Read the FBI Memo: Agents Can ‘Suspend the Law’
By Spencer Ackerman and Noah Shachtman
March 28, 2012 |
4:40 pm
The FBI once taught its agents that they can “bend or suspend the law”
as they wiretap suspects. But the bureau says it didn’t really mean it,
and has now removed the document from its counterterrorism training
curriculum, calling it an “imprecise” instruction. Which is a good
thing, national security attorneys say, because the FBI’s contention
that it can twist the law in pursuit of suspected terrorists is just
wrong.
“Dismissing this statement as ‘imprecise’ is a rather unsatisfying
response given the very precise lines Congress and the courts have
repeatedly drawn between what is and is not permissible, even in
counterterrorism cases, over the past decade,” Steve Vladeck, a
national-security law professor at American University, says. “It might
technically be true that the FBI has certain authorities when conducting
counterterrorism investigations that the Constitution otherwise
forbids, but that’s good only so far as it goes.”
Saturday, March 31, 2012
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