[Senate Hearing 118-575]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]



                                                        S. Hrg. 118-575

                    OVERSIGHT OF SECTION 702 OF THE
                 FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE SURVEILLANCE ACT
                  AND RELATED SURVEILLANCE AUTHORITIES

=======================================================================

                                HEARING

                               before the

                       COMMITTEE ON THE JUDICIARY
                          UNITED STATES SENATE

                    ONE HUNDRED EIGHTEENTH CONGRESS

                             FIRST SESSION

                               __________


                             JUNE 13, 2023

                               __________


                          Serial No. J-118-20

                               __________


         Printed for the use of the Committee on the Judiciary





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                        www.judiciary.senate.gov
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                               ______
                                 

                 U.S. GOVERNMENT PUBLISHING OFFICE

58-969                    WASHINGTON : 2025











                       COMMITTEE ON THE JUDICIARY

                   RICHARD J. DURBIN, Illinois, Chair

DIANNE FEINSTEIN, California         LINDSEY O. GRAHAM, South Carolina, 
SHELDON WHITEHOUSE, Rhode Island             Ranking Member
AMY KLOBUCHAR, Minnesota             CHARLES E. GRASSLEY, Iowa
CHRISTOPHER A. COONS, Delaware       JOHN CORNYN, Texas
RICHARD BLUMENTHAL, Connecticut      MICHAEL S. LEE, Utah
MAZIE K. HIRONO, Hawaii              TED CRUZ, Texas
CORY A. BOOKER, New Jersey           JOSH HAWLEY, Missouri
ALEX PADILLA, California             TOM COTTON, Arkansas
JON OSSOFF, Georgia                  JOHN KENNEDY, Louisiana
PETER WELCH, Vermont                 THOM TILLIS, North Carolina
                                     MARSHA BLACKBURN, Tennessee

             Joseph Zogby, Chief Counsel and Staff Director
      Katherine Nikas, Republican Chief Counsel and Staff Director









                            C O N T E N T S

                              ----------                              

                           OPENING STATEMENTS

                                                                   Page

Durbin, Hon. Richard J...........................................     1
Graham, Hon. Lindsey O...........................................    12

                               WITNESSES

Abbate, Paul.....................................................     9
    Prepared joint statement.....................................    46
    Responses to written questions contain classified information 
  and are
    not included in the appendix.

Barnes, George C.................................................     5
    Prepared joint statement.....................................    46
    Responses to written questions contain classified information 
  and are
    not included in the appendix.

Cohen, David S...................................................     7
    Prepared joint statement.....................................    46
    Responses to written questions contain classified information 
  and are
    not included in the appendix.

Fonzone, Chris...................................................     3
    Prepared joint statement.....................................    46
    Responses to written questions contain classified information 
  and are
    not included in the appendix.

Olsen, Matthew G.................................................    11
    Prepared joint statement.....................................    46
    Responses to written questions...............................    60

                                APPENDIX

Items submitted for the record...................................    45










 
                    OVERSIGHT OF SECTION 702 OF THE
                 FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE SURVEILLANCE ACT
                  AND RELATED SURVEILLANCE AUTHORITIES

                              ----------                              


                         TUESDAY, JUNE 13, 2023

                              United States Senate,
                                Committee on the Judiciary,
                                                    Washington, DC.
    The Committee met, pursuant to notice, at 10:04 a.m., in 
Room 216, Hart Senate Office Building, Hon. Richard J. Durbin, 
Chair of the Committee, presiding.
    Present: Senators Durbin [presiding], Whitehouse, 
Klobuchar, Blumenthal, Hirono, Booker, Padilla, Ossoff, Welch, 
Graham, Grassley, Cornyn, Lee, Cruz, Hawley, Kennedy, Tillis, 
and Blackburn.

