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Curated research library of TV news clips regarding the NSA, its oversight and privacy issues, 2009-2014

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Primary curation & research: Robin Chin, Internet Archive TV News Researcher; using Internet Archive TV News service.

Speakers

Ryan Gallagher
Reporter for The Intercept
KCSM 08/28/2014
Gallagher: After 9/11, the NSA basically concluded that it had to bolster metadata sharing across the U.S. government because there was a feeling that after 9/11, there was intelligence failures. It failed to prevent the attack and also they were getting slammed for the bad intelligence that led up to the Iraq invasion. And so Alexander's solution was that how he could solve this was to build this gigantic new metadata search system and give analysts right across the government access so they could sift through people's information obviously to identify certain threats and things like that. But obviously when you open a system like that up with all of these records to all of the thousands of analysts, there is a concern there about the possibility for abuse of that.
Ryan Gallagher
Reporter for The Intercept
KCSM 08/28/2014
Gallagher: For me, there are multiple things that are shocking about it. Mostly, just the vast scale and scope of it, and the kind of brazen way it is described in the documents. There was no, it doesn't really seem like there was any intention to try to restrict, or place limitations on it. It’s all about how much can they share. They want to share as much as possible. And again this kind of feeds into what they described as their collect it all mentality where they just want more and more data. That’s what they think is their solution. For me, I think the scale is shocking. And also the fact that domestic law enforcement are able to tap into this thing with very little oversight and few restrictions. Yeah, I mean, the whole thing is really quite striking.
Ryan Gallagher
Reporter for The Intercept
KCSM 08/28/2014
Gallagher: We’ve had it confirmed by the NSA that the data that is swept up and stored on this database en masse, is collected using this Reagan-era Presidential order, which is called 12333. This thing is subject to no court oversight from the secret foreign intelligence court and minimal congressional scrutiny.
Ryan Gallagher
Reporter for The Intercept
KCSM 08/28/2014
Gallagher: Dianne Feinstein, who’s the Chief of the Senate Intelligence Committee, even she’s usually quite a defender of the NSA. She has in the past said that this executive order isn't subject to congressional oversight. And so that’s the authority that is used to put these records on the system and then being funneled across the U.S. intelligence community. So there are huge legal questions about that, the restrictions on it, how it can be used potentially in domestic criminal investigations, secretly by federal agents, and stuff like that. These are questions that people are asking now and we hope are going to be sufficiently addressed by the government in the weeks to come.
Ryan Gallagher
Reporter for The Intercept
KCSM 08/28/2014
Gallagher: In the early 1990's, the CIA and the DEA, according to the documents, started this program called Criss-Cross. And basically, what they were doing was gathering as much information they could about phone calls in Latin America, and it seems pretty much anywhere. And using that information to go after drug targets, people involved in drug trafficking but very quickly the scope of this thing expanded and by the mid to late 90's, the NSA was involved in it, the FBI was involved in it, the Defense Intelligence Agency was involved in it.
Ryan Gallagher
Reporter for The Intercept
KCSM 08/28/2014
Gallagher: And they were scaling up again And they built a new system which they called Proton to put on all kinds of new records so it wasn't just your basic phone call stuff. It was location data. They had records from CIA reports and stuff about people's visa applications when traveling overseas -- everything like that. Billions of records. And so that was the kind of precursor to ICReach Program, which again scaled this thing up massively. And they talk about a 12 fold increase. It was something like by the end the, The Proton I believe is still exists today. With about 50 billion or so of these metadata records on it. ICReach is about to contain about 850 Billion or more. So that’s like more than a 12 fold increase in capacity.
Amy Goodman
Host and Executive Producer for Democracy Now
KCSM 08/28/2014
Goodman; There’s this graphic with your new story in The Intercept that compares how many records are now available via ICReach. It reads in part – People on Earth: 7 billion. Google searches per month: 100 billion. Estimated stars in the Milky Way: 400 billion. And estimated records available via ICReach: more than 850 billion.
Ryan Gallagher
Reporter for The Intercept
KCSM 08/28/2014
Gallagher: Parallel construction was, some excellent Reuters reporters revealed last year that some federal agents within the drug enforcement administration were using data that had been obtained through covert surveillance and using it to initiate investigations against people inside the United States, American citizens. – but they’re not disclosing (and if there were a Prosecution say?), basically covering up that evidence and inventing a false evidence trail so that the way the surveillance data was obtained can never be challenged in the court. Which to most ordinary people, that seems like a clear subversion of the basic principles of the justice system.
Ryan Gallagher
Reporter for The Intercept
KCSM 08/28/2014
Gallagher: One of the big issues with the story that we've just put out is that it seems to be a huge part of the jigsaw puzzle in terms of showing where some of the data that is being used in this parallel construction technique by federal agents could be coming from. And indeed, the Reuters reporter who, one of the Reuters reporters who first revealed parallel construction and contacted me to say he thinks this story that we’ve done is hugely significant for that reason, because it is a huge piece of the puzzle that shows how NSA data is ending up in the hands of DEA agents in the United States.
Amy Goodman
Host and Executive Producer for Democracy Now
KCSM 08/28/2014
Goodman: you recently reported U.S. military has banned the intercept, the news site. You cite a portion of an e-mail sent to staff last week at a U.S. Marine Corps base that directs employees not to read The Intercept. It reads in part: “We have received information from our higher headquarters regarding a potential new leaker of classified information. Although no formal validation has occurred, we thought it prudent to warn all employees and subordinate commands. Please do not go to any website entitled “The Intercept” for it may very well contain classified material.” “Viewing potentially classified material (even material already wrongfully released in the public domain) from unclassified equipment will cause you long term security issues. This is considered a security violation.” -- your response.
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