Your Mail

ÚŃČí

 

Counseling:

Ask the Scholar

|

Ask About Islam

|

Hajj & `Umrah

|

Cyber Counselor

|

Parenting Counselor

 

FBI Asks 17 Senators To Turn Over Phone Records, Appointment Calendars

FBI asked all members of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence to collect and turn over records from June 18 and 19, 2002

WASHINGTON, August 24 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) – Seventeen U.S. senators have been asked by the Federal Bureau of Investigation to turn over phone records, appointment calendars and schedules that would reveal their possible contacts with reporters, U.S. media reported Saturday, August 24.

In an Aug. 7 memo passed to the senators through the Senate general counsel's office, the FBI asked all members of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence to collect and turn over records from June 18 and 19, 2002, reported the Washington Post adding that those dates are the day of and the day after a classified hearing in which the director of the National Security Agency, Lt. Gen. Michael V. Hayden, spoke to lawmakers about two highly sensitive messages that hinted at an impending action that the agency intercepted on the eve of Sept. 11 but did not translate until Sept. 12.

The request suggests that the FBI is now focusing on the handful of senior senators who are members of a Senate-House panel investigating Sept. 11 and attend most classified meetings and read all the most sensitive intelligence agency communications, said the Post. A similar request did not go to House intelligence committee members.

The request also represents a much more intrusive probe of lawmakers' activities, and comes at a time when some legal experts and members of Congress are already disgruntled that an executive branch agency, such as the FBI -- headed by a political appointee -- is probing the actions of legislators whose job it is to oversee FBI and intelligence agencies, the paper added.

The FBI declined to comment. Most senators are away for the August recess, but Sen. Bob Graham (D-Fla.), who heads the Senate intelligence committee, said through a spokesman that he is cooperating with the investigation and has asked staff members to gather the requested records, reported the Post.

The paper also said that 37 members of House and Senate intelligence committees as wll as 60 staff members have been questioned by the FBI and that most of them said that they would not be willing to take polygraph tests.

Charles Tiefer, A University of Baltimore law professor and former House deputy general counsel was quoted by the Post saying that this request may “frighten senators out of the business of telling the public [through the media] what they need to know."

Some officials generally involved in the probe believe that quashing the release of information to the public about embarrassing or sensitive information related to the Sept. 11 attacks was exactly what the administration intended when it sent Vice President Cheney to chastise committee members for unauthorized leaks that end up in news reports, added the Post.

On June 19, CNN reported the contents of two messages based on National Security Agency (NSA) intercepts. The Arabic-language messages said, "The match is about to begin," and "Tomorrow is zero hour." Other news outlets, including the Post, also reported on the intercepts, said the paper.

The NSA, based at Fort Meade, is one of the government's most secretive intelligence agencies. Much of its information carries a higher classification than other sorts of intelligence. It is illegal to release classified information, the paper reported.

Neither congressional historians nor legal experts could recall any situation in which the FBI was probing a leak of classified information in this way.
 

 

Yesterday's News

Search Articles 

 

 

News Archive :
Day:   Month: Year:   


Send Mail

News | Shari`ah | Health & Science | Politics in Depth | Reading Islam | Family | Culture | Youth | Euro-Muslims

About Us | Speech of Sheikh Qaradawi | Contact Us | Advertise | Support IOL | Site Map