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EE_
6th March 2017, 07:07 PM
WND EXCLUSIVE
TRUMP'S TWITTER BOMB MAY HAVE DETONATED 'OBAMAGATE'
Obama's track record reveals Barack was 'President Surveillance'
Published: 1 hour ago. Updated: 03/06/2017 at 9:06 PM

Let the great cover up begin.

That’s what more than a few conservative political analysts say is happening now that President Trump threw a Twitter dart that landed between the collective eyes of the Obama administration and its scheme to take down Trump.

Barack Obama did not hesitate to use the federal surveillance apparatus against his foes during his eight years in office [see list at end of story], but his defenders nonetheless cried “conspiracy theory” Monday in their attempts to deflect Trump’s Twitter accusations.

Trump tweeted that his predecessor in the White House ordered, in October of last year, a wiretap of his campaign headquarters at Trump Tower, comparing Obama to Nixon and Watergate.

While Obama and his spokespersons have denied ordering any such action, a careful reading of their denials leaves open the possibility of sensational executive overreach if not outright illegal activity.

Andrew McCarthy, in an op-ed for National Review, explained how, technically, a president doesn’t “order” such surveillance measures. And just because a “wiretap” may not have been placed directly on a Trump Tower phone line doesn’t mean other forms of surveillance weren’t taken against Trump or his campaign surrogates.

“This seems disingenuous on several levels. First, as Obama officials well know, under the FISA process, it is technically the FISA court that ‘orders’ surveillance. And by statute, it is the Justice Department, not the White House, that represents the government in proceedings before the FISA court. So, the issue is not whether Obama or some member of his White House staff ‘ordered’ surveillance of Trump and his associates. The issues are (a) whether the Obama Justice Department sought such surveillance authorization from the FISA court, and (b) whether, if the Justice Department did that, the White House was aware of or complicit in the decision to do so. Personally, given the explosive and controversial nature of the surveillance request we are talking about – an application to wiretap the presidential candidate of the opposition party, and some of his associates, during the heat of the presidential campaign, based on the allegation that the candidate and his associates were acting as Russian agents – it seems to me that there is less than zero chance that could have happened without consultation between the Justice Department and the White House.”

As former Reagan deputy Attorney General Mark Levin stated in a Fox News interview, the story is not new that the Obama DOJ under Loretta Lynch tried on two occasions to get FISA court approval to intercept communications between Trump campaign surrogates and Russian officials. The first attempt in June was rejected, then the DOJ came back in October with a more narrowly focused request that was granted. This has already been reported in January by multiple outlets including the New York Times.

Former Secret Service agent: Media missing wiretap story point

McClatchy ran a story on Jan. 19, the second to last day of Obama’s term in office, titled “FBI, five other agencies probe possible covert Kremlin aid to Trump”

Among the six agencies were the FBI, CIA, NSA, Justice Department, the Treasury Department’s financial crimes unit, and representatives of the director of national intelligence, the unnamed sources told McClatchy.

The New York Times reported, also on Jan. 19, that the government “intercepted Russian communications part of inquiry into Trump associates,” two of which were campaign advisers Paul Manafort and Roger Stone.

The FBI is leading the investigations and “accelerated the investigation in recent weeks but found no exclusive evidence of wrongdoing,” the Times reported.

Then comes this bombshell from the Times article:

“One official said intelligence reports based on some of the wiretapped communications had been provided to the White House.”

“Are you telling me Barack Obama did not know what was going on in six agencies,” Levin told Fox. “I need to make the case, because the media seems to be confused about their own reporting.”

‘Deep state’ now covering its tracks?

Tom Fitton, president of the government watchdog agency Judicial Watch, said the “deep state” is in full rebellion against Trump and they will go to any lengths to cover their tracks.

“I’ve been saying for some time that the scandal involves surveillance and illegal leaks of information concerning the Trump team. The left had been trying to distract the public with the unicorn theory of election and the Russians quote ‘stealing’ the election when in fact you had the president’s people in the Obama administration surveilling and trying to influence the election prior to it and then afterward leaking information in a way to destroy the Trump administration.

“Trump is more right than he knows,” Fitton continued. “Whether he was specifically, by name, the target of a wiretap as opposed to his campaign or something like that, we don’t know. That’s why we sued today, to get more information through FOIA requests, and we’ve been investigating this for months. It goes back to General [Mike] Flynn and what came out about him as well.”

Now another leak has Washington in a tizzy about the same issued successfully used against Flynn – contacts with Russians – only this time it is being used against Attorney General Jeff Sessions.

Could this be the tip of the iceberg, with more leaks being dribbled out over time, perhaps even at the command of Obama, who still has hundreds of loyalists in the federal government?

