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Saturday, September 07, 2013

Civil-liberties Groups Seek Hearings On DEA's Use Of Intelligence

A coalition of two dozen civil-liberties groups called Thursday for broad congressional hearings on the Drug Enforcement Administration, citing recent revelations by Reuters about the DEA's use of National Security Agency data to build non-terrorism cases against Americans.

Last month, Reuters reported that the DEA funnels tips from overseas NSA intercepts, informants, court-ordered wiretaps and a massive telephone database to police and federal agents nationwide, including tax investigators at the Internal Revenue Service.

The DEA instructs the agents and police to never reveal the source of the information and to instead "recreate" the investigative trail, records seen by Reuters show. This DEA process, which agents call "parallel construction," disturbs some judges, former prosecutors and defense lawyers, who say it systematically eliminates potential evidence that defendants may need to ensure a fair trial.

The DEA says the programs follow the law.

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1 comment:

ginn said...

A lot could be rectified by repealing the "Patriot Act". As was insisted by many before it was ever enacted, this law completely morphed into domestic misuse by the government.
Unless drastic changes in America's gov't are enacted soon, freedom will be lost to all of us.