The New York Times has revealed the Drug Enforcement Administration has
an even more extensive collection of U.S. phone records than the
National Security Agency. Under a secretive DEA
program called the Hemisphere Project, the agency has access to records
of every phone call transmitted via AT&T’s infrastructure dating
back to 1987. That period covers an even longer stretch of time than the
NSA’s collection of phone records, which started under President George
W. Bush. Each day, some four billion call records are swept into the
database, which is stored by AT&T. The U.S. government then pays for
AT&T employees to station themselves inside DEA units, where they can quickly hand over records after agents obtain an administrative subpoena. The DEA
says the collection allows it to catch drug dealers who frequently
switch phones, but civil liberties advocates say it raises major privacy
concerns. We speak with Scott Shane, national security reporter for the
New York Times and co-author of the report, "Drug Agents Use Vast Phone
Trove, Eclipsing NSA’s."
Video
Source: democracynow.org
Author: --
Video
Source: democracynow.org
Author: --
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