http://abclocal.go.com/kgo/story?section=politics
<http://abclocal.go.com/kgo/story?section=politics&id=4935497> &id=4935497

 

U.S. Terror, Espionage Suspects

 


Cheney Defends Bank, Credit Records Searches By Pentagon, CIA


Jan. 14 - Vice President Dick Cheney said Sunday the Pentagon and CIA are
not violating people's rights by examining the banking and credit records of
hundreds of Americans and others suspected of terrorism or espionage in the
United States.

Rep. Silvestre Reyes, D-Texas, the new chairman of the House Intelligence
Committee, said his panel will be the judge of that. 

National security letters permit the executive branch to seek records about
people in terrorism and spy investigations without a judge's approval or
grand jury subpoena. 

"The Defense Department gets involved because we've got hundreds of bases
inside the United States that are potential terrorist targets," Cheney said.


"The Department of Defense has legitimate authority in this area. This is an
authority that goes back three or four decades. It was reaffirmed in the
Patriot Act," he said. "It's perfectly legitimate activity. There's nothing
wrong with it or illegal. It doesn't violate people's civil rights." 

In a statement Sunday, Reyes promised that his panel would take a careful
look at those claims. 

"Any expansion by the department into intelligence collection, particularly
on U.S. soil, is something our committee will thorough review," Reyes said. 

"We want our intelligence professionals to have strong tools that will
enable them to interrupt the planning process of our enemies and to stop
attacks against our country," he said. "But in doing so, we also want those
tools to comply fully with the law and the Constitution." 

The Pentagon and the CIA, to a lesser extent, have used this little-known
power, officials said. The FBI, the lead agency on domestic counterterrorism
and espionage, has issued thousands of such letters since the attacks of
Sept. 11, 2001. 

The letters have generated criticism and court challenges from civil
liberties advocates who claim they invade the privacy of Americans' lives,
even though banks and other financial institutions typically turn over the
financial records voluntarily. 

The vast majority of national security letters are issued by the FBI, but in
rare circumstances they have been used by the CIA before and after Sept. 11,
according to a U.S. intelligence official. The CIA has used these
noncompulsory letters in espionage investigations and other circumstances,
the official said. 

The New York Times, which reported Sunday on the expanded use of the
technique by the Pentagon and CIA, said military intelligence officers have
sent the letters in up to 500 investigations. 

"This is a dramatic story, but I think it's important for people to
understand here this is a legitimate security effort that's been under way
for a long time, and it does not represent a new departure from the
standpoint of our efforts to protect ourselves against terrorist attacks,"
the vice president said. 

Cheney was interviewed on "Fox News Sunday." 



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