          OPENING STATEMENT OF HON. RICHARD J. DURBIN,
           A U.S. SENATOR FROM THE STATE OF ILLINOIS

    Chair Durbin. This meeting of the Senate Judiciary 
Committee will come to order. Senator Graham is on his way and 
sent word that we should start before he arrives.
    Today, the Judiciary Committee will focus on two of our 
most critical responsibilities to the American people: 
protecting our national security and our Constitution.
    At the end of this year, an important and controversial 
surveillance authority known as Section 702 of the Foreign 
Intelligence Surveillance Act, or FISA, is set to expire. It is 
worth taking a moment to recall the history of this program.
    After 9/11/2001, the Bush administration launched a 
warrantless surveillance program without authorization from the 
courts or Congress. Years later, the Committee heard dramatic 
testimony about White House officials pressuring Attorney 
General John Ashcroft from his hospital bed to reauthorize this 
surveillance program. He refused.
    After this surveillance program came to light, Congress 
retroactively authorized it in the FISA Amendments Act of 2008 
as a temporary--temporary emergency tool to combat terrorism. 
That is what became Section 702.
    Today, nearly two decades later, Section 702 is touted as 
critical for a range of purposes, including countering China, 
tracking Russian atrocities in Ukraine, and even monitoring the 
distribution of fentanyl in the United States.
    There is no doubt that Section 702 is a valuable tool for 
collecting foreign intelligence. But, as I have said for years, 
Section 702 also raises serious constitutional concerns. Only 
foreigners abroad may be targeted under Section 702. Let me 
repeat that. Only foreigners abroad may be targeted under 
Section 702. But in the course of gathering intelligence on 
foreigners, our Government also collects the private 
communications of Americans who communicate with these 
individuals abroad.
    How many American communications are collected under 
Section 702? The Government cannot and will not say. What we 
know is that hundreds of thousands of foreigners are targeted 
each year, and likely, billions of communications are collected 
and stored on Government databases. The Government can then 
search these databases for Americans email, phone calls, and 
text messages. All without a warrant.
    Just as a reminder, the Fourth Amendment to the 
Constitution says, ``The right of the people to be secure in 
their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against 
unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and 
no warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by 
oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to 
be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.''
    It was my view when this program was first established--
first authorized by Congress in 2008, and it's my view now that 
Section 702 does not sufficiently protect the privacy and civil 
liberties of Americans.
    That's why I joined with Senator Lee in a bipartisan 2012 
effort to offer an amendment to require a warrant for any 
backdoor search of American communications.
    The Government can then search these databases for emails 
and phone calls, as I mentioned earlier, in what is known as a 
backdoor search. The FBI alone conducted more than 200,000 
warrantless searches of Americans in 2022.
    Since Senator Lee and I offered our amendment in 2012, the 
problems with Section 702 have continued. The court charged 
with overseeing this program has found, quote, ``persistent and 
widespread,'' closed quote, violations of the rules governing 
Section 702.
    In just the latest example, it was recently revealed that 
the FBI has used Section 702 to conduct backdoor searches on 
the communications of Americans who were arrested in the racial 
justice protests following the murder of George Floyd, as well 
as individuals who participated in the January 6 insurrection.
    I understand that recently implemented remedial measures 
have already begun to reduce these egregious violations. I 
understand additional compliance measures are under 
consideration. These are good steps. But Congress also has a 
constitutional responsibility.
    So at the outset of today's hearing, let me say this. I 
will only support the reauthorization of Section 702 if there 
are significant--significant reforms. And that means, first and 
foremost, addressing the warrantless surveillance of Americans 
in violation of the Fourth Amendment.
    Moreover, the reforms must also include safeguards to 
prevent future abuses and ensure effective oversight by 
Congress and the courts.
    Some of our colleagues believe it will be best to let this 
authority expire. Others argue that Congress should reauthorize 
Section 702 with minimal reform.
    As Chair of this Committee, I will work on a bipartisan 
basis to bridge this divide over the coming months. I 
understand the seriousness of this challenge. We can protect 
America's national security and the constitutional rights of 
the American people at the same time.
    Senator Graham has not arrived. I will start with the 
introduction of the witnesses. He may be coming in shortly.
    Today, we welcome five senior officials from the 
administration. Chris Fonzone--I hope I pronounce the name 
correctly--general counsel of the Office of Director of 
National Intelligence. Next, we will hear from George Barnes, 
deputy director of the National Security Agency. We will then 
hear from the deputy director of the CIA, David Cohen. 
Following Mr. Cohen, we will hear from Paul Abbate, the deputy 
director of the FBI. And last, we will hear testimony from the 
Assistant Attorney General for National Security at the 
Department of Justice, Matt Olsen.
    After we swear in the witnesses, each witness will have 5 
minutes to provide an opening statement. Then each Senator 5 
minutes to ask.
    I urge my colleagues to focus their questions on today's 
hearing. In particular, I'd like to emphasize that everyone on 
both sides of the aisle has a responsibility not to interfere 
in the Special Counsel's ongoing criminal investigation of the 
former President.
    Mr. Trump is entitled to the presumption of innocence. 
Attempting to litigate the indictment against him has no place 
in today's hearings. Now, I'd ask the witnesses to stand and be 
sworn. Please raise your right hand.
    [Witnesses are sworn in.]
    Let the record reflect that all of the witnesses answered 
in the affirmative. We'll begin with opening statements from 
ODNI General Counsel Chris Fonzone. Mr. Fonzone, you may 
proceed.

