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 NEWS & UPDATES

Will Tulsi Gabbard’s “Trust” Task Force DIG Out the Truth?

4/10/2025

 
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​Congratulations to Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard for launching a serious effort at intelligence community (IC) reform.
 
On Tuesday, Director Gabbard announced a “Task Force to Restore Trust in the Intelligence Community and End Weaponization of Government Against Americans.” Rather than saddle Washington with an unwieldy new acronym, TFRTICEWGAA, this task force will be known as the Director’s Initiatives Group (DIG).
 
“I established the Director’s Initiative Group to bring about transparency and accountability across the IC,” Director Gabbard said in a statement.
 
She lists many DIG priorities that are familiar hobby horses of this administration, though they are admittedly responses to deep and serious abuses – from official and secret government censorship during the Biden administration, to weaponization of government for political purposes.
 
What we find most intriguing about DIG is its charge to engage in mass declassification. We’ve long called out the absurd lengths the federal government goes to stamp “classified” on even the most innocuous documents, often in conflict with executive orders to declassify.
 
In this new effort we see enormous potential for DIG to inform Congress and the American people of key facts regarding oversight of intelligence community programs. A few are:
 
  • How many Americans (or “U.S. Persons”) by year have had their communications warrantlessly collected and reviewed by federal agencies under FISA Section 702, a law meant to allow surveillance of foreign targets on foreign soil?
  • How many times has evidence gleaned from Section 702 been used by prosecutors against American criminal defendants? Was the origin of such evidence revealed to those defendants’ counsels?
  • How much money does each federal intelligence and law enforcement agency spend on purchasing the private and sensitive data of Americans from third-party data brokers?
  • Who are the data brokers who sell this information to the government?
  • How does each agency use this information obtained without warrants?
 
For years, PPSA has used FOIA and legal action to try to force the government into revealing how often it has “unmasked” – or internally revealed the identity – Members of Congress whose communications get picked up in surveillance. We also want to know if the agencies are using these surveillance authorities, whether Section 702 or purchased data, to surveil Members of Congress on the House and Senate Judiciary and Intelligence Committees, those with specific oversight of the intelligence community.
 
Director Gabbard has undertaken a strong and necessary corrective within the intelligence community – and one from the top, no less. Despite her position, she will no doubt encounter resistance and obfuscation along the way. But if she presses forward, Director Gabbard can reinforce the power of Congress to create guardrails and constitutional protections on programs that operate in near darkness.

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