FEDERAL GOVERNMENT WIRETAPS SKYROCKET UNDER THE CLINTON ADMINISTRATIONBy Jim McGee Washington Post Reprinted from LA Times, Orange Co Edition
WASHINGTON, DC--The Clinton Administration has sharply increased use of federal telephone
wiretaps and other electronic surveillance in the United States since taking office, and official
estimates foresee that the growth will continue in coming years.
The expansion has been driven in large part by stepped-up use of electronic eavesdropping
against narcotics traffickers. In addition, a substantial rise in spending on federal law
enforcement has overridden the chief constraint on use of wiretaps -- their relatively high cost.
While federal electronic surveillance has been expanding for more than a decade, the trend has
accelerated under the Clinton administration. Last year marked the first time federal courts
approved more wiretaps than all state courts combined.
"We are up 30% to 40% this year," said Frederick D. Hess, who runs the Justice Department
office that approves applications for court-ordered wiretaps. This maintains the pace set in 1993,
when the number of federal surveillance orders rose 32%.
In 1992, the last year of the Bush administration, there were 340 federal court orders permitting
electronic surveillance in criminal cases. That number rose to 672 last year, officials say, and
the total for 1996 almost certainly will rise above 700.
Those figures do not include "national security" wiretap orders, obtained under intelligence
legislation, which also have been rising swiftly. The acceleration of wiretapping during the
Clinton administration stems in part from Attorney General Janet Reno's decision to accept
recommendations of career narcotics supervisors in the Justice Department's Criminal Division,
who strongly back electronic surveillance as a particularly effective tool in the drug war.
A second growth factor is the fast buildup of federal law enforcement generally, in which
hundreds of prosecutors, agents and support personnel have been added nationwide. The FBI's
budget has grown 53% since 1993, while the Drug Enforcement Administration's budget has
jumped 33%. Both agencies are asking for large budget increases in fiscal 1997.
This new funding has been a factor in making possible increased use of electronic surveillance.
Federal wiretaps cost more than $70,000.00 a month to operate and generate hundreds of hours
of labor for monitors, transcribers, surveillance teams and investigators. Larger budgets mean
cost is less of an obstacle.
Building for the future, the DEA is carrying out a $33-million program to replace single-line wiretapping gear with equipment that can monitor 40 lines simultaneously and process the intercepted conversations by computer. The FBI is plowing millions of dollars into developing interception techniques for digital lines and expanding its cadre of agents who use the bureau's high-tech surveillance gear.
SOURCE: Excerpted from an article by Jim McGee, Washington Post, reprinted from the 7/7/96 issue of the LA Times, Orange Co Edition. Reprinted in the public service of the national interest of the American people.RETURN TO INDEX |