Secret
Docs Reveal: President Trump Has Inherited an
FBI With Vast Hidden Powers
By Glenn
Greenwald and Betsy Reed
January
31, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
-
"The
Intercept" -
In the
wake of President Donald Trump’s
inauguration, the FBI assumes an importance and
influence it has not wielded since J. Edgar
Hoover’s death in 1972. That is what makes
today’s batch of stories from The Intercept,
The FBI’s Secret Rules, based on a trove of
long-sought confidential FBI documents, so
critical: It shines a bright light on the vast
powers of this law enforcement agency,
particularly when it comes to its ability to
monitor dissent and carry out a domestic war on
terror, at the beginning of an era highly
likely to be marked by vociferous protest and
reactionary state repression.
In
order to understand how the FBI makes decisions
about matters such as infiltrating religious or
political organizations, civil liberties
advocates have sued the government for access to
crucial FBI manuals — but thanks to a
federal judiciary highly subservient to
government interests, those attempts have
been largely unsuccessful. Because their
disclosure is squarely in the public interest,
The Intercept is publishing this series of
reports along with annotated versions of the
documents we obtained.
Trump
values loyalty to himself above all other
traits, so it is surely not lost on him that few
entities were as devoted to his victory, or
played as critical a role in helping to achieve
it, as the FBI. One of the more unusual aspects
of the 2016 election, perhaps the one that will
prove to be most consequential, was the covert
political war waged between the CIA and FBI.
While the top echelon of the CIA community was
vehemently
pro-Clinton, certain factions within the FBI
were aggressively supportive of Trump. Hillary
Clinton herself
blames James Comey and his election-week
letter for her defeat. Elements within
the powerful New York field office were furious
that Comey refused to indict Clinton, and
embittered agents reportedly shoveled anti-Clinton
leaks to Rudy Giuliani. The FBI’s 35,000
employees across the country are therefore
likely to be protected and empowered. Trump’s
decision to retain Comey — while jettisoning all
other top government officials — suggests that
this has already begun to happen.
When
married to Trump’s clear disdain for domestic
dissent — he venerates strongman authoritarians,
called for a crackdown on free press
protections, and suggested citizenship-stripping
for flag-burning — the authorities vested in the
FBI with regard to domestic political activism
are among the most menacing threats Americans
face. Trump is also poised to expand the powers
of law enforcement to surveil populations deemed
suspicious and deny their rights in the name of
fighting terrorism, as he has already done with
his odious restrictions on immigration from
seven Muslim-majority countries. Understanding
how the federal government’s law enforcement
agency interprets the legal limits on its
own powers is, in this context, more essential
than ever. Until now, however, the rules
governing the FBI have largely been kept secret.
Donald Trump enters the stage at the
Republican National Convention on July 18,
2016, in Cleveland, Ohio.
Photo:
Alex Wong/Getty Images
Today’s
publication is the result of months of
investigation by our staff, and we planned to
publish these articles and documents regardless
of the outcome of the 2016 election. The public
has an interest in understanding the FBI’s
practices no matter who occupies the White
House. But in the wake of Trump’s victory, and
the unique circumstances that follow from it,
these revelations take on even more urgency.
After
Congress’s 1976 Church Committee investigated
the excesses of Hoover’s FBI, in particular the
infamous COINTELPRO program — in which agents
targeted and subverted any political groups the
government deemed threatening, including
anti-war protesters, black nationalists, and
civil rights activists — a series of reforms
were enacted to rein in the FBI’s domestic
powers. As The Intercept and other news outlets
have
amply documented, in the guise of the war on
terror the FBI has engaged in a variety of
tactics that are redolent of the COINTELPRO
abuses — including, for example, repeatedly
enticing innocent Muslims into fake terror
schemes concocted by the bureau’s own
informants. What The Intercept’s reporting on
this new trove of documents shows is how the
FBI has quietly transformed the system of rules
and restraints put in place after the scandals
of the ’70s, opening the door for a new wave of
civil liberties violations. When asked to
respond to this critique, the FBI provided the
following statement:
All
FBI policies are written to ensure that the
FBI consistently and appropriately applies
the lawful tools we use to assess and
investigate criminal and national security
threats to our nation. All of our
authorities and techniques are founded in
the Constitution, U.S. law, and Attorney
General Guidelines. FBI policies and rules
are audited and enforced through a rigorous
internal compliance mechanism, as well as
robust oversight from the Inspector General
and Congress. FBI assessments and
investigations are subject to responsible
review and are designed to protect the
rights of all Americans and the safety of
our agents and sources, acting within the
bounds of the Constitution.
Absent
these documents and the facts of how the bureau
actually operates, this may sound reassuring.
But to judge how well the bureau is living up to
these abstract commitments, it is necessary to
read the fine print of its byzantine rules and
regulations — which the FBI’s secrecy has
heretofore made it impossible for outsiders to
do. Now, thanks to our access to these documents
— which include the FBI’s governing rulebook,
known as the DIOG, and classified policy guides
for counterterrorism cases and handling
confidential informants — The Intercept is able
to share a vital glimpse of how the FBI
understands and wields its enormous power.
For
example, the bureau’s agents can decide that a
campus organization is
not “legitimate” and therefore not entitled
to robust protections for free speech; dig for
derogatory information on
potential informants without any basis for
believing they are implicated in unlawful
activity; use a person’s immigration status to
pressure them to collaborate and then
help deport them when they are no longer
useful; conduct
invasive “assessments” without any reason
for suspecting the targets of wrongdoing;
demand that companies provide the
bureau with personal data about their users in
broadly worded
national security letters without actual
legal authority to do so;
fan out across the internet along with
a vast army of informants, infiltrating
countless online chat rooms; peer through the
walls of private homes; and more. The FBI
offered various justifications of these tactics
to our reporters. But the documents and our
reporting on them ultimately reveal a
bureaucracy in dire need of greater transparency
and accountability.
One of
the documents contains an
alarming observation about the nation’s
police forces, even as perceived by the FBI.
Officials of the bureau were so concerned that
many of these police forces are linked to, at
times even populated by, overt white
nationalists and white supremacists, that they
have deemed it necessary to take that into
account in crafting policies for sharing
information with them. This news arrives in an
ominous context, as the nation’s law enforcement
agencies are among the few institutional
factions in the U.S. that supported Trump, and
they
did so with virtual unanimity. Trump
ran on a platform of unleashing an already
out-of-control police — “I will restore law and
order to our country,” he thundered when
accepting the Republican nomination — and
now the groups most loyal to Trump are those
that possess a state monopoly over the use of
force, many of which are infused with racial
animus.
The
Church Committee reforms were publicly debated
and democratically enacted, based on the
widespread fears of sustained FBI overreach
brought to light by aggressive reporters like
Seymour Hersh. It is simply inexcusable to erode
those protections in the dark, with no
democratic debate.
As we
enter the Trump era, with a nominated attorney
general who has not hidden his contempt for
press freedoms and a president who has made the
news media the primary target of his
vitriol, one of the most vital weapons for
safeguarding basic liberties and imposing
indispensable transparency is journalism that
exposes information the government wants to keep
suppressed. For exactly that reason, it is
certain to be under even more
concerted assault than it has been during the
last 15 years. The revealing, once-secret FBI
documents The Intercept is today reporting on,
and publishing, demonstrate why protecting press
freedom is more critical than ever.
READ OUR
INVESTIGATION ON THE FBI’S SECRET RULES.