What Special Project Lives in FBI HQ Room 4944?
By Ryan Singel
In March, the Justice Department’s Inspector General revealed that FBI agents had sent a flurry of fake emergency letters to phone companies, asking them to turn over phone records immediately by promising that the proper papers had been filed with U.S. attorneys, though in many cases this was a complete lie. More than 60 of these letters were made public today as part of a FBI document dump in response to a government sunshine lawsuit centered on the FBI’s abuse of a key Patriot Act power.
The most striking thing about these expedited letters (made public via the Electronic Frontier Foundation) is that they all use the same pathetic, passive bureaucratese: “Due to exigent circumstances, it is requested that records for the attached list of telephone numbers be provided.”
So far they seem to all be coming from the same office: the Communications Analysis Unit which looks to be located in Room 4944 in FBI Headquarters. The “exigent letters” also refer almost exclusively to a “Special Project” and the only name on any of the letters is Larry Mefford.
Mefford was no rookie FBI agent. Mefford was the Executive Assistant Director, in charge of the Counterterrorism/Counterintelligence Division. In English, that means he was in charge of preventing another terrorist attack domestically.What does that mean? Well, Mefford’s name is on documents that requested personal information on Americans. Some of those requests included information known to be false to the agents signing them. That’s a federal crime, according to one former FBI agent.
What was this “Special Project” in the Communications Analysis Group? What exactly were they doing that would require “expedited” letters that sometimes requested more than 2 pages of phone numbers from phone companies? In the immortal words of the Butch Cassidy, who are those guys?
http://blog.wired.com/27bstroke6/2007/07/fbi-patriot-act.html