FBI gets owned.. hahahaha

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Digitized

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http://www.cnn.com/2008/POLITICS/01/10/fbi.unpaid.phone.bills.ap/index.html


Phone companies cut FBI wiretaps due to unpaid bills

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Telephone companies have cut off FBI wiretaps used to eavesdrop on suspected criminals because of the bureau's repeated failures to pay phone bills on time.


One FBI office had $66,000 in unpaid telehpone bills.

A Justice Department audit released Thursday blamed the lost connections on the FBI's lax oversight of money used in undercover investigations. Poor supervision of the program also allowed one agent to steal $25,000, the audit said.

In at least one case, a wiretap used in a Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act investigation "was halted due to untimely payment," the audit found. FISA wiretaps are used in the government's most sensitive and secretive criminal investigations, and allow eavesdropping on suspected terrorists or spies.

"We also found that late payments have resulted in telecommunications carriers actually disconnecting phone lines established to deliver surveillance results to the FBI, resulting in lost evidence," according to the audit by Inspector General Glenn A. Fine.

More than half of 990 bills to pay for telecommunication surveillance in five unidentified FBI field offices were not paid on time, the report shows. In one office alone, unpaid costs for wiretaps from one phone company totaled $66,000.

The FBI did not have an immediate comment.

The report released Thursday was a highly edited version of Fine's 87-page audit that the FBI deemed too sensitive to be viewed publicly. It focused on what the FBI admitted was an "antiquated" system to track money sent to its 56 field offices nationwide for undercover work. Generally, the money pays for rental cars, leases and surveillance, the audit noted.

It also found that some field offices paid for expenses on undercover cases that should have been financed by FBI headquarters. Out of 130 undercover payments examined, auditors found 14 cases of at least $6,000 each where field offices dipped into their own budgets to pay for work that should have been picked up by headquarters.

The faulty bookkeeping was blamed, in large part, in the case of an FBI agent who pleaded guilty in June 2006 to stealing $25,000 for her own use, the audit noted.

"As demonstrated by the FBI employee who stole funds intended to support undercover activities, procedural controls by themselves have not ensured proper tracking and use of confidential case funds," it concluded.

Fine's report offered 16 recommendations to improve the FBI's tracking and management of the funding system, including its telecommunication costs. The FBI has agreed to follow 11 of the suggestions but said that four "would be either unfeasible or too cost prohibitive." The recommendations were not specifically outlined in the edited version of the report.
 
doesn't mean you're the FBI that you don't have to pay the bills. Good for them.

What if they were in the middle of a drug seize operation, LMAO
 
pas aussi fameux que la fois que des jeunes de 15 ans ont jouer à Quake sur leur serveur "sécurisé".
 
c koi l'histoire de celle la ?

Ca remonte à presque 10 ans, alors ma mémoire est flou sur l'histoire complète. Il y a quelqu'un qui a detecté un breach dans leur système de sécurité, l'un de lors port avait été ouvert, et de l'information circulait, ce qui leur faisait accroire une attaque de pirate. Ils ont fermé le port et fait des recherches. Dans la journée, plusieurs personnes avaient accéder au port, et ils ont trouvé la personne qui avait loggé en premier.
Ca se trouve qu'un ado a ouvert une game de Quake sur le ip sans savoir trop ou était le serveur. Ils ont arrêté le jeune, retracer la plupart des joueurs, et porter des accusations pour piratage contre le gouvernement et ont voulu poursuivre pour quelques dizaines de milliers $. Je sais pas comment ca a fini, mais la majorité du blâme a été sur ceux en charge du réseau (imaginez quelqu'un qui aurait réellement essayer de pirater leur système)
 
Ca remonte à presque 10 ans, alors ma mémoire est flou sur l'histoire complète. Il y a quelqu'un qui a detecté un breach dans leur système de sécurité, l'un de lors port avait été ouvert, et de l'information circulait, ce qui leur faisait accroire une attaque de pirate. Ils ont fermé le port et fait des recherches. Dans la journée, plusieurs personnes avaient accéder au port, et ils ont trouvé la personne qui avait loggé en premier.
Ca se trouve qu'un ado a ouvert une game de Quake sur le ip sans savoir trop ou était le serveur. Ils ont arrêté le jeune, retracer la plupart des joueurs, et porter des accusations pour piratage contre le gouvernement et ont voulu poursuivre pour quelques dizaines de milliers $. Je sais pas comment ca a fini, mais la majorité du blâme a été sur ceux en charge du réseau (imaginez quelqu'un qui aurait réellement essayer de pirater leur système)

LOL nice. jouer dans le serveur des FBI lol.
 
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