Coleen
Rowley's Memo to FBI Director Robert Mueller
An edited version of the agent's 13-page letter
May 21, 2002
FBI Director Robert Mueller
FBI Headquarters Washington, D.C.
Dear Director Mueller:
I feel at this point that I have to put my concerns in writing concerning the
important topic of the FBI's response to evidence of terrorist activity in the
United States prior to September 11th. The issues are fundamentally ones of
INTEGRITY and go to the heart of the FBI's law enforcement mission and mandate.
Moreover, at this critical juncture in fashioning future policy to promote the
most effective handling of ongoing and future threats to United States citizens'
security, it is of absolute importance that an unbiased, completely accurate
picture emerge of the FBI's current investigative and management strengths and
failures.
To get to the point, I have deep concerns that a delicate and subtle
shading/skewing of facts by you and others at the highest levels of FBI
management has occurred and is occurring. The term "cover up" would be
too strong a characterization which is why I am attempting to carefully (and
perhaps over laboriously) choose my words here. I base my concerns on my
relatively small, peripheral but unique role in the Moussaoui investigation in
the Minneapolis Division prior to, during and after September 11th and my
analysis of the comments I have heard both inside the FBI (originating, I
believe, from you and other high levels of management) as well as your
Congressional testimony and public comments.
I feel that certain facts, including the following, have, up to now, been
omitted, downplayed, glossed over and/or mis-characterized in an effort to avoid
or minimize personal and/or institutional embarrassment on the part of the FBI
and/or perhaps even for improper political reasons:
1) The Minneapolis agents who responded to the call about Moussaoui's flight
training identified him as a terrorist threat from a very early point. The
decision to take him into custody on August 15, 2001, on the INS
"overstay" charge was a deliberate one to counter that threat and was
based on the agents' reasonable suspicions. While it can be said that
Moussaoui's overstay status was fortuitous, because it allowed for him to be
taken into immediate custody and prevented him receiving any more flight
training, it was certainly not something the INS coincidentally undertook of
their own volition. I base this on the conversation I had when the agents called
me at home late on the evening Moussaoui was taken into custody to confer and
ask for legal advice about their next course of action. The INS agent was
assigned to the FBI's Joint Terrorism Task Force and was therefore working in
tandem with FBI agents.
2) As the Minneapolis agents' reasonable suspicions quickly ripened into
probable cause, which, at the latest, occurred within days of Moussaoui's arrest
when the French Intelligence Service confirmed his affiliations with radical
fundamentalist Islamic groups and activities connected to Osama Bin Laden, they
became desperate to search the computer lap top that had been taken from
Moussaoui as well as conduct a more thorough search of his personal effects. The
agents in particular believed that Moussaoui signaled he had something to hide
in the way he refused to allow them to search his computer.
3) The Minneapolis agents' initial thought was to obtain a criminal search
warrant, but in order to do so, they needed to get FBI Headquarters' (FBIHQ's)
approval in order to ask for DOJ OIPR's approval to contact the United States
Attorney's Office in Minnesota. Prior to and even after receipt of information
provided by the French, FBIHQ personnel disputed with the Minneapolis agents the
existence of probable cause to believe that a criminal violation had
occurred/was occurring. As such, FBIHQ personnel refused to contact OIPR to
attempt to get the authority. While reasonable minds may differ as to whether
probable cause existed prior to receipt of the French intelligence information,
it was certainly established after that point and became even greater with
successive, more detailed information from the French and other intelligence
sources. The two possible criminal violations initially identified by
Minneapolis Agents were violations of Title 18 United States Code Section 2332b
(Acts of terrorism transcending national boundaries, which, notably, includes
"creating a substantial risk of serious bodily injury to any other person
by destroying or damaging any structure, conveyance, or other real or personal
property within the United States or by attempting or conspiring to destroy or
damage any structure, conveyance, or other real or personal property within the
United States") and Section 32 (Destruction of aircraft or aircraft
facilities). It is important to note that the actual search warrant obtained on
September 11th was based on probable cause of a violation of Section 32.1
Notably also, the actual search warrant obtained on September 11th did not
include the French intelligence information. Therefore, the only main difference
between the information being submitted to FBIHQ from an early date which HQ
personnel continued to deem insufficient and the actual criminal search warrant
which a federal district judge signed and approved on September 11th, was the
fact that, by the time the actual warrant was obtained, suspected terrorists
were known to have highjacked planes which they then deliberately crashed into
the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. To say then, as has been iterated