          STATEMENT OF CHRIS FONZONE, GENERAL COUNSEL,
        OFFICE OF THE DIRECTOR OF NATIONAL INTELLIGENCE

    Mr. Fonzone. Chairman Durbin, distinguished Members of the 
Committee, thank you for the opportunity to speak to you today 
about Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, 
an important intelligence authority set to expire at the end of 
the year.
    Section 702 is an authority that enables the United States 
to collect critical foreign intelligence on non-U.S. persons 
located outside the United States with the assistance of U.S. 
communications service providers. It provides the United States 
with indispensable insight into a diverse range of issues, from 
the conventional and cyber threats posed by China, Russia, 
Iran, and North Korea to cybersecurity and terrorism threats, 
to the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, to 
numerous other high priority national security challenges.
    And it provides these insights while simultaneously 
requiring the Government to comply with robust safeguards 
designed to protect the privacy and civil liberties of 
Americans. That's why, in a nutshell, my intelligence 
community, and DOJ colleagues, and I believe the 
reauthorization of Section 702 is so vital.
    Section 702's origins lie in the rapid changes of the 
threat in communications landscape that occurred early in the 
21st century when Congress recognized that the then-existing 
legal framework for collecting intelligence--often referred to 
as traditional FISA--had not kept pace with technology.
    Specifically, when FISA was first enacted in 1978, it was 
primarily designed to regulate activities inside the United 
States. Over time, however, the advent of the internet and 
other technological changes meant that terrorists, hackers, 
spies, and other adversaries operating overseas, but using U.S. 
communication services, were increasingly subject to 
traditional FISA's requirements. Requirements which included 
that the Government must obtain a court order based on probable 
cause to collect those adversaries' communications.
    The operational burden of obtaining those individual court 
orders was unworkable, however, and also legally unnecessary as 
foreign adversaries located overseas are not entitled to Fourth 
Amendment protections.
    Section 702 was Congress' elegant solution to the problem. 
Rather than requiring individual judicial approval to collect 
intelligence on these non-U.S. persons located overseas, 
Congress decided to create an approach that a court would 
approve on a programmatic basis, and that all three branches of 
our Government would help oversee.
    Specifically, for the Government to collect intelligence 
using Section 702, the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, 
an Article III court, must annually review and approve 
certifications submitted by the Attorney General and Director 
of National Intelligence that describe the categories of 
foreign intelligence that the Government plans to acquire.
    Alongside these certifications, the court also reviews the 
detailed procedures containing privacy and civil liberty 
safeguards the Government proposes to follow in collecting and 
using in foreign intelligence under Section 702. And the court 
will only approve these certifications procedures if it 
concludes that they are consistent with both the Fourth 
Amendment and FISA, including statutory protections that 
require the program to be properly aimed at non-U.S. persons 
located outside the United States.
    Even after the court approves the program, the Government 
still cannot collect information on any specific target until 
it complies with detailed rules that require, among other 
things, a documented basis for concluding that the target is a 
non-U.S. person located overseas, and that there is an 
appropriate foreign intelligence purpose for the collection.
    Furthermore, even after the Government starts collecting 
under Section 702, all three branches of our Government engage 
in rigorous oversight of the program. This includes oversight 
from internal components at each agency, DOJ's review of the 
documentation for every targeting decision, programmatic 
oversight from DOJ and ODNI, regular reporting to the FISC, and 
regular reporting and briefings to the congressional 
Intelligence and Judiciary Committees.
    I think it is safe to say that my colleagues and I 
unanimously believe that this program, enacted by Congress in 
2008 and subsequently improved over time, is an essential 
authority. In particular, while I will leave it to my 
colleagues to provide more detail on Section 702's intelligence 
value, I will just note that I think the Attorney General and 
DNI pretty much summed it up in a letter they sent to 
congressional leadership earlier this year: ``Section 702 has 
proven invaluable again and again in protecting American lives 
and U.S. national security,'' they wrote, ``such that there is 
no way to replicate Section 702's speed, reliability, 
specificity, and insight.''
    Likewise, I believe the other half of Section 702's 
equation, its privacy and civil reduced safeguards, have also 
proven their efficacy. To be sure, this does not mean the 
intelligence community has been perfect. To the contrary, like 
any human endeavor, we have made mistakes, including some 
important ones.
    But Section 702 has required us to identify and confront 
those mistakes, disclose them to our overseers and the public, 
and take remedial actions that make us better. This process 
also identifies areas for potential statutory improvement, and 
we are therefore committed to working with Congress on reforms 
so long as they fully preserve the critical intelligence 
Section 702 provides.
    I look forward to answering your questions today and 
working with you to renew this essential authority. With that, 
I will turn it over to my colleague from the National Security 
Agency.
    [The prepared statement of Mr. Fonzone appears as a 
submission for the record.]
    Chair Durbin. Thank you, Mr. Fonzone. We have next NSA 
Deputy Director Barnes. You may proceed.

        STATEMENT OF GEORGE C. BARNES, DEPUTY DIRECTOR,
                    NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY

    Mr. Barnes. Chairman Durbin, Ranking Member Graham, and 
distinguished Committee Members. I'm honored to represent the 
National Security Agency here today, and I'm grateful for the 
opportunity to speak with you about FISA, Section 702. This 
authority is essential to NSA's foreign intelligence mission. 
Without it, our ability to preserve the Nation's security would 
be significantly impaired.
    The United States is the leader in internet technology and 
U.S. communication services are globally distributed, including 
by use by a myriad high priority intelligence targets. When the 
intelligence community compels the assistance of electronic 
communication service providers under 702 authority, we quickly 
get access to reliable, detailed information that addresses key 
national security information gaps affecting the safety and 
security of our Nation.
    The importance of this authority to our mission cannot be 
overstated. Data from FISA Section 702 helps us every day to 
understand the strategic intentions of foreign governments and 
certain non-state actors who pose threats to our interests. 
This source of intelligence is a big part of what keeps our 
leaders well informed about the threats we face. Fifty-nine 
percent of the Presidential Daily Brief articles include 
intelligence acquired by NSA under 702 authority, and the PDB 
plays a key role in keeping the leadership across our 
Government cited on key threats.
    Countless intelligence community successes would not have 
been possible without 702. We have spoken publicly many times 
about how 702 has supported our counterterrorism mission from 
preventing an attack on New York City's subway in 2009, to 
supporting the operation that took down Ayman al-Zawahiri just 
last year. But 702 has likewise become indispensable across 
NSA's other vital mission areas.
    Let me offer some specifics.
    702 collection identified an Iranian ransomware attack 
against an American nonprofit, and the data we acquired 
provided the U.S. Government with information needed to 
mitigate the damage and recover the victim organization's data 
without resorting to ransom payments.
    Information acquired under 702 authority was essential to 
the recovery of the cryptocurrency ransom paid by Colonial 
Pipeline to the foreign hacker who perpetrated the attack in 
2021.
    Section 702 was vital in warning the international 
community, the private sector, and the public about DPRK 
efforts to commit widespread fraud, including against U.S. 
businesses aimed at generating revenue for their nuclear 
weapons program.
    702 regularly provides intelligence community counterparts 
with critical insights into the fentanyl supply chain, from 
Chinese origins of key precursor chemicals to the efforts of 
foreign narcotic traffickers to smuggle fentanyl and other 
drugs toward the United States.
    702 has also helped us to uncover despicable atrocities 
committed by Russia in Ukraine, including the heinous murder of 
noncombatants, and the forced relocation of Ukrainian children 
to Russia.
    In every facet of our foreign intelligence mission, 702 is 
critical. And that's not just an exaggeration.
    Last year, nearly every item in the President's 
Intelligence Priorities list was addressed in some way, shape, 
or form by 702. It's not replaceable. NSA could not replicate 
intelligence from 702 using other authorities. It's agile, 
specific, and efficient.
    The compelled assistance of U.S. electronic communication 
service providers means that for certain key requirements, we 
can avoid sending our officers into overseas hostile areas to 
mount risky collection operations.
    It means that we can rapidly acquire information about 
targets in remote and denied areas of the world where the 
intelligence community has little or no accessibility.
    It means that when we see a target changing their behavior, 
we can adapt quickly, ensuring that we do not miss critical 
leads and details.
    And importantly, it means that we get narrowly tailored 
information, the data of specific foreign targets located 
overseas communicating information of foreign intelligence 
significance and value. All in a manner defined by the law 
guided by the National Intelligence Priorities Framework and 
scoped by the specific certifications approved annually by the 
FISC.
    Finally, I'll talk a bit about compliance. NSA has a deep 
culture of compliance. I'm proud that our workforce is so 
dedicated to compliance with all the laws and policies that we 
follow, and those that govern our sacred mission, including 
702.
    The DOJ's review and assessment determined that NSA's 702 
targeting decisions have been over 99 percent compliant since 
the last reauthorization. In large part, because we have a 
robust compliance program, including hundreds of dedicated 
compliance professionals working hand in hand with analysts.
    Our compliance team is part of each stage of the analytic 
process, from the initial targeting decision to the review of 
the responsive content supporting the mission and ensuring that 
our culture of compliance is maintained day in and day out.
    Thank you for the opportunity to discuss 702, and what it 
means to NSA. And I'd like to turn next to my colleague, David 
Cohen, from CIA.
    [The prepared statement of Mr. Barnes appears as a 
submission for the record.]
    Chair Durbin. The CIA Deputy Director, Mr. Cohen, you may 
proceed.

