CIA investigates, then clears itself in computer spying

CIA ID

I don’t know about you, but I feel much better now!

An internal CIA review concluded that agency employees committed no wrongdoing when they surreptitiously searched a computer system used by Senate investigators in a multiyear probe of the agency’s brutal interrogations of terrorism suspects.

The CIA panel found that “no disciplinary actions are warranted” for agency lawyers and computer experts who were involved in the incident, which led to an extraordinary public rupture between the CIA and the Senate Intelligence Committee last year.

[…] The dispute centers on the committee’s discovery in 2010 of an internal CIA report commissioned by then-director Leon E. Panetta that in many aspects agreed with the Senate committee’s damning conclusions about how the interrogation program was run. A senior aide on the Senate panel secretly made a copy of the document and took it to Capitol Hill without informing the agency.

[…] The determination that no employees should face discipline is also likely to anger lawmakers and critics who have repeatedly chastised the agency for a seeming unwillingness to hold its employees accountable, even in cases of botched counterterrorism operations and egregious abuse.

One thought on “CIA investigates, then clears itself in computer spying

  1. Don’t all police agencies investigate and then clear themselves as a standard practice?
    The problem here is that the CIA’s own charter allows it to spy only on entities outside the borders of the US. So by admitting that they did the act at all, which they admitted, they have violated their own charter and broken the law.
    Case closed.

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