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More FISA Orders Were Denied During President Trump's First Year in Office Than in the Court's 40-Year History (zdnet.com)

In its first year, the Trump administration kept one little-known courtroom in the capital busy. From a report: A secretive Washington DC-based court that oversees the US government's foreign spy programs denied more surveillance orders during President Donald Trump's first year than in the court's 40-year history, according to newly released figures. Annual data published Wednesday by the US Courts shows that the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance (FISA) Court last year denied 26 applications in full, and 50 applications in part. That's compared to 21 orders between when the court was first formed in 1978 and President Barack Obama's final year in office in 2016.

24 of 271 comments (clear)

  1. Fake news, or basically poor editorship? by Nutria · · Score: 5, Insightful

    In its first year, the Trump administration kept one little-known courtroom in the capital busy.

    There's nothing in the story about whether the gov't made more or fewer FISA requests in 2016.

    --
    "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
    1. Re:Fake news, or basically poor editorship? by Nutria · · Score: 3, Funny

      greater or fewer FISA requests in 2016.

      Good thing you posted AC, because your "fix" is grammatically incorrect.

      --
      "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
    2. Re:Fake news, or basically poor editorship? by dlkwnt · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I'm not sure what your news diet consists of, but I can only assume by your statement that you were either in a coma during the 2016 season, or you've never used social media.

      I've got a very small number of conservative friends on social media and I could still name at least a dozen fake news websites that were all over the place during that time period. One of them that really stood out to me and is still around is truthfeed.com, which was constantly peddling pro-trump/anti-hillary bullshit on a daily basis.

      Fake News is a very real thing, and it's exactly what it sounds like; websites built to look like a new site, but filled with patently false or distorted stories and little to no transparency about who is running or financing the site. This is/was a real thing, and its dangerous because the average American is so mindnumbingly stupid they would believe this crap and share it online with their equally dumb friends. That's how we got nutjobs believing the Hillary Clinton was running a pedophile ring out of a goddamn pizza shop.

      Then you have Donald Trump step in and start calling ALL news "fake news", thereby co-opting the phrase and completely destroying all meaning it once possessed. I have no idea whether he did that intentionally, or he just bumbled into it like most everything in his life, but the effect is the same, it's become a tactic to de-legitimize professional journalism in favor of bullshit hackery the same way that Fox News vilifies everyone else as "Mainstream Media" when they themselves are absolutely part of that very same media.

  2. Re:Good? by HornWumpus · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It says 'they' are embarrassed by the unreasonable approval rates that were revealed after the election. The judges are _now_ doing their jobs, not rubber stamping.

    Which is good, I guess. Another example of routine corruption that got exposed and derailed by Trump's election.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  3. Re:and...? by dunkindave · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Or were they denied because the standards have changed due to some recently publicized abuses, meaning how many would have been denied if submitted about two years ago?

    All we have are some numbers, and now people will claim conclusions that fit their desired viewpoint.

  4. Re:For those of you not up on any of this by HornWumpus · · Score: 3, Insightful

    What a load of bullshit.

    This is about the FISA warrant that was used to spy on Trump's campaign. He was supposed to lose and the facts were never supposed to come out.

    Now that those facts are out, they are embarrassed and a few even realize that it could be turned against them and their pet candidates.

    It's too late, unless someone from Hillary's campaign and the FBI goes to prison for this, every (non-incumbent/appointed successor) candidate's campaign will be spied on.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  5. Comparison to 2016 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    OK, let's do a little research and look at the actual data. We can get all the reports since transparency was mandated in 2015:

    USCourts Report on Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Courts' Activities

    According to FISA's data, in 2016:
    "The FISC disclosed that it received 1,752 applications in 2016. After consideration by the court, 1,378
    orders were granted, 339 orders were modified, 26 orders were denied in part, and 9 applications were
    denied in full."

    Meanwhile, in the latest report, from 2017, during the first year of the Trump administration:
    "The FISC disclosed that it received 1,614 applications in 2017. After consideration by the court, 1,147
    orders were granted, 391 orders were modified, 50 orders were denied in part, and 26 applications
    were denied in full."

    So what does this tell us? Applications for survellience were actually a bit lower, but denials went from .5% of Obama's FBI to 1.5% of Trump's FBI's requests. Does that mean the requests were of lower quality in 2017? The FISA court was feeling a little chastened by all of the publicity of its usual rubber-stamp policy? Or the FISA court is a bunch of liberal cheeto-haters? Hard to say?

    1. Re:Comparison to 2016 by DamnOregonian · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Or does it mean that 24 orders out of 1600+ is nothing bug fucking line noise?

  6. Re:Good? by Crashmarik · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Silly Rabbit, The NSA and FISA are tools of the beltway insiders, no way they will let an outsider get his grubby orange hands on them.

