July 28, 2007
Will Gonzales Controversy Affect Overseas Intelligence Collection?
- Alberto Gonzales
- U.S. Attorney Firings
- White House
- Dept. of Justice
- Pres. George W. Bush
- White House Counsel
- Domestic Surveillance Program
- Mike McConnell
- Director of National Intelligence
There’s an urgent problem created by Alberto Gonzales’ litany of controversies while serving as U.S. Attorney General and White House Counsel to President Bush.
Will Gonzales’ inability to testify truthfully before Congress, attempts to circumvent the Justice Department’s legal conclusion under former Attorney General John Ashcroft that warrantless wiretapping is unconstitutional, and continued lack of Congressional support for firing career criminal prosecutors in U.S. Attorney offices around the country have a catastrophic affect on America’s ability to collect vital intelligence on terrorists and others threatening the U.S. domestically and abroad?
These questions come to mind after reading today’s Washington Post article on efforts by Mike McConnell, the U.S. Director of National Intelligence to get Congress to amend the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (’FISA’) (50 U.S.C. § 1801, et al.
In effect, McConnell appears like he’s trying to ‘pull a Gonzales’ by circumventing the federal judiciary. The changes that he is proposing to Congress for the current FISA law, according to the Post, are of a logistical nature, and raise the following question: “When communications between one foreign-located source and another foreign-located source travel through a U.S.-located terminal or switch, can they be intercepted without a warrant?”
Here are a few hypothetical scenarios that come to mind:
- If potential targets of a terrorism investigation use Skype (which is owned by San Jose, Calif.-based eBay), could the U.S. eavesdrop on VoIP phone calls or text communications simply because the parent company is a U.S.-based entity?
- If VoIP servers used in foreign communications by terrorists are located overseas, would the U.S. still have jurisdiction to eavesdrop on the communication(s) without first obtaining a court-ordered warrant?
- If an al Qaeda terrorist called from a satellite phone in the tribal areas between Afghanistan and Pakistan to a member of a terrorist cell in a country outside of the United States, could the U.S. legally eavesdrop on the conversation and use information collected from to act against the parties when their communication, locations, and systems used were all overseas?
Convicted 9/11 conspirator and admitted al Qaeda terrorist Zarias Moussaoui used Hotmail accounts to help carry out part of his intended operation, according to court documents and news reports in the case.
If he had used a overseas e-mail account instead of his Hotmail account hosted by Microsoft, would McConnell’s proposed changes in the law have enabled U.S. intelligence agencies to legally collect and used information garnered from his communications (the FBI reportedly bungled their collection and use of Moussaoui’s Hotmail e-mails.)?

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