“Yes, and in a matter contrary to law,” Fitton said. “It is illegal. You can’t leak what they leaked.

“I think the Obama team has said they are doing what Trump is concerned about, surveilling him or his people so that information is going to come out, and the irony is Trump can make it come out.”

Concerned about ethics accusations

Fitton said Trump may not have ordered copies of all the intel reports on communications that were scooped up during FISA-approved intercepts.

“My guess is he’s not being direct in getting access to this information in order to satisfy ethics concerns, no matter how misplaced those concerns may be, by people in the agencies,” Fitton said.

What most Americans don’t realize, Fitton said, is that the federal bureaucracy that controls the intelligence agencies is the same bureaucracy that worked under Obama. Only a few Trump loyalists have been appointed to these agencies since the transfer of power with thousands of job openings still to be filled by the Trump administration.

“We don’t know the source of the leaker,” Fitton added. “It could be current and former officials.”

“The president ought to endeavor to remove them but in the meantime he can’t get his people appointed because of all the obstruction in Congress.

“People call it the deep state,” Fitton said. “But another way to think about it is you have the Trump administration, the White House, in the hands of a newly elected president and then you have all the government organized against him thinking they can run Washington rather than the elected president and the laws of America.”

Gowdy says he will investigate but defends Obama

Rep. Trey Gowdy, R-S.C., the chairman of the House subcommittee on the National Security Agency, told Fox News Monday that his committee will investigate the latest charges and if Trump or his surrogates were targeted by the Obama administration for surveillance through the FISA court, there will be a “paper trail.”

But Gowdy indicated he didn’t believe Obama would be involved in any decision to surveil the Trump campaign.

“I don’t think the FBI is the Obama team and I don’t think the men and women who are career prosecutors at DOJ belong to any team other than a blindfolded woman holding a pair of scales,” Gowdy said.

Rep. Devin Nunes, R-Calif., chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, said in a statement that the committee “will make inquiries into whether the government was conducting surveillance activities on any political party’s campaign officials or surrogates.”

Rep. Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah, the chairman of the House oversight committee, said Monday he hasn’t seen any direct information yet that would back up President Trump’s claims that former President Barack Obama ordered wiretaps on phones in Trump Tower last year.

He must not have read the newspapers cited by Levin.

“Thus far, I have not seen anything directly that would support what the president has said,” Chaffetz said on “CBS This Morning.”

“It’s a very serious allegation. The president has at his fingertips tens of billions of dollars in intelligence apparatus,” he said.

“I got to believe I think he might have something there, but if not we’re going to find out,” he said.

Mr. Chaffetz said he did try to contact FBI Director James B. Comey over the weekend to hear what he had to say about it, he said.

The New York Times reported that Mr. Comey asked the Justice Department over the weekend to reject Mr. Trump’s claims, the Washington Times reports.

“I think it is interesting the Department of Justice has not yet weighed in on this and look forward to hearing what they’re going to say,” Chaffetz said.

Whatever the case, there is no reason to believe in “conspiracy theory,” as some Democrats have alleged, to believe that Obama would use the NSA and other parts of the sprawling intelligence-gathering apparatus, to wage war on a political enemy.

List of Obama surveillance of friends and foes

WikiLeaks released the following list on February 23rd (see link here) of Obama Administration wire taps:

The US National Security Agency bugged a private climate change strategy meeting; between UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon and German Chancellor Angela Merkel in Berlin;

Obama bugged Chief of Staff of UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) for long term interception targetting his Swiss phone;

Obama singled out the Director of the Rules Division of the World Trade Organisation (WTO), Johann Human, and targetted his Swiss phone for long term interception;

Obama stole sensitive Italian diplomatic cables detailing how Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu implored Italy’s Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi to help patch up his relationship with US President Barack Obama, who was refusing to talk to Netanyahu;

Obama intercepted top EU and Japanese trade ministers discussing their secret strategy and red lines to stop the US “extort[ing]” them at the WTO Doha arounds (the talks subsequently collapsed);

Obama explicitly targeted five other top EU economic officials for long term interception, including their French, Austrian and Belgium phone numbers;

Obama explicitly targetted the phones of Italy’s ambassador to NATO and other top Italian officials for long term interception; and

Obama intercepted details of a critical private meeting between then French president Nicolas Sarkozy, Merkel and Berluscon, where the latter was told the Italian banking system was ready to “pop like a cork.”

