"... Inspector General Glenn A. Fine said in a report. 
"The FBI's collection of audio material continues to outpace its
ability to review and translate all that mate-rial," Fine said. His
findings were similar in a July 2004 audit, except that he said the
FBI now does a bet-ter job prioritizing its translation work. Fine
released his report at an FBI oversight hearing by the Senate
Judiciary Committee. 
There were 707,742 hours of unreviewed recordings at the end of March,
a 50 percent increase over the start of 2004, Fine said. The bureau no
longer is running behind on intercepts relating to al-Qaida cases. "


FBI TRANSLATION BACKLOG GROWS

► AP / by Mark Sherman
► Intelligence Digest / by Glenmore Trenear-Harvey / [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Jul 28 2005 ► Jul 28. The FBI's backlog of untranslated audio
recordings from terrorism and espionage investigations grew markedly
in the past year, the Justice Department's internal watchdog said
Wednes-day. 
The FBI is capturing and reviewing more conversations than ever in
languages associated with terrorists, Inspector General Glenn A. Fine
said in a report. 
"The FBI's collection of audio material continues to outpace its
ability to review and translate all that mate-rial," Fine said. His
findings were similar in a July 2004 audit, except that he said the
FBI now does a bet-ter job prioritizing its translation work. Fine
released his report at an FBI oversight hearing by the Senate
Judiciary Committee. 
There were 707,742 hours of unreviewed recordings at the end of March,
a 50 percent increase over the start of 2004, Fine said. The bureau no
longer is running behind on intercepts relating to al-Qaida cases. 
The FBI said those backlogged recordings include hundreds of thousands
of hours of white noise and other unintelligible audio, conversations
in closed cases and mistakenly captured exchanges. But even by its own
measure, the FBI's counterterrorism audio backlog more than doubled,
Fine said. 
FBI Director Robert Mueller, testifying at the same hearing, said much
of the backlog is in obscure lan-guages for which translators are hard
to find. He told senators that the bureau is able "to promptly address
all of our highest priority counterterrorism intelligence, generally
within 24 hours." 
On a different topic, Mueller was unusually specific in describing a
case to illustrate the need for adminis-trative subpoena power, a
provision of the anti-terrorism Patriot Act that is up for renewal. 
It allows law enforcement to subpoena records without permission from
a judge or grand jury. 
At a time when authorities were scrambling to pursue leads on the men
who set off bombs in the London mass transit system on July 7, it took
the FBI two days to obtain records from an American university on a
one-time chemistry student who may have had ties to the four
attackers, Mueller said. 
While Mueller did not use any names, the situation he described is
similar to the case of Magdy el-Nashar, an Egyptian-born academic who
recently taught chemistry at Leeds University. He is believed to have
rented one of the homes authorities searched in Leeds, where some of
the attackers lived. 
El-Nashar studied chemical engineering at North Carolina State
University in 2000. 
"The person had expertise in chemistry that would enable the person to
 construct the bombs," Mueller said. But when the FBI first approached
the university, officials declined to turn over records. 
"We had to go back with a grand jury subpoena. Now in my mind we
should not  in that circumstance ... have to show somebody that this
was an emergency," he said. 
North Carolina State spokesman Keith Nichols said the university
needed a subpoena or court order to comply with a federal education
privacy law. Nichols said the FBI eventually served three subpoenas on
the university "and we provided all the remaining documents." 
El-Nashar was detained in Egypt. But after several days of
questioning, the Egyptian government said he had no links to the
attacks or to al-Qaida. 
Mueller's example did not persuade Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif.,
who said there would not be sufficient checks on the FBI if it could
issue subpoenas in intelligence cases on its own. 






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