mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-10-01 01:15:38 -04:00
427 lines
21 KiB
Plaintext
427 lines
21 KiB
Plaintext
NIGHTLINE: FBI, PRIVACY, AND PROPOSED WIRE-TAPPING LEGISLATION
|
|
(Friday, May 22, 1992)
|
|
|
|
Main Participants:
|
|
Ted Koppel (TK - Moderator)
|
|
Marc Rotenberg (MR - Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility)
|
|
William Sessions (WS - Director, FBI)
|
|
|
|
TK: In these days of encroaching technology, when every transaction,
|
|
from the purchase of a tie to the withdrawal of twenty dollars from a
|
|
cash machine, is a matter of record, it may be surprising to learn
|
|
that technology has given us some added privacy. To find this new
|
|
boon, look at your telephone. It used to be fair game for wiretapping.
|
|
Done legally, that requires a court order. But that was the hard part.
|
|
For the price of a few pieces of wires and clips, human voices were
|
|
there for the eavesdropping. That's changing now. The advent of phiber
|
|
optics, of digital communication and encryption devices all mean that
|
|
what we say, what we transmit over the telephone lines, can't easily
|
|
be spied upon. Even if you could single out the one phone call among
|
|
thousands passing in a phiber optic cable, what you would hear would
|
|
be a hiss. Voices being transmitted in computer code. That's good
|
|
news for businesses, who fear industrial spies, and it's welcomed by
|
|
telephone users anywhere, who want to think that what they say into a
|
|
receiver is protected. But, it's bad news for those whose business it
|
|
is sometimes to eavesdrop. That includes law enforcement. As Dave
|
|
Marek reports, it's getting tougher to reach out and wiretap someone.
|
|
|
|
DM: The explosion of new communications technology, e-mail upstaging
|
|
airmail, fax machines pushing prose into offices, homes, and even
|
|
automobiles, celluar phones that keep us in touch from anywhere to
|
|
everywhere, has created a confusing competition of services and
|
|
counter-services.
|
|
|
|
(Unseen female voice answering telephone): Who is this please.
|
|
|
|
(Heavy breathing unseen male caller): Why don't you guess?
|
|
|
|
DM: Take that new telephone service called "caller ID." Already most
|
|
phone companies now offer a counter-service which blocks caller ID.
|
|
This is bad news if you're fighting off creep callers. But it's good
|
|
news if you want to block some 900 number service from capturing your
|
|
number on their caller ID screen, and the selling it off to some
|
|
direct marketing outfit. But today's biggest communications
|
|
controversy is about interception services. Tapping telephones used to
|
|
be so simple.
|
|
|
|
(Film clips from commercial for adult 900 number and film clips of
|
|
wiretapping from film "Three Days of the Condor") with reporter's
|
|
voice-over.
|
|
|
|
A snooper needed only a couple of alligator clips and a set of
|
|
earphones to hear what was being said. Today's telephones digitalize
|
|
chatter into computer code. Bundle all those infinitesimal ones and
|
|
zeros into flashes of light and don't reconstruct them into sound
|
|
again until just before the call reaches your ear. This has made phone
|
|
tapping much tougher. But still, according to Bell Atlantic executive
|
|
Ken Pitt (??): There's never yet been an FBI surveillance request a
|
|
phone company couldn't handle.
|
|
|
|
KP: We have been able to satisfy every single request that they've
|
|
made, not only here at Bell Atlantic, but all across the country.
|
|
|
|
DM: Still, when the FBI looks into the future, it sees trouble. It
|
|
sees criminals like John Gotti becoming able to shield their
|
|
incriminating conversations from surveillance and thereby becoming
|
|
able to defeat law enforcements best evidence.
|
|
|
|
Clifford Fishman:: When you're going after organized crime, and the
|
|
Gotti case is a perfect example, the traditional techniques, visual
|
|
surveillance, the paper trail, trying to turn the people who are on
|
|
the inside, trying to infiltrate someone into the, uh, organization,
|
|
they all have built-in difficulties. Witnesses can be killed, they can
|
|
be bribed, they can be threatened. Ah, the most effective evidence
|
|
quite often that a prosecutor can have, the only evidence that can't
|
|
be discredited, that can't be frightened off, are tape recordings of
|
|
the suspects talking to each other, discussing their crimes together,
|
|
planning their crimes together, committing their crimes together.
