Comment Of Sen. Patrick Leahy,
D-Vt.,
Chairman, Senate Judiciary Committee,
On Attorney General Misleading Senate
Concerning Abuses Of NSLs
July 10, 2007
WASHINGTON (Tuesday, July 10) - Below is Judiciary Chairman Patrick
Leahy’s comment on reports that the Attorney General misled the
Senate regarding the timing of his knowledge of widespread abuses by
the FBI that resulted in violations of Americans’ privacy and civil
liberties.
In addition to the
comments the Attorney General’s provided to the Senate Intelligence
Committee in 2005, detailed in The
Washington Post story today, the Attorney General also failed
to provide the Senate Judiciary Committee with the accurate
information regarding the timing of his knowledge of abuses of
National Security Letters (NSLs). In answers to questions posed by
Chairman Leahy to the Attorney General following the Committee’s
April 2007 oversight hearing, the Attorney General indicated that he
first learned of the NSL abuses through drafts of the Office of
Inspector General’s report on NSL abuses, just prior to the public
release of that report in March 2007. The Judiciary Committee
received the Attorney General’s answers last week.
Relevant questions and answers from the Attorney General to the
Judiciary Committee.
“Each day seems to
bring with it another example of this Administration’s troubling
pattern of misleading or stonewalling Congress and the public.
“The reports today
that the Attorney General misled Congress regarding violations of
Americans’ privacy and civil liberties by his department are deeply
disturbing and warrant further inquiry. In addition to the Attorney
General’s misleading statements to the Senate Intelligence Committee
prior to the reauthorization of the PATRIOT ACT, it appears the
Attorney General also failed to disclose the truth about when he
first knew of widespread abuses by the FBI of National Security
Letters (NSLs) in questions I posed to him following his hearing
before the Senate Judiciary Committee earlier this year.
“Unfortunately,
this Administration’s penchant for secrecy makes it difficult to
work in a cooperative way, and it is only through dogged oversight
or Freedom of Information Act lawsuits – such as the one that
revealed these inconsistent statements – that Congress and the
American people learn the truth about this Administration’s
activities.
“This
inconsistency is a disturbing addition to a growing list of
misleading answers by the Attorney General to questions from the
Judiciary Committee, and it is unacceptable. I intend to pursue
this matter with the Attorney General prior to his appearance before
the Judiciary Committee later this month.”
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