numerous times, that probable cause did not exist until after the disasterous
event occurred, is really to acknowledge that the missing piece of probable
cause was only the FBI's (FBIHQ's) failure to appreciate that such an event
could occur. The probable cause did not otherwise improve or change. When we
went to the United States Attorney's Office that morning of September 11th, in
the first hour after the attack, we used a disk containing the same information
that had already been provided to FBIHQ; then we quickly added Paragraph 19
which was the little we knew from news reports of the actual attacks that
morning. The problem with chalking this all up to the "20-20 hindsight is
perfect" problem, (which I, as all attorneys who have been involved in
deadly force training or the defense of various lawsuits are fully appreciative
of), is that this is not a case of everyone in the FBI failing to appreciate the
potential consequences. It is obvious, from my firsthand knowledge of the events
and the detailed documentation that exists, that the agents in Minneapolis who
were closest to the action and in the best position to gauge the situation
locally, did fully appreciate the terrorist risk/danger posed by Moussaoui and
his possible co-conspirators even prior to September 11th. Even without
knowledge of the Phoenix communication (and any number of other additional
intelligence communications that FBIHQ personnel were privy to in their central
coordination roles), the Minneapolis agents appreciated the risk. So I think
it's very hard for the FBI to offer the "20-20 hindsight"
justification for its failure to act! Also intertwined with my reluctance in
this case to accept the "20-20 hindsight" rationale is first-hand
knowledge that I have of statements made on September 11th, after the first
attacks on the World Trade Center had already occurred, made telephonically by
the FBI Supervisory Special Agent (SSA) who was the one most involved in the
Moussaoui matter and who, up to that point, seemed to have been consistently,
almost deliberately thwarting the Minneapolis FBI agents' efforts (see number
5). Even after the attacks had begun, the SSA in question was still attempting
to block the search of Moussaoui's computer, characterizing the World Trade
Center attacks as a mere coincidence with Misseapolis' prior suspicions about
Moussaoui.2
4) In one of my peripheral roles on the Moussaoui matter, I answered an e-mail
message on August 22, 2001, from an attorney at the National Security Law Unit (NSLU).
Of course, with (ever important!) 20-20 hindsight, I now wish I had taken more
time and care to compose my response. When asked by NSLU for my "assessment
of (our) chances of getting a criminal warrant to search Moussaoui's
computer", I answered, "Although I think there's a decent chance of
being able to get a judge to sign a criminal search warrant, our USAO seems to
have an even higher standard much of the time, so rather than risk it, I advised
that they should try the other route." Leaked news accounts which said the
Minneapolis Legal Counsel (referring to me) concurred with the FBIHQ that
probable cause was lacking to search Moussaoui's computer are in error. (or
possibly the leak was deliberately skewed in this fashion?) What I meant by this
pithy e-mail response, was that although I thought probable cause existed
("probable cause" meaning that the proposition has to be more likely
than not, or if quantified, a 51% likelihood), I thought our United States
Attorney's Office, (for a lot of reasons including just to play it safe) in
regularly requiring much more than probable cause before approving affidavits,
(maybe, if quantified, 75%-80% probability and sometimes even higher), and
depending on the actual AUSA who would be assigned, might turn us down. As a
tactical choice, I therefore thought it would be better to pursue the
"other route" (the FISA search warrant) first, the reason being that
there is a common perception, which for lack of a better term, I'll call the
"smell test" which has arisen that if the FBI can't do something
through straight-up criminal methods, it will then resort to using
less-demanding intelligence methods. Of course this isn't true, but I think the
perception still exists. So, by this line of reasoning, I was afraid that if we
first attempted to go criminal and failed to convince an AUSA, we wouldn't pass
the "smell test" in subsequently seeking a FISA. I thought our best
chances therefore lay in first seeking the FISA. Both of the factors that
influenced my thinking are areas arguably in need of improvement: requiring an
excessively high standard of probable cause in terrorism cases and getting rid
of the "smell test" perception. It could even be argued that FBI
agents, especially in terrorism cases where time is of the essence, should be
allowed to go directly to federal judges to have their probable cause reviewed
for arrests or searches without having to gain the USAO's approval.4
5) The fact is that key FBIHQ personnel whose job it was to assist and
coordinate with field division agents on terrorism investigations and the
obtaining and use of FISA searches (and who theoretically were privy to many
more sources of intelligence information than field division agents), continued
to, almost inexplicably,5 throw up roadblocks and undermine Minneapolis' by-now
desperate efforts to obtain a FISA search warrant, long after the French
intelligence service provided its information and probable cause became clear.
