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Dead Constitution See other Dead Constitution Articles Title: FBI slowed terror investigation by using 'secret letter' The use of National Security Letters by the Bush Administration has long been controversial -- allowing the Justice Department and the FBI to demand financial and telephone records, e-mails and conduct surveillance without the supervision of a court. The FBI says these letters are critical to law enforcement, because it allows the agency to act in a more timely manner with regard to terrorist suspects than waiting for a court-issued warrant. But new documents, obtained by the Electronic Frontier Foundation, seem to upend that claim. In the investigation of a student suspected of links to terrorism, the FBI delayed its own investigation by employing an improper NSL to seek information on the suspect, at the direction of FBI Headquarters. The FBI failed to report the misuse for almost two years. The report comes on the eve of hearings in the House and Senate on the misuse of the letters. "This report raises important questions about the FBI's use of these very powerful investigative tools," said EFF Senior Staff Attorney Kurt Opsahl. "Congress should determine why FBI headquarters insisted on an improper NSL instead of using the appropriate tools, and why the FBI failed to report the misuse for almost two years." More from the Electronic Frontier Foundation: The EFF report, and the documents referenced, can be found here.
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