Monday, August 31, 2020

U.S. intelligence won’t answer if it spies on American journalists

The Office of Director of National Intelligence is refusing to say whether U.S. spy agencies monitor American journalists' overseas phone calls or records that were collected by the National Security Agency, saying revealing the answer could jeopardize its tactics.

The ODNI's answer came late last week in response to a Just the News request under the Freedom of Information Act for any records since 2015 that "Show the frequency by which professional journalists' phone records were searched via the NSA database and any journalists' overseas conversations were unmasked." "ODNI can neither confirm nor deny the existence or non-existence of the requested records," the agency wrote in a letter to Just the News.

The Project for Privacy and Surveillance Accountability, a nonprofit where former House Judiciary Committee Chairman Bob Goodlatte works as a senior adviser, was rejected recently for records it sought on whether U.S. intelligence has been surveilling past and current U.S. senators and House members.

Specifically, the group asked ODNI whether the spy agencies it supervises unmasked the identities of current and past lawmakers known to have been caught up in foreign surveillance, and whether the names of these members were searched through what is known as the "Upstream" phone database.

ODNI summarily denied the FOIA with what is known as a "Glomar response," saying confirming or denying such surveillance "Could reveal sources and methods information." There is at least one documented instance of executive branch spying on Congress in the last decade.

The CIA inspector general concluded in 2014 that CIA officers wrongly spied on Senate Intelligence Committee investigators preparing a report on the agency's terrorist interrogation program.

On Friday, Rep. Anna Eshoo asked U.S spy agencies if they have spied on lawmakers in the last decade, based on allegations in a recent book by journalist Barton Gellman.

https://justthenews.com/politics-policy/privacy/us-intelligence-wont-answer-if-it-spies-american-journalists 

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