HQ personnel brought up almost ridiculous questions in their apparent efforts to
undermine the probable cause.6 In all of their conversations and correspondence,
HQ personnel never disclosed to the Minneapolis agents that the Phoenix Division
had, only approximately three weeks earlier, warned of Al Qaeda operatives in
flight schools seeking flight training for terrorist purposes!
Nor did FBIHQ personnel do much to disseminate the information about Moussaoui
to other appropriate intelligence/law enforcement authorities. When, in a
desperate 11th hour measure to bypass the FBIHQ roadblock, the Minneapolis
Division undertook to directly notify the CIA's Counter Terrorist Center (CTC),
FBIHQ personnel actually chastised the Minneapolis agents for making the direct
notification without their approval!
6 ) Eventually on August 28, 2001, after a series of e-mails between Minneapolis
and FBIHQ, which suggest that the FBIHQ SSA deliberately further undercut the
FISA effort by not adding the further intelligence information which he had
promised to add that supported Moussaoui's foreign power connection and making
several changes in the wording of the information that had been provided by the
Minneapolis Agent, the Minneapolis agents were notified that the NSLU Unit Chief
did not think there was sufficient evidence of Moussaoui's connection to a
foreign power. Minneapolis personnel are, to this date, unaware of the specifics
of the verbal presentations by the FBIHQ SSA to NSLU or whether anyone in NSLU
ever was afforded the opportunity to actually read for him/herself all of the
information on Moussaoui that had been gathered by the Minneapolis Division and
the French intelligence service. Obviously verbal presentations are far more
susceptible to mis-characterization and error. The e-mail communications between
Minneapolis and FBIHQ, however, speak for themselves and there are far better
witnesses than me who can provide their first hand knowledge of these events
characterized in one Minneapolis agent's e-mail as FBIHQ is "setting this
up for failure." My only comment is that the process of allowing the FBI
supervisors to make changes in affidavits is itself fundamentally wrong, just
as, in the follow-up to FBI Laboratory Whistleblower Frederic Whitehurst's
allegations, this process was revealed to be wrong in the context of writing up
laboratory results. With the Whitehurst allegations, this process of allowing
supervisors to re-write portions of laboratory reports, was found to provide
opportunities for over-zealous supervisors to skew the results in favor of the
prosecution. In the Moussaoui case, it was the opposite -- the process allowed
the Headquarters Supervisor to downplay the significance of the information thus
far collected in order to get out of the work of having to see the FISA
application through or possibly to avoid taking what he may have perceived as an
unnecessary career risk.7 I understand that the failures of the FBIHQ personnel
involved in the Moussaoui matter are also being officially excused because they
were too busy with other investigations, the Cole bombing and other important
terrorism matters, but the Supervisor's taking of the time to read each word of
the information submitted by Minneapolis and then substitute his own choice of
wording belies to some extent the notion that he was too busy. As an FBI
division legal advisor for 12 years (and an FBI agent for over 21 years), I can
state that an affidavit is better and will tend to be more accurate when the
affiant has first hand information of all the information he/she must attest to.
Of necessity, agents must continually rely upon information from confidential
sources, third parties and other law enforcement officers in drafting
affidavits, but the repeating of information from others greatly adds to the
opportunities for factual discrepancies and errors to arise. To the extent that
we can minimize the opportunity for this type of error to arise by simply not
allowing unnecessary re-writes by supervisory staff, it ought to be done. (I'm
not talking, of course, about mere grammatical corrections, but changes of some
substance as apparently occurred with the Moussaoui information which had to be,
for lack of a better term, "filtered" through FBIHQ before any action,
whether to seek a criminal or a FISA warrant, could be taken.) Even after
September 11th, the fear was great on the part of Minneapolis Division personnel
that the same FBIHQ personnel would continue their "filtering" with
respect to the Moussaoui investigation, and now with the added incentive of
preventing their prior mistakes from coming to light. For this reason, for
weeks, Minneapolis prefaced all outgoing communications (ECs) in the PENTTBOM
investigation with a summary of the information about Moussaoui. We just wanted
to make sure the information got to the proper prosecutive authorities and was
not further suppressed! This fear was probably irrational but was nonetheless
understandable in light of the Minneapolis agents' prior experiences and
frustrations involving FBIHQ. (The redundant preface information regarding
Moussaoui on otherwise unrelative PENTTBOM communications has ended up adding to
criminal discovery issues, but this is the reason it was done.)