  7. Re:deep state by rahvin112 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Given the FISA court will give a warrant on a french bagel you have to wonder what exactly Trumps new "torture first" group of CIA/NSA spies are asking for warrants on.

  8. Re:This fits the narrative of lefties by youngone · · Score: 3, Informative
    You completely misunderstood the point of the article, and have it back to front:
    This is the FISA court refusing government surveillance orders. The implication is that the current regime is asking for things they shouldn't get.

    Obama refused 21

    21 orders between when the court was first formed in 1978 and President Barack Obama's final year in office in 2016.

    That quote is from TFA, you should read it.

    A secretive Washington DC-based court that oversees the US government's foreign spy programs denied more surveillance orders during President Donald Trump's first year than in the court's 40-year history, according to newly released figures.

    That is also from TFA, first sentence.
    Let's not pretend that secret courts are a good idea however.

  9. Re:This fits the narrative of lefties by Anubis+IV · · Score: 4, Interesting

    If they say Obama refused 21, and Trump has said fsck off to 26

    You've got the situation reversed. When you're a law enforcement officer dealing with national security and want to request a warrant, you can't go to a normal court to ask for a warrant since it's a sensitive matter, so you instead go to a FISA court to ask for a warrant. The Presidential administration isn't refusing anything: they're the ones making the requests, and it's the FISA court refusing the requests of the intelligence/law enforcement agencies serving under the President.

    Anyway, depending on how you interpret the information, this difference could mean a few different things:
    1) If you assume that the FISA court has up to now been failing at its duty to provide oversight (which is a frequent complaint among many people here), then one interpretation is that the FISA court has finally started performing its duty instead of rubber-stamping everything that crosses their desks.

    2) If you assume that the rejection rate for requests being made under Trump is the same as prior rejection rates, that would mean that agencies under Trump are making SIGNIFICANTLY more requests than agencies serving under previous administrations.

    3) If you assume that the FISA court is behaving impartially and otherwise the same as before, then this difference is evidence that Trump's administration is abusing the system by asking for unwarranted warrants on a regular basis.

    4) If you assume that the FISA court is acting partially, this difference could be evidence that the judges serving on the FISA court are rejecting requests on account of who's the boss of the people making the requests.

    Or it could be some combination of the above or other factors that I've failed to account for here. The fact is, a single data point doesn't really tell us much about what's going on. I'm hoping the FISA court is finally waking up to their duties, but I figure that it's likely a combination of #1, #3, and #4.

  10. Better stats by leehwtsohg · · Score: 4, Informative

    2010: 1511, 0 rejected
    2011: 1676, 0 rejected
    2012: 1789, 0 rejected
    2013: 1588, 0 rejected
    2014: 1379, 0 rejected
    2015: 1457, 5 rejected
    2016: 1485, 34 rejected
    2017: 1614, 26 rejected

    https://epic.org/privacy/surve...

  11. Re:Also it makes you wonder by swillden · · Score: 5, Insightful

    is Trump's administration denying more requests a good thing because they're denying bad requests or a bad thing because they're making so many outlandish requests. No real telling since it's a secret court.

    Well, only one of the 11 FISA judges has been appointed since Trump took office, and Trump and his administration had no control over the choice -- appointments are made by the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, with no executive or Congressional oversight, review or even input. Chief Justice Roberts has appointed all 11 of the current FISA judges. So, it's safe to say that the composition of the court hasn't changed with the administration.

    What has changed is the leadership of the DoJ. So it seems clear that what has changed is the nature of the requests -- or possibly the number, but it would require a massive increase in number of requests to cause this change. My money is on the nature of the requests.

    OTOH, the court rejected nine in 2016, the largest number in any year (until 2017). From 1979 to 2015, there were 12 rejections, in 2016 there were nine, in 2017 there were 26. So the change seems to predate Trump, a little.

    --
    Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
  12. Re:Good? by tlhIngan · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It says 'they' are embarrassed by the unreasonable approval rates that were revealed after the election. The judges are _now_ doing their jobs, not rubber stamping.

    Which is good, I guess. Another example of routine corruption that got exposed and derailed by Trump's election.

    The problem is, it's statistics that don't mean jack squat.

    It COULD mean the administration is doing their job. Or it COULD mean the administration is producing very poor requests that judges are denying because they're stupid.

    And the latter is certainly possible if a certain commander in chief wanted to spy on all his "enemies" and got rejected more times.

    The problem is, we don't know. We can never know because the nature of the courts won't let use determine if the rejections are because the courts are applying more scrutiny, or because the requests are of poorer quality and thus rejected because there is no basis for approving them?