         STATEMENT OF DAVID S. COHEN, DEPUTY DIRECTOR,
                  CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY

    Mr. Cohen. Good morning, and thank you, Chairman Durbin, 
Ranking Member Graham, and Members of the Committee for 
inviting me to discuss this important topic, and to represent 
the men and women of the Central Intelligence Agency.
    The information the CIA derives from FISA 702 collection 
is, quite simply, indispensable for CIA to perform its mission. 
It allows us with precision and with care for the rights of the 
American public that we serve to gain authoritative, timely, 
and actionable insights into the full range of national 
security threats and foreign policy issues confronting our 
Nation.
    I thought it would be most useful for the Committee to 
focus my opening remarks on some of the ways that CIA uses FISA 
702 collection every day to do our job. I'll focus in 
particular on how we use 702 in our overseas clandestine 
collection and counterintelligence operations, in preparing 
all-source analysis for policymakers here in Congress and in 
the administration, and as part of a Governmentwide response to 
the fentanyl crisis.
    First starting with our operations. As I'm sure you know, 
one of CIA's core missions is to operate clandestinely overseas 
to collect intelligence from individuals we've recruited. These 
individuals, our assets, often risk their lives and the lives 
of their families to provide information to CIA officers to 
help the United States. And my officers who spot, assess, 
develop, recruit, and meet with these individuals often put 
their lives, their safety, and their well-being at risk to do 
their job.
    Because human intelligence operations carry a great deal of 
risk, we often think about human intelligence, or humans, as 
the collection of last resort. The means of collection we turn 
to when no other source of collection can deliver the 
information we need to keep this country safe. Once we've 
reached that point, once we know a human source is necessary, 
we have to find exactly the right person among hundreds, maybe 
thousands of potential candidates.
    FISA Section 702 helps us find many of these individuals, 
these potential sources. And it allows CIA officers to do their 
jobs faster and with less risk. Once we have an operation 
underway, 702 collection helps us keep those operations secure 
by allowing us to identify threats early, and to provide real-
time monitoring during our most dangerous operations.
    CIA officers face unique challenges and threats from all 
sorts of nefarious actors, from hostile intelligence services 
trying to identify our officers and our sources, to terrorist 
groups who seek to harm, or even kill them.
    We take very seriously our responsibility to protect our 
officers and the people who put their lives on the line to work 
with us as sources. 702 is quite simply a key tool in our 
arsenal to help keep both our officers and our assets safe.
    Section 702 collection plays a critical role in our 
analytic mission, ensuring we can provide the best possible 
all-source analysis to policymakers in the administration and 
in Congress. CIA analysts leverage intelligence from every 
source available: open source information, humans, imagery, 
signals intelligence, and 702 to prepare this analysis.
    Information collected under 702 is a key piece of that all-
source puzzle, and a particularly important one because of its 
timeliness and precision. The statistics bear this out.
    As I'm sure you know, one of our primary analytic 
publications is the World Intelligence Review, known by its 
acronym, the WIRe. It is provided across the executive branch 
and to Congress.
    In the last year, nearly 40 percent of our daily WIRe 
articles contain at least one intelligence report derived from 
702 collection.
    In our other analytic products for Congress and the 
administration, including the Presidential Daily Brief, the 
numbers are similar.
    Section 702 is, put simply, a critical component of much of 
CIA's analytic product across the gamut of national security 
and foreign policy issues.
    The third way we leverage 702 is to support broader U.S. 
Government efforts against foreign-based drug trafficking 
organizations. 702 collection illuminates the networks and 
global supply chains used by foreign-based drug trafficking 
organizations. This includes how they manufacture and transport 
everything, from precursor chemicals to their foreign labs, to 
their distribution of their product into the United States. As 
we gain this insight, we're able to support and partner with 
foreign governments to take action.
    Most recently, 702 has proven critical in helping us 
counter the fentanyl threat, which, as I'm sure this Committee 
is aware, is responsible for the deaths of nearly 100,000 
Americans every year.
    Without 702, we would be missing essential information on 
the dangerous groups and individuals behind overseas fentanyl 
production and distribution. And CIA's ability working with and 
through our partners to stem the flow of fentanyl into our 
communities would be greatly diminished.
    I hope these three examples illustrate some of the ways 
that we at CIA rely on FISA 702 collection every day. It is, as 
I said at the outset, indispensable for our work. I look 
forward to answering your questions. Thank you.
    [The prepared statement of Mr. Cohen appears as a 
submission for the record.]
    Chair Durbin. Thank you, Mr. Cohen. Next we have FBI Deputy 
Director, Mr. Abbate. I hope I pronounced your name correctly.
    Mr. Abbate. Yes, Senator.
    Chair Durbin. Please proceed.