7) Although the last thing the FBI or the country needs now is a witch hunt, I
do find it odd that (to my knowledge) no inquiry whatsoever was launched of the
relevant FBIHQ personnel's actions a long time ago. Despite FBI leaders' full
knowledge of all the items mentioned herein (and probably more that I'm unaware
of), the SSA, his unit chief, and other involved HQ personnel were allowed to
stay in their positions and, what's worse, occupy critical positions in the
FBI's SIOC Command Center post September 11th. (The SSA in question actually
received a promotion some months afterward!) It's true we all make mistakes and
I'm not suggesting that HQ personnel in question ought to be burned at the
stake, but, we all need to be held accountable for serious mistakes. I'm
relatively certain that if it appeared that a lowly field office agent had
committed such errors of judgment, the FBI's OPR would have been notified to
investigate and the agent would have, at the least, been quickly reassigned. I'm
afraid the FBI's failure to submit this matter to OPR (and to the IOB) gives
further impetus to the notion (raised previously by many in the FBI) of a double
standard which results in those of lower rank being investigated more
aggressively and dealt with more harshly for misconduct while the misconduct of
those at the top is often overlooked or results in minor disciplinary action.
From all appearances, this double standard may also apply between those at FBIHQ
and those in the field.
8) The last official "fact" that I take issue with is not really a
fact, but an opinion, and a completely unsupported opinion at that. In the day
or two following September 11th, you, Director Mueller, made the statement to
the effect that if the FBI had only had any advance warning of the attacks, we
(meaning the FBI), may have been able to take some action to prevent the
tragedy. Fearing that this statement could easily come back to haunt the FBI
upon revelation of the information that had been developed pre-September 11th
about Moussaoui, I and others in the Minneapolis Office, immediately sought to
reach your office through an assortment of higher level FBIHQ contacts, in order
to quickly make you aware of the background of the Moussaoui investigation and
forewarn you so that your public statements could be accordingly modified. When
such statements from you and other FBI officials continued, we thought that
somehow you had not received the message and we made further efforts. Finally
when similar comments were made weeks later, in Assistant Director Caruso's
congressional testimony in response to the first public leaks about Moussaoui we
faced the sad realization that the remarks indicated someone, possibly with your
approval, had decided to circle the wagons at FBIHQ in an apparent effort to
protect the FBI from embarrassment and the relevant FBI officials from scrutiny.
Everything I have seen and heard about the FBI's official stance and the FBI's
internal preparations in anticipation of further congressional inquiry, had,
unfortunately, confirmed my worst suspicions in this regard. After the details
began to emerge concerning the pre-September 11th investigation of Moussaoui,
and subsequently with the recent release of the information about the Phoenix
EC, your statement has changed. The official statement is now to the effect that
even if the FBI had followed up on the Phoenix lead to conduct checks of flight
schools and the Minneapolis request to search Moussaoui's personal effects and
laptop, nothing would have changed and such actions certainly could not have
prevented the terrorist attacks and resulting loss of life. With all due
respect, this statement is as bad as the first! It is also quite at odds with
the earlier statement (which I'm surprised has not already been pointed out by
those in the media!) I don't know how you or anyone at FBI Headquarters, no
matter how much genius or prescience you may possess, could so blithely make
this affirmation without anything to back the opinion up than your stature as
FBI Director. The truth is, as with most predictions into the future, no one
will ever know what impact, if any, the FBI's following up on those requests,
would have had. Although I agree that it's very doubtful that the full scope of
the tragedy could have been prevented, it's at least possible we could have
gotten lucky and uncovered one or two more of the terrorists in flight training
prior to September 11th, just as Moussaoui was discovered, after making contact
with his flight instructors. It is certainly not beyond the realm of imagination
to hypothesize that Moussaoui's fortuitous arrest alone, even if he merely was
the 20th hijacker, allowed the hero passengers of Flight 93 to overcome their
terrorist hijackers and thus spare more lives on the ground. And even greater
casualties, possibly of our Nation's highest government officials, may have been
prevented if Al Qaeda intended for Moussaoui to pilot an entirely different
aircraft. There is, therefore at least some chance that discovery of other
terrorist pilots prior to September 11th may have limited the September 11th
attacks and resulting loss of life. Although your conclusion otherwise has to be
very reassuring for some in the FBI to hear being repeated so often (as if
saying it's so may make it so), I think your statements demonstrate a rush to
judgment to protect the FBI at all costs. I think the only fair response to this
type of question would be that no one can pretend to know one way or another.