In addition to the above list we also know now that Obama wire tapped various individuals in the US media that were reporting information not flattering to the Obama Administration. It is widely known that Obama’s Justice Department targeted journalists with wiretaps in 2013:

In 2013 the liberal Washington Post expressed outrage after the revelation that the Justice Department had investigated the newsgathering activities of a Fox News reporter as a potential crime in a probe of classified leaks. The reporter, Fox News’ James Rosen and his family, were part of an investigation into government officials anonymously leaking information to journalists. Rosen was not charged but his movements and actions were tracked.

Also in 2013, members of the Associated Press were also a target of the surveillance. The ultra liberal New Yorker even noted that “In moderate and liberal circles, at least, the phone-records scandal, partly because it involves the dear old A.P. and partly because it raises anew the specter of Big Brother, may well present the most serious threat to Obama’s reputation.”

Reporter Sharyl Attkisson said in 2014 that her personal computer and CBS laptop were hacked after she began filing stories about Benghazi that were unflattering to the Obama administration. A source who checked her laptop said the hacker used spyware “proprietary to a government agency,” according to an article in the New York Post.

Read more at http://www.wnd.com/2017/03/trumps-twitter-bomb-may-have-detonated-obamagate/#aU5yjM2icVJ6lhdw.99

Glass
6th March 2017, 08:39 PM
Its like watching a game of "kick me in the balls".

keehah
15th December 2023, 04:41 PM
justsecurity.org:The FISA Court’s 702 Opinions, Part I: A History of Non-Compliance Repeats Itself (https://www.justsecurity.org/66595/the-fisa-courts-702-opinions-part-i-a-history-of-non-compliance-repeats-itself/)

October 15, 2019
This is now the fourth major FISA Court opinion on Section 702 in 10 years documenting substantial non-compliance with the rules meant to protect Americans’ privacy. The opinion, moreover, reveals that the FBI is conducting literally millions of backdoor searches—including so-called “batch queries” that rest on the same discredited legal theory used to justify the NSA’s bulk collection of Americans’ phone records. Despite the enormous implications for Americans’ privacy and the government’s dismal record, the remedy suggested by amici and imposed by the Court was just more record-keeping.
aclu.org: Trump's Wiretapping Accusations: Here's What the Government Can Actually Do (https://www.aclu.org/news/national-security/trumps-wiretapping-accusations-heres-what-government)

March 5, 2017
On Saturday morning, President Donald Trump posted a series of angry tweets, accusing former President Barack Obama of engaging in a “Nixon/Watergate”-style plot to tap the phones at Trump Tower during the election.
Tweet- Donald J Trump

How low has President Obama gone to tap my phones during the very sacred election process.
This is Nixon/Watergate. Bad (or sick) guy.
4 Mar 2017
As an initial matter, it’s important to emphasize that little has actually been reliably verified. While many critical details remain unknown, portions of President Trump’s statements seem consistent with earlier news reports that, prior to the election, the FBI sought to surveil members of the Trump campaign team under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA). That law, passed by Congress in 1978 to prevent abuses of executive power, allows the government to surveil foreign powers and their agents with the approval of a secret court.

With a traditional wiretap, the government must establish probable cause that its surveillance will lead to evidence of a crime, and strict minimization rules are applied to protect the privacy of non-targets whose information could get swept up by the wiretap. With FISA surveillance, the government need only establish that there’s probable cause to believe that its target is an agent of a foreign power and is using a particular phone line, email account, or other communications “facility.” In addition, the purpose of FISA surveillance — to obtain wide-ranging “foreign intelligence information” — is much broader than a typical wiretap, and can extend, for example, to information related to the foreign affairs of the United States. Those are extremely broad parameters. Finally, the minimization rules under FISA are far less protective of Americans’ privacy interests...

Section 702 is set to expire at the end of the year, unless Congress renews it. Instead, Congress must reform this law, which harms the privacy rights both of people abroad and virtually all Americans.
nbcnews.com: Democrats just handed Trump more domestic surveillance powers. They should know better.There is no reason for the FBI to read Americans' emails without a warrant. Why doesn't Nancy Pelosi agree? (https://www.nbcnews.com/think/opinion/democrats-just-handed-trump-more-domestic-surveillance-powers-they-should-ncna836836)

Jan. 11, 2018
[W]ith Section 702 expiring next week, the Trump administration has of course, demanded that Congress pass an extension with supposed “reforms” that do hardly anything to stop the feds from abusing their powers and actually codify the ability for the FBI, in many cases, to search Americans’ emails without a warrant.
Tweet- Donald J Trump (https://twitter.com/realDonaldTrump/status/951457382651056128)

With that being said, I have personally directed the fix to the unmasking process since taking office and today’s vote is about foreign surveillance of foreign bad guys on foreign land. We need it! Get smart!
Jan 11, 2018
Paul Ryan and House Republicans needed Democratic votes to ensure that the measure passed because at least some members of House Freedom Caucus, led by GOP Rep. Justin Amash, were staunchly opposed to any extension without robust safeguards to protect Americans’ privacy. Along with a large group of Democrats — including the Democratic National Committee vice chairman, Rep. Keith Ellison, D-Minn — the group had an amendment to the extension known as the USA RIGHTS Act, which would have replaced the privacy-invasive bill with a privacy-protecting one.

