ED Noor: Would June Cleaver have had to deal with such things if SHE had access to the internet back in the day?
August 4,
2013
Michele
Catalano was looking for information online about pressure cookers. Her
husband, in the same time frame, was Googling backpacks. Wednesday morning, six
men from a joint terrorism task force showed up at their house to see if they
were terrorists.
This prompts the question: How'd the government know what they were Googling?
Because the
Googling happened at work.
The Suffolk County Police Department released a statement this evening that answers the great mystery of the day.
Suffolk County Criminal Intelligence Detectives received a tip from a Bay Shore based computer company regarding suspicious computer searches conducted by a recently released employee. The former employee’s computer searches took place on this employee’s workplace computer. On that computer, the employee searched the terms “pressure cooker bombs” and “backpacks.”After interviewing the company representatives, Suffolk County Police Detectives visited the subject’s home to ask about the suspicious internet searches. The incident was investigated by Suffolk County Police Department’s Criminal Intelligence Detectives and was determined to be non-criminal in nature.
Original
article: Catalano (who is a professional writer) describes the
tension of that visit.
[T]they were peppering my husband with questions. Where is he from? Where are his parents from? They asked about me, where was I, where do I work, where do my parents live. Do you have any bombs, they asked. Do you own a pressure cooker? My husband said no, but we have a rice cooker. Can you make a bomb with that? My husband said no, my wife uses it to make quinoa. What the hell is quinoa, they asked.
Have you ever looked up how to make a pressure cooker bomb? My husband, ever the oppositional kind, asked them if they themselves weren’t curious as to how a pressure cooker bomb works, if they ever looked it up. Two of them admitted they did.
The men
identified themselves as members of the "joint terrorism task force."
The composition of such task forces depend
on the region of the country, but, as we
outlined after the Boston bombings, include a variety of federal agencies.
(The photo above is from the door-to-door sweep in Watertown at that time.)
Among those agencies: the FBI and Homeland Security.
As of this
afternoon, it was still not clear which agency knocked on Catalano's door.
The
Guardian reported that an FBI spokesperson said that Catalano
"was visited by Nassau County police department … working in conjunction
with Suffolk County police department." (Catalano apparently lives on Long
Island, most likely in Nassau County.)
Detective
Garcia of the Nassau County Police, however, told The Atlantic Wire by phone
that his department was "not involved in any way." Similarly, FBI
spokesperson Peter Donald confirmed with The Atlantic Wire that his agency
wasn't involved in the visit. He also stated that he could not answer whether
or not the agency provided information that led to the visit, as he didn't
know.
Local and
state authorities work jointly with federal officials on terror investigations
similar to the one Catalano describes. Both Suffolk and Nassau County's police
departments are members of the FBI's Joint Terrorism Task Force (JTTF), Donald
confirmed. Suffolk County is also home
to a "fusion center," a regionally located locus for terror
investigations associated
with the Department of Homeland Security. It wasn't the JTTF that led to
the visit at Catalano's house, Donald told us. The task force deputizes local
authorities as federal marshals, including some in Suffolk and Nassau, who can
then act on its behalf. But, Donald said, "officers, agents, or other
representatives of the JTTF did not visit that location.
Ever since
details of the NSA's surveillance infrastructure were leaked by Edward Snowden,
the agency has been insistent on the boundaries of the information it collects.
It is not, by law, allowed to spy on Americans — although there are
exceptions of which it takes advantage. Its PRISM program, under which it
collects internet content, does not include information from Americans unless
those Americans are connected to terror suspects by no more than two
other people. It collects metadata on phone calls made by Americans, but reportedly
stopped collecting metadata on Americans' internet use in 2011. So how, then,
would the government know what Catalano and her husband were searching for?
It's possible
that one of the two of them is tangentially linked to a foreign terror suspect,
allowing the government to review their internet activity. After all, that
"no more than two other people" ends up covering
millions of people. Or perhaps the NSA, as part of its routine collection
of as much internet traffic as it can, automatically flags things like Google
searches for "pressure cooker" and "backpack" and passes on
anything it finds to the FBI.
Or maybe it
was something else. On Wednesday, The Guardian reported
on XKeyscore, a program eerily
similar to Facebook search that could clearly allow an analyst to run a
search that picked out people who'd done searches for those items from the same
location. How those searches got into the government's database is a question
worth asking; how the information got back out seems apparent.
It is also
possible that there were other factors that prompted the government's interest
in Catalano and her husband. He travels to Asia, she notes in her article. Who
knows. Which is largely Catalano's point.
They mentioned that they do this about 100 times a week. And that 99 of those visits turn out to be nothing. I don’t know what happens on the other 1% of visits and I’m not sure I want to know what my neighbours are up to.
One hundred
times a week, groups of six armed men drive to houses in three black SUVs,
conducting consented-if-casual searches of the property perhaps in part because
of things people looked up online.
But the NSA
doesn't collect data on Americans, so this certainly won't happen to you.
You might
also want to read our look at how
to hide from the NSA, or a comparison of the NSA's
recently revealed search tool with
Facebook's.
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