and one additional recommendation was found unnecessary. But it said that four ''would be either unfeasible or too cost prohibitive.'' The recommendations were not specifically outlined in the edited version of the report.
 

HeartlessNinny

Heartlessness is a virtue
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bokmeow said:
...

Sources close to the FBI suggest that the agency's failure to pay for the telephone bill is due to maxing out their credit cards :emb:

Capitalism > Law enforcement?

Kinda depressing.
 

bokmeow

Ned's Ninja Academy Dropout
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Gotta work on the delivery.... like, "the agency's failure to pay for delinquent phone bill was attributed to the federal government's maxing out its credit cards" or summat :emb:
 

Loopz

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I'm glad the fiscal conservatives are in charge.
 

OrochiEddie

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I was hearing this on the radio, and I find it rather amusing. If you're going to be unconstitutional you got to at least pay the bills to do it.
 

Talen

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HeartlessNinny said:
Capitalism > Law enforcement?

Kinda depressing.

Capitalism > Unconstitutional abuse of powers more like it.

The war on terror has been nothing if not a massive rape of civil rights and due process. Not that the phone companies are standing up for anyone but themselves, it's just funny to see this happen.
 

HeartlessNinny

Heartlessness is a virtue
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Talen said:
Capitalism > Unconstitutional abuse of powers more like it.

The war on terror has been nothing if not a massive rape of civil rights and due process. Not that the phone companies are standing up for anyone but themselves, it's just funny to see this happen.

Ah, guess I should have more than just skimmed the story... I thought it was a case of the feds losing a wiretap on some gangsters or something.

I change my previous statement! For once, I'm glad capitalism screwed up a government process.

It might not be justice, but it's just as satisfying!!
 

lordtut

Kuroko's Training Dummy
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Posts
76
when i heard this i was not surprised.
i know someone who works for the fbi at they'er training facility.
if i listed everything that was wrong you would cry its so messed up.
one thing they have blind people cleaning the place. :spock:
i'm not joking.
i think they stoped taking new recruits and are forcing older ones to retire.
i think it will be phased out soon.

besides that place is just for land lines the cell phone place works fine.
trust me if they thought it was important it would have been payed.
they used to have 2 places for land lines but with cellphones they dropped one.
the government isn't as dumb as they make out.

they have no trouble comming up with money for that highway thats gona connect us to canada & mexico.
i should add they are not adding border stops to check for immigrants or drugs.
 
Last edited:

Piratero

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lordtut said:
they have no trouble comming up with money for that highway thats gona connect us to canada & mexico.
i should add they are not adding border stops to check for immigrants or drugs.

Why would they when they* want/need the illegal drugs?

* The United States.
 

lordtut

Kuroko's Training Dummy
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Piratero said:
Why would they when they* want/need the illegal drugs?

* The United States.


you forgot they want/need the illegal immigrants too.
someone need to do my job for 1/2 price.
 

alec

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Is this real? This is awesome on so many levels. :lolz:
 

norton9478

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For Games.
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I miss the good old days when the goverment invented shit like crack to fund these types of operations.
 
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