The USA RIGHTS Act would have required the FBI to get a warrant to go back into the NSA’s Section 702 database to search for Americans’ information. It also would have provided additional safeguards to make sure the bill doesn’t turn into a domestic surveillance bill.
theintercept.com: The Inspector General’s Report on 2016 FBI Spying Reveals a Scandal of Historic Magnitude: Not Only for the FBI but Also the U.S. Media (https://theintercept.com/2019/12/12/the-inspector-generals-report-on-2016-fb-i-spying-reveals-a-scandal-of-historic-magnitude-not-only-for-the-fbi-but-also-the-u-s-media/)

December 12 2019
JUST AS WAS TRUE when the Mueller investigation closed without a single American (https://theintercept.com/2019/04/18/robert-mueller-did-not-merely-reject-the-trumprussia-conspiracy-theories-he-obliterated-them/) being charged with criminally conspiring with Russia over the 2016 election, Wednesday’s issuance of the long-waited report (https://www.justice.gov/storage/120919-examination.pdf) from the Department of Justice’s Inspector General reveals that years of major claims and narratives from the U.S. media were utter frauds (https://www.nytimes.com/2019/12/11/us/politics/fisa-surveillance-fbi.html).

Before evaluating the media component of this scandal, the FBI’s gross abuse of its power – its serial deceit – is so grave and manifest that it requires little effort to demonstrate it. In sum, the IG Report documents multiple instances in which the FBI – in order to convince a FISA court to allow it spy on former Trump campaign operative Carter Page during the 2016 election – manipulated documents, concealed crucial exonerating evidence, and touted what it knew were unreliable if not outright false claims.

If you don’t consider FBI lying, concealment of evidence, and manipulation of documents in order to spy on a U.S. citizen in the middle of a presidential campaign to be a major scandal, what is? But none of this is aberrational: the FBI still has its headquarters in a building named after J. Edgar Hoover – who constantly blackmailed elected officials with dossiers and tried to blackmail Martin Luther King into killing himself – because that’s what these security state agencies are. They are out-of-control, virtually unlimited police state factions that lie, abuse their spying and law enforcement powers, and subvert democracy and civic and political freedoms as a matter of course...

It’s vital to reiterate this because of its gravity: we identified multiple instances in which factual assertions relied upon in the first FISA application were inaccurate, incomplete, or unsupported by appropriate documentation, based upon information the FBI had in its possession at the time the application was filed.
lawandcrime.com: Reminder: Trump Signed into Law the Warrantless FISA Surveillance That He’s Railing Against (https://theintercept.com/2019/12/12/the-inspector-generals-report-on-2016-fb-i-spying-reveals-a-scandal-of-historic-magnitude-not-only-for-the-fbi-but-also-the-u-s-media/)

May 27th, 2020
In an all-caps declaration of opposition to the renewal bill, Trump tweeted that “WARRANTLESS SURVEILLANCE OF AMERICANS IS WRONG!”

“I’m sure you don’t remember this, didn’t really understand it when you did it, don’t understand it now, and lack the intellectual capacity ever to understand it, but you signed into law Public Law No. 115-118, the FISA Amendments Reauthorization Act of 2017,” post-2016 Election Trump critic George Conway noted via Twitter (https://twitter.com/gtconway3d/status/1265733265543041025?s=20).

A presidential signing statement (https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefings-statements/statement-president-fisa-amendments-reauthorization-act-2017/) from 2018 reflects Trump’s prior view of FISA spying authority:

This intelligence is vital to keeping the Nation safe. As shown by the recent attacks in New York City and elsewhere around the globe, we face a constant threat from foreign terrorist networks and other foreign actors who would do us harm. In order to detect and prevent attacks before they happen, we must be able to intercept the communications of foreign targets who are reasonably believed to possess foreign intelligence information. Section 702 provides the necessary authority, and it has proven to be among the Nation’s most effective foreign intelligence tools. It has enabled our Intelligence Community to disrupt numerous plots against our citizens at home and our warfighters abroad, and it has unquestionably saved American lives. The Act I have signed today preserves and extends this critically important national security tool.