           STATEMENT OF PAUL ABBATE, DEPUTY DIRECTOR,
                FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION

    Mr. Abbate. Thank you, Chair Durbin, Ranking Member Graham, 
and Members of the Committee. It is a privilege to be here 
because of the immense importance of this topic, and the 
discussion to follow, and for the opportunity to have it in 
this public setting as this distinguished panel of colleagues 
has already done a thorough job of covering so much of what is 
vitally important about the collective FISA Section 702 
authority.
    I will try to provide insight into the FBI's use of the 
tool, how we act based on the critical intelligence gleaned 
from it, and the actions we have taken, and continue to take, 
to ensure strict compliance with its use.
    With respect to the threats we face, as you are all aware, 
Section 702 is invaluable within our cyber program as it 
counters malicious activity from adversaries such as China, 
Russia, Iran, North Korea, among others. It is also a critical 
authority for the counterintelligence program which relies on 
it to thwart the work of hostile foreign intelligence services, 
including each of the lawless authoritarian regimes just 
mentioned.
    And our counterterrorism operators depend on it to stop 
foreign terrorists, those who detest American values, freedom, 
and our way of life. And who seek to attack our country, take 
lives, and cause harm. As we've learned from the past, if the 
702 tool is lost, and we have to rely on traditional FISA 
moving forward, it would be next to impossible to keep pace 
with the foreign threats we face today.
    With that, we know many very real and legitimate concerns 
have been raised about the Bureau's use of 702, particularly as 
it relates to querying the limited subset of 702 data relating 
to the FBI's national security investigations.
    I want to be clear about my own views on the compliance 
incidents that were cited in the FISA Court's opinion from last 
year, which was just recently declassified.
    They are wholly and completely unacceptable, and they do 
not reflect the high standards that we seek to hold ourselves 
to in the FBI. I know Director Wray and the entire leadership 
team feel the same way.
    It is important to keep in mind that all the incidents 
cited in that 2022 FISA Court opinion predated a set of major 
reforms that the FBI instituted in 2021 and 2022 that were 
designed to address the root causes and eliminate incidents 
like these, from changes in our IT systems to our internal 
approval processes, to training, and to accountability.
    These reforms have already had significant positive 
impacts. We've seen a 94 percent drop in U.S. person queries 
overall, and our Office of Internal Auditing found a 14 
percentage point increase in our compliance rate from before 
the reforms to after. It is now at approximately 96 percent.
    What is vital to remember is that there are incredibly 
important national security and public safety reasons for the 
FBI to query U.S. persons in FISA holdings. This was a 
fundamental lesson derived by both the 9/11 Commission and the 
Fort Hood Commission.
    We must share information across the intelligence community 
so that we can connect the dots, and then we must be able to 
find the relevant pieces of information in our databases in 
time to be able to take action to neutralize the threat.
    U.S. person queries are used to identify those who are 
actively working with foreign terrorist organizations or 
hostile intelligence services with intent to harm U.S. national 
security and threaten the lives of those who we serve. And we 
also use these queries to determine if those U.S. persons are 
current or potential victims targeted by those foreign powers. 
And if they are victims, we use U.S. person queries to 
investigate the extent of that targeting and can use that 
information to protect and warn the U.S. person or 
organization.
    But it's not enough to say that queries like these are 
valuable to our mission to protect the homeland. The American 
people and Congress also need to have trust and confidence that 
these queries are being done lawfully and in a fully compliant 
manner. It is our obligation to rebuild and to earn that trust.
    As the FBI official responsible for personally approving 
some of the most sensitive queries, I take these compliance 
errors very seriously, and find them entirely unacceptable. It 
is difficult to express strongly enough in words how 
disappointed I am in these failures.
    And so, in response to these and other incidents, I'm 
announcing today two additional new measures we will be taking 
to hold personnel accountable for FISA-related compliance 
incidents.
    First, I have issued new accountability procedures which 
establish a three-strike policy, four-query compliance 
incidents deemed to be unintentional, with a range of rapidly 
escalating consequences. And even stronger disciplinary action 
for those incidents deemed deliberate, reckless, or 
particularly egregious. Penalties based on the facts range up 
to dismissal from the agency.
    Second, the FBI has developed a new business health measure 
to hold our leadership accountable for monitoring FISA 
compliance within their field offices and divisions. This is 
one of the measures our leaders will be evaluated on when it 
comes time for performance ratings, awards, and promotions. 
Because it is not enough to simply hold the line-level 
employees accountable. We strive to ensure that we have 
accountability at every level throughout the organization.
    You have an absolute and complete commitment from Director 
Wray and I that we will continue this progress and work within 
the bounds of legislative authority. Because as crucial as 702 
authority is now, it will only become more important over the 
next 5 years as foreign cyberattacks continue to escalate in 
sophistication and frequency, as foreign terrorist 
organizations continue to reconstitute and pose resurgent 