|
|
|
|
DM: As FBI Director William Sessions told a Congressional Hearing late
|
|
last month:
|
|
|
|
WS: The technology must allow us access, and it must allow us to stay
|
|
even with what we now have. Else, we are denied the ability to carry
|
|
out the responsibility which the Congress of the United States has
|
|
given us.
|
|
|
|
KP: One of the solutions they've asked for is the simple software
|
|
solution.
|
|
|
|
DM: This would involve not tapping into individual phone lines, but
|
|
planting decoding software into:
|
|
|
|
KP: ....The central offices where the telephone switching's done,
|
|
where the wires are connected to ((bad audio cut)) ...the computers,
|
|
and someone, the FBI is saying, "Let's do the switching, let's do the
|
|
wiretaps with the software."
|
|
|
|
DM: This software solution is already in use. But communications
|
|
expert Marc Rotenberg says it could lead to future abuses of privacy
|
|
by creating a surveillance capability:
|
|
|
|
Marc Rotenburg: ...which would allow the agent from a remote keyboard,
|
|
not in the phone system, not at the target's location, to punch in a
|
|
phone number and begin recording the contents of the communication.
|
|
That also's never been done in this country before. It's not too
|
|
different from what the STAZI (??) attempted to do in East Germany.
|
|
But the ((one word garbled)) for abuse there would be very hard.
|
|
|
|
DM: Protecting the privacy of ordinary conversation isn't the only
|
|
issue at stake here.
|
|
|
|
Janlori Goldman (ACLU): The privacy rights of ordinary citizens will
|
|
be put at risk if the FBI's proposal goes forward. Right now, all
|
|
kinds of very sensitive information is flowing through the
|
|
telecommunications network. A lot of routine banking transactions,
|
|
people are sending information over computer lines. ((One word
|
|
garbled)) will be communicating more over the network. And what is
|
|
happening is that as the private sector is trying to make systems less
|
|
vulnerable, to make them more secure, to develop encryption so that
|
|
these people don't have to worry about sending information through, if
|
|
the FBI's proposal goes forward, those systems will be at great risk.
|
|
|
|
DM: Encryption, or putting communications into unbreakable code,
|
|
frightens the FBI and the super-secret National Security Agency, which
|
|
monitors communications of all kinds all around the globe. Like the
|
|
FBI, the NSA wants total access. And to assure it, the NSA wants to
|
|
limit all American companies to a communications' code system it can
|
|
break. Some people call that "turning back the clock."
|
|
|
|
JG: What we're seeing is an FBI effort to require US industries to
|
|
basically reverse progress, and there's no way that international
|
|
companies will be following the U.S. trends in this area. If anything,
|
|
they will surpass us, they will go beyond us, and we will be out of
|
|
competiveness in the information market.
|
|
|
|
DM: The competition to control and surveil communications spreads
|
|
across all the boarders on the planet and squeezes inside the flickers
|
|
that activate a computer's brain. But what makes both the big picture
|
|
and the little one so hard to focus is that the rules of the
|
|
surveillance game are always changing. Every time, a new
|
|
technological explosion makes new ways of snooping possible. I'm Dave
|
|
Marek for Nightline in Washington.
|
|
|
|
TK: When we come back, we'll be joined by the Director of the FBI,
|
|
William Sessions, and by an expert in privacy law, Marc Rotenburg.
|
|
|
|
((COMMERCIAL))
|
|
|
|
TK: As Director of the FBI, William Sessions is the point man in the
|
|
lobbying effort to adjust new technologies so that his agency can
|
|
continue to use telephone wiretaps. Judge Sessions joins us in our
|
|
Washington studios. Also joining us in Washington is Marc Rotenburg,
|
|
the Director of the Washington Office of Computer Professionals for
|
|
Social Responsibility. Mr. Rotenburg, who teaches privacy law at
|
|
Georgetown University, says that the FBI proposal would invite use of
|
|
wiretaps.
|
|
|
|
Judge Sessions, I'd like to begin on a more fundamental point. As you
|
|
understand better than most, the very underpinning of our system of
|
|
jurisprudence is that it's better to let a hundred guilty men go free
|
|
than to wrongfully convict one innocent man, so why should the privacy
|
|
of millions of innocents be in anyway jeopardized by your need to have
|
|
access to our telephone system?