“Just signed 702 Bill to reauthorize foreign intelligence collection,” the 45th president tweeted before falsely claiming the provision was not the long-criticized source of concern surrounding American law enforcement and intelligence agencies. “This is NOT the same FISA law that was so wrongly abused during the election. I will always do the right thing for our country and put the safety of the American people first!”

Trump was savaged for his doublespeak regarding FISA at the time.

“There is one signal that will tell you if the Republican’s #ReleaseTheMemo campaign is legitimate: whether or not [Trump] signs the FISA 702 [reauthorization] into law in the next 10 days,” American dissident Edward Snowden noted back then. “If he doesn’t veto 702 and send it back to Congress for reform, this is nothing but politics.”

Snowden was referring to an effort by the president’s allies in Congress to release a series of memos allegedly documenting serial FISA abuse by the nation’s top law enforcement agencies–including the long-venerated Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).

Such abuse was later confirmed by Justice Department Inspector General Michael Horowitz in a bombshell report that, while cursory, documented a pattern of lying, concealing evidence and manipulation of documents to extend wiretaps as well as untold warrant application errors inconsistent with internal FBI policy.

While the Horowitz report was hailed by some as a political victory for the Trump administration, then frustrated by the Russia probe, the report’s conclusions were also something of a rare vindication for the typically reviled left-right coalition of civil libertarians who have long opposed the post-9/11 grant of power to the nation’s law enforcement and national security apparatus.
reason.com: Congress Renews Warrantless Digital Spying Program as Part of $886 Billion Spending BillSection 702 will continue until April, when Congress will have another shot at seriously reforming a program that desperately needs it. (https://reason.com/2023/12/14/congress-renews-warrantless-digital-spying-program-as-part-of-886-billion-spending-bill/)

12.14.2023
A bipartisan effort to reform or shutter the federal government's massive warrantless spying regime ended, for now, in failure on Thursday morning as Congress approved a temporary renewal of the program as part of a military funding package.

The $886 billion National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) cleared its final hurdle in the House with a 310–118 vote (73 Republicans and 45 Democrats opposed its passage), less than a day after the Senate approved the bill with an 87–13 vote.

A group of Republicans led efforts in both chambers to remove a temporary reauthorization of Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, which allows federal intelligence agencies to collect communications between Americans and foreigners. Congressional authorization for Section 702 was set to expire at the end of the year, but will now continue until April...

A bipartisan group of 34 senators supported [Sen Rand] Paul's motion to strip the Section 702 reauthorization from the final version of the NDAA.

"Extending Section 702 robs Congress of the ability to make reforms now, and likely robs Congress of the opportunity to make reforms any time in the next year," Sen. Rand Paul (R–Ky.) argued on the Senate floor. "That means, once again, the intelligence agencies that ignore the constraints on their power will go unaddressed and unpunished. And the warrantless surveillance of Americans, in violation of the Bill of Rights, will continue."...

In 2021 alone, the FBI ran more than 3.3 million queries through the Section 702 database, according to a government transparency report...

Despite the obvious problems with how Section 702 is used and the growing awareness in Congress that changes must be made, lawmakers this week did what they often do best: They took the easy way out.

"It's incredibly disheartening that Congress decided to extend an easily abused law with zero of the reforms needed to protect all of our privacy," Kia Hamadanchy, senior federal policy counsel for the ACLU, said in a statement after Thursday's vote in the House. "As long as Section 702 is being used by the government to spy on Americans without a warrant, we will continue to fight this unconstitutional law and work with Congress to strengthen our Fourth Amendment protections against government surveillance."

keehah
16th December 2023, 09:20 AM
time.com: Fears of a Trump Win Add Urgency to Effort to Tighten Surveillance Laws (https://time.com/6511716/trump-ndaa-fisa-surveillance/)

DECEMBER 14, 2023
The prospect of Donald Trump using the powers of the presidency as a tool of retribution has raised the stakes for a bipartisan push by Congress to tighten what data on Americans federal investigators can search without a warrant.

Donald Trump has said publicly in recent weeks that he wants to be “a dictator for one day,” that he will “root out” the “radical left thugs that live like vermin within the confines of our country.”

Some Democrats in Congress are taking Trump at his word, giving new urgency to a long-standing effort to overhaul the controversial spying program authorized under Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), which allows intelligence agencies to collect records of overseas communications of suspected terrorists and foreign intelligence agents...

“We saw how he tried to weaponize these government agencies for his own personal political gain last time around,” says Rep. Pramila Jayapal, chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and a senior Democrat on the Judiciary Committee. “There’s no question to me that if he were to get reelected, he will be, double, triple times as bad as he was last time.”