Mr. Director, I hope my observations can be taken in a constructive vein. They
are from the heart and intended to be completely apolitical. Hopefully, with our
nation's security on the line, you and our nation's other elected and appointed
officials can rise above the petty politics that often plague other discussions
and do the right thing. You do have some good ideas for change in the FBI but I
think you have also not been completely honest about some of the true reasons
for the FBI's pre-September 11th failures. Until we come clean and deal with the
root causes, the Department of Justice will continue to experience problems
fighting terrorism and fighting crime in general.
I have used the "we" term repeatedly herin to indicate facts about
others in the Minneapolis Office at critical times, but none of the opinions
expressed herin can be attributed to anyone but myself. I know that those who
know me would probably describe me as, by nature, overly opinionated and
sometimes not as discreet as I should be. Certainly some of the above remarks
may be interpreted as falling into that category, but I really do not intend
anything as a personal criticism of you or anyone else in the FBI, to include
the FBIHQ personnel who I believe were remiss and mishandled their duties with
regard to the Moussaoui investigation. Truly my only purpose is to try to
provide the facts within my purview so that an accurate assessment can be
obtained and we can learn from our mistakes. I have pointed out a few of the
things that I think should be looked at but there are many, many more.8 An
honest acknowledgment of the FBI's mistakes in this and other cases should not
lead to increasing the Headquarters bureaucracy and approval levels of
investigative actions as the answer. Most often, field office agents and field
office management on the scene will be better suited to the timely and effective
solution of crimes and, in some lucky instances, to the effective prevention of
crimes, including terrorism incidents. The relatively quick solving of the
recent mailbox pipe-bombing incidents which resulted in no serious injuries to
anyone are a good example of effective field office work (actually several field
offices working together) and there are hundreds of other examples. Although
FBIHQ personnel have, no doubt, been of immeasurable assistance to the field
over the years, I'm hard pressed to think of any case which has been solved by
FBIHQ personnel and I can name several that have been screwed up!
Decision-making is inherently more effective and timely when decentralized
instead of concentrated.
Your plans for an FBI Headquarters' "Super Squad" simply fly in the
face of an honest appraisal of the FBI's pre-September 11th failures. The
Phoenix, Minneapolis and Paris Legal Attache Offices reacted remarkably
exhibiting keen perception and prioritization skills regarding the terrorist
threats they uncovered or were made aware of pre-September 11th. The same cannot
be said for the FBI Headquarters' bureaucracy and you want to expand that?!
Should we put the counterterrorism unit chief and SSA who previously handled the
Moussaoui matter in charge of the new "Super Squad"?! You are also
apparently disregarding the fact the Joint Terrorism Task Forces (JTTFs),
operating out of field divisions for years, (the first and chief one being New
York City's JTTF), have successfully handled numerous terrorism investigations
and, in some instances, successfully prevented acts of terrorism. There's no
denying the need for more and better intelligence and intelligence management,
but you should think carefully about how much gate keeping power should be
entrusted with any HQ entity. If we are indeed in a "war", shouldn't
the Generals be on the battlefield instead of sitting in a spot removed from the
action while still attempting to call the shots?