|
|
|
|
WS: Ted, I think that that question has been fundamentally answered by
|
|
the Congress back in 1968 with the Organized Crime Control and Safe
|
|
Streets Act, when it decided that it's absolutely essential for law
|
|
enforcement to have court ordered and court authorized access to ((two
|
|
words garbled)) privacy information normally private conversations, if
|
|
they involve criminal conduct. And the point is that unless you have
|
|
that access to criminal conversations, you cannot deal with it in a
|
|
law enforcement technique or a law enforcement method. Therefore,
|
|
it's essential that you have the ability to tap into those
|
|
conversations. So, privacy of that kind is not an issue. Criminality
|
|
is.
|
|
|
|
TK: Although, what is currently the case, is that you would be
|
|
required on a case-by-case basis, to get a judge to give you
|
|
permission to do that.
|
|
|
|
WS: That is absolutely correct. The United States District Judge, who
|
|
is the person authorized to actually give that consent, must be
|
|
convinced that it is absolutely necessary, and that the technique will
|
|
be properly used under the law.
|
|
|
|
TK: If you have, therefore, the centralized capacity to do that, let's
|
|
say from FBI headquarters, doesn't that invite abuse?
|
|
|
|
WS: There has been no suggestion that that would ever be contemplated
|
|
under any system. There are necessities of tapping phones that, in
|
|
connection with various criminal cases around the country, have many
|
|
different jurisdictions, from the east to the west. The point is that
|
|
a court would authorize the FBI, or other law enforcement agencies, to
|
|
have that access.
|
|
|
|
TK: All right. Mr. Rotenburg, what then is the problem? What then is
|
|
different from the modality that the FBI uses these days?
|
|
|
|
MR: Well, Mr. Koppel, I think the critical point, that the 1968 law
|
|
which Judge Sessions referred to, set down very strict procedures for
|
|
the conduct of wire surveillance. And the methods that come from
|
|
reading that history, the Congress was very much concerned about this
|
|
type of investigative method. They described it as an investigative
|
|
method of last resort. And it's for that reason that the wire
|
|
surveillance statute creates so many requirements. Now, the FBI has
|
|
put forward a proposal that would permit them to engage in a type of
|
|
remote surveillance, in other words, to permit an agent, with a
|
|
warrant, to presumably type in the telephone number to begin to record
|
|
a telephone conversation. That capability has not previously existed
|
|
in the United States, and I think that's the reason the proposal is so
|
|
troubling.
|
|
|
|
TK: But, if this happens, still, under control of the judge, the
|
|
technical means of doing it may be somewhat changing, but as long as
|
|
the legality has not been changed, and the means by which the FBI gets
|
|
permission to do this kind of thing, why should that trouble us in
|
|
anyway?
|
|
|
|
MR: Well, the two are closely related. Communications privacy is very
|
|
much about network security. It's about sealed pipes, and showing
|
|
that information can move through the network and not be intercepted
|
|
unlawfully by anyone who shouldn't have access to it. When you talk
|
|
about designing the network to facilitate wire surveillance, in a
|
|
sense to replace walls with doors that can be opened, you create new
|
|
opportunities for abuse, and I see this as a problem.
|
|
|
|
TK: Judge Sessions, again, there is the argument that is made, and I
|
|
guess Mr. Rotenburg is one of the most eloquent proponents of this
|
|
argument, that the FBI doesn't want this particular breakthrough in
|
|
technology, that the FBI is taking a sort of Luddite philosophy here,
|
|
and saying if indeed communications can be so safeguarded against
|
|
intrusion, well that's just too darn bad.
|
|
|
|
WS: Well, of course, as you noted, it is absolutely essential, the
|
|
essential ingredient is that there be a court authorization to kick
|
|
out that particular conversation that is authorized to be overheard,
|
|
authorized to be intercepted. And, so, the spectre that Mr. Rotenburg
|
|
raises does not exist in any shape or form in what we're proposing.
|
|
All we are proposing is that with the digital telephony capability,
|
|
that we be able to maintain the same capability that we've always had
|
|
under the Organized Crime Control and Safe Streets Act. That is, to
|
|
have access to that particular digital bit, or that particular
|
|
conversation, always under a court authorization with (two words
|
|
garbled). And as Mr. Rotenburg noted, very, very meticulously and
|
|
carefully followed by the courts with an insistence upon total
|
|
compliance with the law. That's all we seek. That is, to stay even and
|
|
to be able to have that necessary access under the law.
