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Short answer: Yes. Longer answer: Hell, yes. Carter Page, a former foreign policy advisor to the 2016 Trump presidential campaign, will be paid $1.25 million to settle claims for surveillance that resulted from an FBI that knowingly made untruthful claims against him before the secret Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISA) Court. At a time when history is measured in news cycles, this may seem like ancient history to many in Washington. And yes, the Page debacle concerned Title I of FISA, a different surveillance authority from the FISA Section 702 authority, whose reauthorization is now the subject of intense debate in Congress. But the Carter Page ordeal is well worth revisiting. It does, in fact, have a lot to say about the current Section 702 controversy. The Essentials of the Carter Page Debacle The FBI obtained four improperly obtained surveillance orders from the secret FISA Court to surveil Page. Under the law’s “two hop” rule, these orders not only allowed the FBI to spy on Page; they also allowed the FBI to spy on anyone Page communicated with (such as the Trump campaign manager) and anyone that person communicated with (the candidate himself). One doesn’t have to be an admirer of Donald Trump to find it beyond dangerous for the FBI to investigate a presidential campaign, and ultimately the candidate himself, in the middle of a national election. This is especially true when we consider that the whole investigation was predicated on lies the FBI told the court, accompanied by a forgery in the form of a document altered by an FBI attorney. Does that sound overwrought? Consider: The four secret surveillance orders were the direct result of the Department of Justice and the FBI committing acts of omission and commission in their representations to the FISA judge in 2016 and 2017. Department of Justice Inspector General Michael Horowitz – a Democrat, by the way – conducted an exhaustive investigation that identified 17 “significant inaccuracies and omissions in each of the four applications.” The FBI, in its surveillance application for Page, did not inform the court that the basis of its suspicions – an intelligence report produced by a dodgy ex-MI6 officer, Christopher Steele – was something that the Bureau itself had concluded was completely unreliable. Indeed, the “Steele dossier’s” most salacious report, that Russian intelligence had a “pee tape” of Trump cavorting with micturating prostitutes in a Moscow hotel room, was later determined by Horowitz’s investigation to have started as a bar joke. Not only did the FBI know that the basis for probable cause presented to the court was sketchy, but it also falsified evidence. Former FBI lawyer Kevin Clinesmith would later plead guilty to altering an email from the CIA that he had submitted as evidence to the court. What had been altered? The court asked if Carter Page had a connection to the CIA. He had, in fact, been a secret operational contact for the CIA, which had given Page its highest rating for dependability. The FBI attorney altered that CIA document, changing it from affirming Page’s relationship with that agency to denying it. Some Obvious Conclusions We admit to feeling a little personal about this. PPSA attorneys have represented Page in his quest for justice. We can attest that Page – who was subjected to repeated FBI interrogations and a day-long examination before a grand jury – spent months in a lonely, personal hell. Had Page made the slightest mistake in his recollections, he could have been sentenced to years in federal prison. He deserves every penny of this settlement. But the takeaway for the public and every Member of Congress – Democrats as well as Republicans – should be what this story tells us about Section 702. It has been revealed that under Section 702, the FBI secretly surveilled U.S. Senators and U.S. Representatives, a state judge, political and religious organizations, and journalists. If the FBI is willing to be this disingenuous before a federal judge, just imagine what it might be willing to do with the communications of everyday Americans obtained by Section 702 programs that are usually warrantless and lack direct judicial oversight of individual queries. Far from being ancient history, the Carter Page ordeal is a constitutional cautionary tale – one Congress ignores at the peril of every American’s Fourth Amendment rights. Comments are closed.
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