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 NEWS & UPDATES

Trump’s New Advisory Board Can Right Some Surveillance Wrongs

2/17/2025

 

Time For A Fresh Look at Intelligence

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For almost 70 years, the President’s Intelligence Advisory Board (PIAB) has advised U.S. Commanders-in-Chief on the effectiveness of the country’s intelligence operations. President Donald Trump recently announced his PIAB roster, chaired by his longtime ally, former Congressman and House Intelligence Committee Chairman Devin Nunes.
 
In Nunes, Trump has chosen a super-utility player when it comes to evaluating the efficacy and integrity of the intelligence community. When Nunes was Chair, the Department of Justice surreptitiously collected data on multiple committee staffers – an unlikely coincidence given that Nunes was then investigating the FBI’s suspicious interest in Trump’s 2016 campaign, and clashing with the Justice Department and the FBI. Chairman Nunes was vocal and effective in exposing government surveillance abuses.
 
That experience alone makes Nunes a good choice to chair PIAB, as he understands firsthand the dangers of surveillance overreach in domestic contexts. Yet he’s also strong when it comes to spying on other countries, having vigorously supported the renewal of Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) in 2018.
 
Such balance is needed on this advisory board. When advising the president on intelligence matters, we urge the new PIAB to assess three well-documented misuses and abuses:

  1. FISA Section 702: Invaluable for tracking foreign spies, it has long been used for unbridled surveillance of Americans on American soil. The ongoing abuse of Section 702 calls out for substantive reforms to shore up Fourth Amendment rights, including a warrant requirement for searches of Americans’ data.

  2. The dangerous expansion of FISA’s Electronic Communication Service Provider standard – meaning the network/server user data of churches, law offices, gyms, department stores, campaign offices, car dealerships, you name it – can be spied on by the government without restriction. Some in the House blocked a promise made in the Senate’s passage to narrow this overreaching surveillance of Americans. Today, almost every free, business Wi-Fi network Americans use can be repurposed to spy on them. 
    ​
  3. Commercially Available Information sold to federal agencies. At present, third-party data brokers may sell sensitive personal information (scraped from our apps, for example) to government intelligence and law enforcement agencies – from Americans’ financial and bankruptcy records, health and mental health issues, browsing and location histories. Virtually every aspect of our personal online identities can be acquired by the government, without cause or a warrant.

Other members of the newly-announced board include:
  • Scott Glabe, Homeland Security alumnus
  • Amaryllis Fox Kennedy, former CIA officer
  • Wayne Berman of the Blackstone, Inc.
  • Reince Priebus, former White House Chief of Staff
  • Robert O’Brien, Former National Security Adviser
  • Katie Miller, former Communications Director for Mike Pence

Given the experience of this team, we have high hopes they will bring balance to the board’s investigations and deliberations. Biden’s PIAB sidestepped calls for serious reforms of Section 702, despite being presented with evidence detailing more than 278,000 instances of rules violations by the FBI.
 
With President Trump’s stated goal that PIAB should “restore integrity” to the Intelligence Community, we urge the president’s PIAB appointees – who certainly have their work cut out for them – to do exactly that. They should begin by recommending specific measures to reign in the FBI’s rampant surveillance of Americans.

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