  13. Liberal, here by BankRobberMBA · · Score: 3, Insightful

    So, as a way-out-there social liberal who really dislikes Trump and has said bad things about him (and thought worse things), I feel like I owe it to somebody to say 'well done.'

    The cognitive dissonance in my head right now is making it hard for me to follow the threads in the comments. I really did not see this one coming.

    Just, wow.

    1. Re:Liberal, here by BlueStrat · · Score: 4, Interesting

      So, as a way-out-there social liberal who really dislikes Trump and has said bad things about him (and thought worse things), I feel like I owe it to somebody to say 'well done.'

      The cognitive dissonance in my head right now is making it hard for me to follow the threads in the comments. I really did not see this one coming.

      Just, wow.

      I'm on the conservative/libertarian end across from you. I did not vote for Trump. I think he's an egotistical asshole with no fixed ideological principles of his own to speak of, has no filters between his emotions and his mouth, and doesn't know when it's best to keep said mouth shut.

      I'm almost as stunned as you.

      I admire your honesty, we need more of that.

      If I may, allow me to suggest reading a fantastic book by Jonah Goldberg called "The Suicide Of The West". Absolutely brilliant, no matter where you stand ideologically or politically.

      Strat

      --
      Progressivism (aka US 'Liberalism'): Ideas so good they need a police/surveillance-state to enforce.
    2. Re:Liberal, here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I'm almost as stunned as you.

      What is more likely, a sudden break out of ethics in Trump world or something else?

      I'm guessing it is something else. Here are some possibilities.

      1.) Good people are doing their jobs. It has nothing to do with Trump. Some other event is responsible.
      2.) Trump appointed one or more of those good people. (It is certainly possible. His major criteria is how much they praise him, which doesn't eliminate the possibility of competence.)
      3.) They are being rejected because the requests are now so bat shit crazy that not even FISA will tolerate it.

      Personally, if I was going to bet money, I'd bet on 3. We'd need to see a random sampling of requests then and now to really conclude much...

  14. Re:Andy McCabe will by trying on orange jumpsuits. by BlueStrat · · Score: 3, Insightful

    > almost $1 million from Hillary.

    Not true. That money was from Terry McAuliffe the Virginia governor who got it from Hillary, and the part from Hillary was much less than a million dollars. According to Newsweek, and I save the article just to debunk these sort of claims, it was only $675,288. Not evidence that it influenced McCabe has ever been release much less proof that McCabe didn't fully investigate Hillary because of it.

    Oh, well then, no harm, no foul if it was only a measly ~$700,000 from a DNC political apparatchik. Oh, and ~$300,000 from HRC. That's chump-change, not even worth mentioning! I mean, sure, you could probably hire a contract-killer for less, but human life is cheap! There's no way that tiny amount of pocket change could influence somebody being paid those luxurious government wages.

    Strat

    --
    Progressivism (aka US 'Liberalism'): Ideas so good they need a police/surveillance-state to enforce.
  15. Re:Transcripts? by skids · · Score: 3, Interesting

    if they are already doing this, then the hearing that authorized the Trump campaign surveillance needs to be made available to the appropriate committees.

    Do you actually live in the U.S.? If so, what rock are you living under to have escaped the news of the failed Nunes stunt and not know that that's essentially what happened... or that it is kinda the nature of the FISA court that the presented information would often compromise our or our allies' intelligence assets.

  16. Re:Also it makes you wonder by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It might not be the nature of the requests, but the willingness of the court to "work" with this administration (ie. they stopped rubber stamping all requests and started doing their job being one of the powers).
    But since the land of the free has secret courts, secret policies and secret interpretations of them...

  17. Re:Good? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Lots of jobs at the State Dept have gone unfilled, because Trump hasn't nominated anyone to fill them (and Tillerson was in no hurry to, either). The CIA and FBI have both suffered a lot of shakeout since Trump basically declared war on them.

    Did you see the Comey exchange with Anderson Cooper on CNN? Cooper - super liberal Cooper - busted Comey's chops for being the FBI leaker. It was hilarious to see him try to explain himself. Hell, even the left hated Comey's guts before the election. Now with Comey and McCabe both exposed, not to mention the Strzok/page Trump hate fest, it sure looks like Trump was right on the money.

    I don't know about the CIA specifically, but when DNI James Clapper lied to Congress, it didn't give me the warm fuzzy feelings about any of the secret societies.

    Before you complain about anyone declaring war, maybe consider it was a self defense action.

  18. Re:deep state by Kaenneth · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Or is it warrants against people connected to Trump, in relation to the Russian collusion case that are getting rejected?

  19. Re:Good? by frazamatazzle · · Score: 3, Insightful

    That is so cool. How exactly did Trump get the Freedom Act passed in 2015? Please do tell because I would love to hear more about Trump's time travelling skills!