threats to the homeland, and as we venture further into an era 
of heightened global strategic competition.
    So thank you again for inviting us to this important 
hearing, and for your continued support of the FBI and our 
close partners represented here. Thank you.
    [The prepared statement of Mr. Abbate appears as a 
submission for the record.]
    Chair Durbin. Thank you very much, Mr. Abbate. Mr. Olsen.

  STATEMENT OF MATTHEW G. OLSEN, ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL, 
     NATIONAL SECURITY DIVISION, U.S. DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE

    Mr. Olsen. Thank you, Chair Durbin, Ranking Member Graham, 
Members of the Committee. As you've just heard, Section 702 is 
invaluable. The reauthorization of 702 is perhaps the single 
most consequential national security decision that this 
Congress will make. The stakes could not be higher.
    Congress enacted Section 702 as part of a number of 
fundamental legal reforms following 9/11. Those attacks 
demonstrated that we must, one, share intelligence, and two, 
that we must eliminate walls between foreign intelligence 
collection and domestic law enforcement. I was part of the team 
at the Department of Justice in 2008 that worked with Congress 
to pass Section 702.
    Congress, then, recognized that FISA, as written, created a 
dangerous intelligence gap, and enacted 702 on a bipartisan 
basis. And when Congress passed 702, it also included a number 
of critical safeguards for Americans.
    The law, for example, prohibits targeting anyone inside the 
United States or a U.S. person anywhere in the world. The FISA 
Court reviews Section 702 procedures every year to ensure that 
they comply with the Constitution and with FISA. And the 
National Security Division, which I lead, reviews every single 
targeting decision that's made.
    In my experience, Section 702 is a model piece of 
legislation, an authority that both protects national security 
and safeguards civil liberties. So let me address one area of 
particular concern, and that's the FBI's use of Section 702 
information.
    To use the intelligence that the IC collects lawfully, 
agents and analysts, quote, ``query the database of FBI 
information.'' This is the small subset of 702 data that is 
relevant to open FBI national security investigations.
    A query simply means using a term to retrieve specific 
information that already is in the FBI's possession. It's like 
searching for something in your email inbox. You don't read 
every single email. You probably enter a keyword to find what 
you're looking for quickly within what's already stored in your 
inbox.
    And the FBI's ability to do this, to conduct these queries, 
is absolutely essential to its mission. For example, if the FBI 
learns that a spy working for the PRC has a list of U.S. phone 
numbers on their phone, FBI investigators may query FBI 702 
data with those phone numbers--some of them may be U.S. phone 
numbers--to help identify others working for the PRC, or even 
potential victims of PRC espionage.
    And this is not just hypothetical. The FBI, in fact, was 
able to disrupt--able to disrupt ongoing assassination and 
kidnapping plots, in part, because FBI investigators searched 
their 702 data with U.S. person identifiers. And they were able 
to therefore quickly discover the nature and extent of the 
plotting.
    In another case, the FBI was investigating a cyberattack 
against a critical infrastructure company here in the United 
States. The FBI queried its Section 702 data with U.S. person 
identifiers. And they found out that it was Chinese hackers 
that were behind the attack, and that they had compromised the 
network. And they figured out how they did it. It was this 
information that the FBI got from querying its data that 
allowed the FBI to alert the network operators and to mitigate 
the attack.
    Ultimately, the FBI is the single organization represented 
here with the responsibility and the authority to take action 
inside the United States to protect our national security, 
whether that's to identify and disrupt terrorism attacks, 
espionage, or cyber threats. And the FBI's ability to quickly 
review its Section 702 data is an essential tool for that 
mission.
    The FBI, however, must safeguard the rights of Americans. 
In recent years, we have identified and reported serious 
compliance issues with FBI's U.S. person queries.
    And let me be clear, I join with Deputy Director Abbate. 
These compliance problems are not acceptable. They have eroded 
public trust, and I am not here to defend them.
    Indeed, when we identified these problems, the Attorney 
General directed the FBI to make significant changes to their 
systems, and their policies, and their training. Changes that 
have already proven effective in improving compliance. But this 
is an ongoing process, and as the deputy director testified, 
the FBI is imposing new measures for compliance, and new 
measures for accountability. And we are continuing to review 
the FBI's performance for ways to improve.
    We are committed to working with you and with the rest of 
Congress on potential reforms. As we work with you on this 
effort, we must ensure that any changes we make also preserve 
Section 702's essential effectiveness as a national security 
tool.
    In the end, we must not forget the lessons of 9/11. Unduly 
limiting the FBI's ability to access lawfully collected 
information, and imposing artificial barriers between foreign 
intelligence and criminal investigations will set us back 
decades. It will put our Nation at grave risk.
    Section 702 has proven to be an irreplaceable authority 
that enables our entire intelligence community to work 
together, to collect, and to share, and to use the information 
that's necessary to protect our country. Thank you.
    [The prepared statement of Mr. Olsen appears as a 
submission for the record.]
    Chair Durbin. Thank you, Mr. Olsen. Before I start the 
questioning, I'll recognize Senator Graham for an opening 
statement.