|
|
|
|
TK: Has the FBI, in the past, Mr. Rotenburg, ever requested any kind
|
|
of technological assistance? I mean, they've always had to go to the
|
|
telephone company anyway, and say, "Help us get in."
|
|
|
|
MR: Well, yes. And that's appropriate to an extent. The FBI, when
|
|
they're in possession of a lawful warrant, I think, can expect
|
|
assistance in execution of the warrant. The difference in the FBI
|
|
proposal that's now before the Congress is that the communications
|
|
service providers are going to need to design their systems with wire
|
|
surveillance in mind. And that's not been previously done. The
|
|
Congress of 1968 that Judge Sessions referred to purposely created an
|
|
"arms-length" relationship between the Bureau and the telephone
|
|
companies, and I don't think they wanted a situation to develop where
|
|
this system was being designed to facilitate wiretapping.
|
|
|
|
TK: All right. We have to take a break, gentlemen, but when we come
|
|
back, let's discuss where it is in Congress right now, and where it is
|
|
likely to go next. We'll continue our discussion in a moment.
|
|
|
|
((COMMERCIAL))
|
|
|
|
TK: And we're back once again with Marc Rotenburg and FBI Director
|
|
William Sessions. Judge Sessions, what is it you're asking Congress?
|
|
|
|
WS: What we want to be able to do is to maintain our capabilities to
|
|
actually access the digital bitstream that is in the digital telephony
|
|
capability. We're asking the Congress to give us a mechanism whereby
|
|
we can actually do that. I believe it will now be proposed that rather
|
|
than being through the Federal Communications System, it will be
|
|
actually through the Department of Justice, that it will, in fact,
|
|
allow that oversight to ensure that those companies that do in fact,
|
|
under that guidance, prepare us the capability, or give us the
|
|
capability, to access that digital stream in the digital telephonic
|
|
process.
|
|
|
|
TK: Which you could access independently, without turning to the
|
|
telephone company.
|
|
|
|
WS: We would be able to do it under a court order, and always under a
|
|
court order.....
|
|
|
|
TK: ...I understand that. I'm just talking about, technologically
|
|
speaking, you would have the capacity to access it on your own without
|
|
assistance from the telephone company.
|
|
|
|
WS: I would think that that would not be so, Mr. Koppel, because what
|
|
will happen is that it would be, normally the court would order the
|
|
telephone company to provide the access.
|
|
|
|
TK: Again, Mr. Rotenburg, I don't quite understand what the difference
|
|
is. If the telephone company has the capacity to do that, then even
|
|
though...under the current law, presumably, the FBI would be able to
|
|
go to the telephone company if it has the right court order in hand
|
|
and say, "Give us access."
|
|
|
|
MR: The difference, Mr. Koppel, is that currently agents either go to
|
|
the site where the target is and conduct a physical wiretap or they go
|
|
to the central exchange office of the telephone company and conduct a
|
|
tap there. There are other ways to do it as well, but for the most
|
|
part it involves physical access to the networks. The new proposal
|
|
speaks specifically about designing a remote surveillance or
|
|
monitoring capability. Now, that's a change.
|
|
|
|
WS: That's because of the nature of the technology. The technology now
|
|
allows us simply to do exactly what he says....
|
|
|
|
MR: ....But that's not maintaining the status quo. That is a new
|
|
capability that you would get if the proposal goes forward.
|
|
|
|
TK: Why should I, as an individual consumer of telephone, fax,
|
|
whatever the technology may be, why should I be concerned about that,
|
|
Mr. Rotenburg?
|
|
|
|
MR: As I've said before, I think that this is the type of proposal
|
|
that's likely to invite abuse. It makes the network less secure. And
|
|
the other aspect of the proposal, which has also raised concerns, is
|
|
that it give the Department of Justice new authority to set standards
|
|
for communications of all kinds in this country.
|
|
|
|
TK: May I turn it around for a moment? If I may, I think that what
|
|
you're suggesting is not that it makes it less secure, but that the
|
|
new technology makes it more secure than it has been in the past, and
|
|
the FBI wants to stay even. Would you argue with that?
|
|
|
|
MR: It may make it more secure in the future. It's not clear what the
|
|
outcome will be, frankly, if you go forward with these changes that
|
|
the Bureau has proposed.