I have been an FBI agent for over 21 years and, for what it's worth, have never
received any form of disciplinary action throughout my career. From the 5th
grade, when I first wrote the FBI and received the "100 Facts about the
FBI" pamphlet, this job has been my dream. I feel that my career in the FBI
has been somewhat exemplary, having entered on duty at a time when there was
only a small percentage of female Special Agents. I have also been lucky to have
had four children during my time in the FBI and am the sole breadwinner of a
family of six. Due to the frankness with which I have expressed myself and my
deep feelings on these issues, (which is only because I feel I have a somewhat
unique, inside perspective of the Moussaoui matter, the gravity of the events of
September 11th and the current seriousness of the FBI's and United States'
ongoing efforts in the "war against terrorism"), I hope my continued
employment with the FBI is not somehow placed in jeopardy. I have never written
to an FBI Director in my life before on any topic. Although I would hope it is
not necessary, I would therefore wish to take advantage of the federal
"Whistleblower Protection" provisions by so characterizing my remarks.
Sincerely
Coleen M. Rowley
Special Agent and Minneapolis Chief Division Counsel
NOTES
1) And both of the violations originally cited in vain by the Minneapolis agents
disputing the issue with FBIHQ personnel are among those on which Moussaoui is
currently indicted.
2) Just minutes after I saw the first news of the World Trade Center attack(s),
I was standing outside the office of Minneapolis ASAC M. Chris Briesse waiting
for him to finish with a phone call, when he received a call on another line
from this SSA. Since I figured I knew what the call may be about and wanted to
ask, in light of the unfolding events and the apparent urgency of the situation,
if we should now immediately attempt to obtain a criminal search warrant for
Moussaoui's laptop and personal property, I took the call. I said something to
the effect that, in light of what had just happened in New York, it would have
to be the "hugest coincidence" at this point if Moussaoui was not
involved with the terrorists. The SSA stated something to the effect that I had
used the right term, "coincidence" and that this was probably all just
a coincidence and we were to do nothing in Minneapolis until we got their (HQ's)
permission because we might "screw up" something else going on
elsewhere in the country.
4) Certainly Rule 41 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure which begins,
"Upon the request of a federal law enforcement officer [I {or}] an attorney
for the government" does not contain this requirement. Although the
practice that has evolved is that FBI agents must secure prior approval for any
search or arrest from the United States Attorneys Office, the Federal Rule
governing Search and Seizure clearly envisions law enforcement officers
applying, on their own, for search warrants.
5) During the early aftermath of September 11th, when I happened to be
recounting the pre-September 11th events concerning the Moussaoui investigation
to other FBI personnel in other divisions or in FBIHQ, almost everyone's first
question was "Why?--Why would an FBI agent(s) deliberately sabotage a case?
(I know I shouldn't be flippant about this, but jokes were actually made that
the key FBIHQ personnel had to be spies or moles, like Robert Hansen, who were
actually working for Osama Bin Laden to have so undercut Minneapolis' effort.)
Our best real guess, however, is that, in most cases avoidance of all
"unnecessary" actions/decisions by FBIHQ managers (and maybe to some
extent field managers as well) has, in recent years, been seen as the safest FBI
career course. Numerous high-ranking FBI officials who have made decisions or
have taken actions which, in hindsight, turned out to be mistaken or just turned
out badly (i.e. Ruby Ridge, Waco, etc.) have seen their careers plummet and end.
This has in turn resulted in a climate of fear which has chilled aggressive FBI
law enforcement action/decisions. In a large hierarchal bureaucracy such as the
FBI, with the requirement for numerous superiors approvals/oversight, the
premium on career-enhancement, and interjecting a chilling factor brought on by
recent extreme public and congressional criticism/oversight, and I think you
will see at least the makings of the most likely explanation. Another factor not
to be underestimated probably explains the SSA and other FBIHQ personnel's
reluctance to act. And so far, I have heard no FBI official even allude to this
problem-- which is that FBI Headquarters is staffed with a number of short term
careerists* who, like the SSA in question, must only serve an 18
month-just-time-to-get-your-ticket-punched minimum. It's no wonder why very
little expertise can be acquired by a Headquarters unit! (And no wonder why
FBIHQ is mired in mediocrity! -- that maybe a little strong, but it would
definitely be fair to say that there is unevenness in competency among
Headquarters personnel.) (It's also a well known fact that the FBI Agents
Association has complained for years about the disincentives facing those
entering the FBI management career path which results in very few of the FBI's
best and brightest choosing to go into management. Instead the ranks of FBI
management are filled with many who were failures as street agents. Along these
lines, let me ask the question, why has it suddenly become necessary for the
Director to "handpick" the FBI management?) [B {It's quite conceivable
that many of the HQ personnel who so vigorously disputed Moussaoui's
ability/predisposition to fly a plane into a building were simply unaware of all
the various incidents and reports worldwide of Al Qaeda terrorists attempting or
plotting to do so.}]
*By the way, just in the event you did not know, let me furnish you the
Webster's definition of "careerism - - the policy or practice of advancing
one's career often at the cost of one's integrity". Maybe that sums up the
whole problem!
