http://www.comcast.net/news/index.jsp?cat=GENERAL&fn=/2006/11/05/514292.htm

Report: Feds Refusing FBI Terror Cases


By LARA JAKES JORDAN, Associated Press Writer



UPDATED 43 MINUTES AGO

WASHINGTON - The Justice Department increasingly has refused to prosecute
FBI cases targeting suspected terrorists over the past five years, according
to private researchers who reviewed department records.

The government says the findings are inaccurate and "intellectually
dishonest."

The report being released Monday by the Transactional Records Access
Clearinghouse at Syracuse University raises questions about the quality of
the FBI's investigations.

Prosecutors declined to bring charges in 131 of 150, or 87 percent, of
international terrorist case referrals from the FBI between October 2005 and
June 2006, according to the report. The study was based on the most recent
data available from the Justice Department's executive office for U.S.
attorneys.

That number marks the peak of generally steady increases from the 2001
budget year, when prosecutors rejected 33 percent of such cases from the
FBI, according to the report.

The data "raise troubling questions about the bureau's investigation of
criminal matters involving individuals the government has identified as
international terrorists," the report said.

It noted that prosecutions in traditional FBI investigations since 2001 _
including drug cases, white collar crimes and organized crimes _ have
decreased while the number of agents and other employees has risen.

"So with more special agents, many more intelligence analysts, and many
fewer prosecutions the question must be asked: What is the FBI doing?" the
report said.

A Justice Department spokesman disputed the data highlighted by the Syracuse
researchers, noting that terrorist hoax cases that were quickly dismissed
may have been included in the government data.

Additionally, some cases are referred to prosecutors to obtain subpoenas or
other legal orders in investigations that ultimately never result in
criminal charges, spokesman Brian Roehrkasse said. He said prosecutors
rejected 67 percent of FBI international terrorist cases in the nine-month
period _ not 87 percent.

The FBI's assistant director, John Miller, said the low number of cases
prosecuted reflects changes in how investigations have been conducted since
the Sept. 11 attacks. He said about half of the FBI's resources go to
detection and information gathering of terrorist networks in cases that do
not always result in arrests.

"It's not about the numbers and for TRAC to suggest as much is to be
intellectually dishonest," Miller said.

He added: "The FBI has been very clear about how we have changed the way we
do business since 9/11."

TRAC co-director Susan Long said researchers merely relied on the Justice
Department's own numbers to come up with the conclusions.
__._,_.___

Complete archives at http://www.sitbot.net/

Please let us stay on topic and be civil.

OM





SPONSORED LINKS
Independent broker dealer Independent director Central intelligence agency
Central intelligence agency employment

Your email settings: Individual Email|Traditional
Change settings via the Web (Yahoo! ID required)
Change settings via email: Switch delivery to Daily Digest | Switch to Fully Featured
Visit Your Group | Yahoo! Groups Terms of Use | Unsubscribe

__,_._,___

Reply via email to