|
|
|
|
WS: What I think you must remember is that when you're talking about
|
|
illegal access, you're talking about illegal conduct. That is, conduct
|
|
for which a crime can be charged. Therefore, if you had illegal
|
|
conduct anywhere, now or then, illegal use of the system, improper use
|
|
of the system, that is the basis of a criminal charge.
|
|
|
|
TK: The easier the access, the easier the abuse, and the more
|
|
difficult it is to approve that abuse. Would you agree with that,
|
|
Director?
|
|
|
|
WS: Well, the easier the access, it is still a matter of having access
|
|
under the law, under court-authorized permission, and that access,
|
|
whether it's on digital, or whether it's on, presently, analogue, that
|
|
access is what we seek to maintain.
|
|
|
|
TK: I guess what I'm saying, Judge Sessions, is that there have been
|
|
enough instances of abuse over the past 25 or 30 years that people
|
|
become concerned about making it too easy for their law enforcement
|
|
operatives.
|
|
|
|
WS: One of the things you see, Mr. Koppel, is when there is abuse or
|
|
failure to follow the techniques, it plays out in the courtroom. You
|
|
see it in the courtroom with the testimony that goes on that stand,
|
|
under oath, that describes a failure, if there is a failure, to carry
|
|
out the procedures under Title Three. So it's all in the court
|
|
processes. It is not hidden. And if there is an abuse, either the
|
|
wiretap evidence would not be allowed, or it would be weakened to that
|
|
extent, or, criminal charges would be brought if there's actually
|
|
illegal conduct.
|
|
|
|
TK: Unless, of course, the wiretap evidence is used to acquire other
|
|
evidence, and the defense attorneys are not aware of the fact that the
|
|
wiretap evidence was used in the first place.
|
|
|
|
WS: Well, there's always the "Fruit of the Poisonous Tree" philosophy.
|
|
That is, if you've illegally acquired at some point, done something
|
|
illegal, it may thereafter change that, it's not acceptable....
|
|
|
|
TK: ...I understand the philosophy Judge. What I'm saying is that if
|
|
you don't know that that has happened, if you don't know that the
|
|
other information has been acquired through the wiretap, and if the
|
|
wiretap is too easily controlled by the FBI, with or without, I mean,
|
|
if you have the physical capability of doing it, do you at least
|
|
concede the potential for abuse is greater than it would have been
|
|
before?
|
|
|
|
WS: No, I really don't concede that at all, because now, if you have
|
|
endless numbers of ways that you could actually tap into the analogue,
|
|
it will be a much more secure system that you actually have, because
|
|
it will require special ways again. A special computer program that
|
|
will allow you to do that, that is designed to let you in, that is
|
|
court-authorized, court-approved, and specifically for that line,
|
|
specifically for that conversation, specifically for that purpose
|
|
and no other.
|
|
|
|
TK: All right. Closing argument again, Mr. Rotenburg.
|
|
|
|
MR: Well, it is simply the replacement of fixed walls with doors that
|
|
can be opened, and while it may be the case that some agents operating
|
|
operating with warrants will use that facility as it should be used,
|
|
it's clear the opportunities for abuse will increase. And I think all
|
|
these new problems for the Bureau as well.
|
|
|
|
TK: New problems in the sense that, when Judge Sessions says you can't
|
|
bring it to court if it hasn't been done through proper procedures,
|
|
he's quite right obviously.
|
|
|
|
MR: But it may not be the Bureau that we would be concerned about. It
|
|
may be people acting outside of any type of authority. For the last
|
|
several years, we've seen that the telephone network is increasingly
|
|
vulnerable, and this vulnerability plays out as new weaknesses are
|
|
introduced.
|
|
|
|
WS: Well, I'd have to interject that with the new systems, with the
|
|
new technology, it would be far more secure and far less likely that
|
|
could happen, and if it does happen, again, the recourse is the
|
|
criminal charge for the improper criminal conduct in accessing that
|
|
information.
|
|
|
|
TK: Judge Sessions. Mr. Rotenburg. Thank you both very much for being
|
|
with us.
|
|
|
|
WS: Thank you Mr. Koppel.
|
|
|
|
MR: Thank you, Mr. Koppel.
|
|
|
|
** END **
|
|
|
|
|
|
|