6) For example, at one point, the Supervisory Special Agent at FBIHQ posited
that the French information could be worthless because it only identified
Zacarias Moussaoui by name and he, the SSA, didn't know how many people by that
name existed in France. A Minneapolis agent attempted to surmount that problem
by quickly phoning the FBI's legal Attache (Legat) in Paris, France, so that a
check could be made of the French telephone directories. Although the Legat in
France did not have access to all of the French telephone directories, he was
able to quickly ascertain that there was only one listed in the Paris directory.
It is not known if this sufficiently answered the question, for the SSA
continued to find new reasons to stall.
7) Another factor that cannot be underestimated as to the HQ Supervisor's
apparent reluctance to do anything was/is the ever present risk of being
"written up" for an Intelligence Oversight Board (IOB)
"error." In the year(s) preceding the September 11th acts of
terrorism, numerous alleged IOB violations on the part of FBI personnel had to
be submitted to the FBI's Office of Professional Responsibility (OPR) as well as
the IOB. I believe the chilling effect upon all levels of FBI agents assigned to
intelligence matters and their manager hampered us from aggressive investigation
of terrorists. Since one generally only runs the risk of IOB violations when one
does something, the safer course is to do nothing. Ironically, in this case, a
potentially huge IOB violation arguably occurred due to FBIHQ's failure to act,
that is, FBIHQ's failure to inform the Department of Justice Criminal Division
of Moussaoui's potential criminal violations (which, as I've already said, were
quickly identified in Minneapolis as violations of Title 18 United States Code
Section 2332b [BRACKET {Acts of terrorism transcending national boundaries}] and
Section 32 [BRACKET {Destruction of aircraft or aircraft facilities}]). This
failure would seem to run clearly afoul of the Attorney General directive
contained in the "1995 Procedures for Contacts Between the FBI and the
Criminal Division Concerning Foreign Intelligence and Foreign
Counterintelligence Investigations" which mandatorily require the FBI to
notify the Criminal Division when "facts or circumstances are
developed" in an FI or FCI investigation "that reasonably indicate
that a significant federal crime has been, is being, or may be committed."
I believe that Minneapolis agents actually brought this point to FBIHQ's
attention on August 22, 2001, but HQ personnel apparently ignored the directive,
ostensibly due to their opinion of the lack of probable cause. But the issue of
whether HQ personnel deliberately undercut the probable cause can be sidestepped
at this point because the Directive does not require probable cause. It requires
only a "reasonable indication" which is defined as "substantially
lower than probable cause." Given that the Minneapolis Division had
accumulated far more than "a mere hunch" (which the directive would
deem as insufficient), the information ought to have, at least, been passed on
to the "Core Group" created to assess whether the information needed
to be further disseminated to the Criminal Division. However, (and I don't know
for sure), but to date, I have never heard that any potential violation of this
directive has been submitted to the IOB or to the FBI's OPR. It should also be
noted that when making determinations of whether items need to be submitted to
the IOB, it is my understanding that NSLU normally used/uses a broad approach,
erring, when in doubt, on the side of submitting potential violations.
8) For starters, if prevention rather than prosecution is to be our new main
goal, (an objective I totally agree with), we need more guidance on when we can
apply the Quarles "public safety" exception to Miranda's 5th Amendment
requirements. [B {We were prevented from even attempting to question Moussaoui
on the day of the attacks when, in theory, he could have possessed further
information about other co-conspirators.}] (Apparently no government attorney
believes there is a "public safety" exception in a situation like
this?!)
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
Home - Last Updated:
© 2001& 2002 Robert E. Donaldson. All
rights reserved
|