          OPENING STATEMENT OF HON. LINDSEY O. GRAHAM,
        A U.S. SENATOR FROM THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA

    Senator Graham. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I'll be very 
brief.
    The Committee has heard pretty jarring testimony from 
people in the intelligence and law enforcement space that if 
Congress fails to reauthorize 702, that the country would be 
much at risk. And this program has been used to identify some 
pretty bad actors and take action on behalf of the United 
States.
    The abuses that you talked about--I'll talk to you about in 
a minute.
    But I guess what I'm trying to tell my constituents back 
home, the threats to the country are growing. They're not 
lessening. The ISIS-al-Qaeda footprint is coming back. China's 
up to no good at every front. The Iranians are threatening to 
kill former members of the Trump administration, and many of us 
have been briefed by the FBI based on pickups you've had 
regarding threats against us. And I would imagine that came 
from 702.
    That's the need for it. The downside is that it's been 
abused, and there's a warrant requirement to investigate an 
American citizen for potential wrongdoing. And we don't want 
this to be used to get around a warrant requirement. So bottom 
line is let's reauthorize this program and build in some 
safeguards.
    Chair Durbin. Thank you, Senator Graham.
    Before I begin my questions, I want to remind my colleagues 
that following this open session, we'll have a closed session--
SVC 217 at 12 p.m. today--where you can pose questions that may 
not be able to be answered in open session.
    I'd like to start with questioning by just noting the 
following. I listened to how this program was described by our 
witnesses. Mr. Fonzone described it as an elegant program. Mr. 
Barnes described it as agile and specific. Mr. Cohen referred 
to precision. Mr. Olsen, that it was irreplaceable, and 
invaluable, and so forth.
    But since the last reauthorization of Section 702 in 2017, 
many violations of the constitutional, statutory, and court-
imposed restrictions on Section 702 have come to light.
    Last month, an unsealed Foreign Intelligence Surveillance 
Court, or FISC, opinion revealed that the FBI conducted 
improper searches of 702 databases for American communications 
278,000 times--278,000 times. These searches have affected all 
manner of Americans such as individuals listed in police and 
homicide reports, including victims, next of kin, and witnesses 
to the crime.
    One hundred thirty-three people were arrested during the 
2020 Black Lives Matter protest when, as Justice Department 
itself concluded, quote, ``there was no specific factual basis 
to think the searches would turn up foreign intelligence.''
    And 19,000 donors to congressional campaigns when, quote, 
``the only 8 identifiers used in the query had sufficient ties 
to foreign influence activities to allow such a search''--8 out 
of 19,000.
    Mr. Abbate and Mr. Olsen, you both testified regarding the 
remedial measures that have been implemented or are underway. 
But why should Congress or the American people trust the 
Executive to comply with the law this time in light of this 
track record?
    Mr. Olsen. Thank you, Chair Durbin. I'll first take the 
question, and then pass it off to the deputy director.
    As we both said, the problems that you've cited, and that 
we've identified in our reviews of the FBI queries are not 
acceptable. And I don't defend them. I'm not here to do that. 
What I can tell you is that those problems predate the critical 
remedial measures that were put in place in 2021 and 2022.
    In particular, the FBI made a simple change to its system 
at the Attorney General's direction. Instead of--by default, 
when there was a query conducted by an FBI analyst or agent 
searching all of its data, including FISA, raw FISA, and 702 
data, it simply switched that to a default opt-in.
    So that from that point forward, starting in 2021, the FBI 
agent or analyst had to actually affirmatively take the step of 
saying I'm going to conduct a search using a U.S. person 
identifier. And then, say why that was reasonably likely to 
return foreign intelligence information.
    And it was that single change that has resulted primarily 
in the reduction of the number of U.S. person queries by 93 
percent from 2021 to 2022.
    So, it was at--it wasn't--again, these changes, or these 
problems, these mistakes were not intentional. They were 
inadvertent. They're not defensible. But they were addressed 
largely by just simply requiring an affirmative step to search 
that data because most of those searches were inadvertent.
    You know, and if I made one other point on the 278,000 
number within the court opinion that you cited. Obviously, 
that's a huge number.
    The one thing to put that in some context--the one response 
to put that number in context, that doesn't represent a 
single--each one of those a single wrongful query. Many of 
those queries were batch queries. In other words, multiple 
queries by one mistake. One agent making a mistake. In fact, 
one of those errors accounts for over 100,000 of the 278,000. 
So I think it's important to put that number, again, in 
context. Again, not to defend or to excuse that mistake.
    Chair Durbin. It's been a source of frustration since the 
creation of this program to get adequate accountability for the 
numbers, either on the positive side or the negative side. And 
you have to, I hope, understand why some of us are skeptical at 
this point that 278,000 doesn't mean 278,000. I'm not sure 
where you're going with that.
    Let me just ask the basic fundamental question in the few 
seconds I have left. Is the skill of our adversaries and the 
potential destruction that they could bring to us by their 
malicious acts really made the Fourth Amendment something that 
we have to question whether we can follow it in the 21st 
century?
    Mr. Olsen. Again, I--the FBI is committed, the Department 
of Justice is committed to ensuring the safeguards are followed 
with regard to 702. There is no diminution of the Fourth 
Amendment when we're talking about U.S. person queries.
    In other words, the answer to your question is, we do not 
need to dispense with the Fourth Amendment. The Fourth 
Amendment applies fully to everything we do. In fact, it's the 
hallmark of the work that we do when we investigate and 
prosecute cases, is to follow the Fourth Amendment along with 
the rest of the Constitution.
    The courts that have looked at this--have looked at FISA 
702 and FBI queries, no judge has said that there is a Fourth 
Amendment requirement for the FBI to query the data that's 
already lawfully collected. In fact, the courts that have 
looked at it have said there is no Fourth Amendment violation 
or requirement. There certainly are privacy implications here, 
and that's why we've adopted the changes that we've talked 
about. And that's why the FBI has today announced additional 
compliance measures which, again, are already proving to be 
effective.
    Chair Durbin. I can't go any further because I've run out 
of time. But I will tell you that if the reforms that you've 
mentioned in 2021 and 2022 are the only reforms that you're 
bringing to this Committee as we discuss the future of 702, 
I've got to see more. I hope there is more that you can 
present. Senator Graham.
    Senator Graham. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I'll just ask the 
panel to raise your hand if you agree with the following: The 
United States is an undeclared state of war against ISIS and 
al-Qaeda. You agree with that or not?
    [Laughter.]
    [All of the witnesses raised their hands.]
    Senator Graham. Okay. All right. I think you raised your 
hands.
    [Poster is displayed.]
    Senator Graham. That the Communist Chinese Party is hell 
bent on infiltrating as many systems in America as possible? 
Okay.
    So let's talk about--I don't know if there's anybody named 
John Doe out there, but I don't know why you would name your 
kid John Doe. So let's talk about John Doe. If John Doe is 
suspected of working with the Chinese or some terrorist 
organization, do we all agree you'd have to get a warrant 
against John Doe if they were an American citizen?
    Everybody nods their head. Right?
    If you think some American is colluding or working with 
some foreign power that would be a crime, then you'd have to 
get a warrant to investigate them. Do we all agree with that? 
Okay.
    702. This is about foreign persons outside the country. Is 
that correct? We're surveilling foreign people outside the 
United States not to solve a crime but to find out if they're 
up to no good in terms of intelligence-gathering threats to the 
country. Is that correct?
    Here's the rub. You pick up a phone on the battlefield 
somewhere, and there's a bunch of names in that phone or 
numbers in that phone. I think you talked about this, Mr. 
Abbate. But let's just say you capture a terrorist somewhere 
overseas, and you have a mobile device, and on that device 
there are names of Americans or numbers of Americans. What 
happens next?
    Mr. Abbate. We're going to quickly take those numbers, 
Senator. We're going to run them against the holdings----
    Senator Graham. Without a warrant?
    Mr. Abbate. If we're talking about FISA 702?
    Senator Graham. Yes.
    Mr. Abbate. Yes. If it's obtained from a foreign 
terrorist----
    Senator Graham. Yes.
    Mr. Abbate [continuing]. Absolutely.
    Senator Graham. So the idea of not looking at those numbers 
is absurd. Why wouldn't you want to look at those numbers? 
Doing it in a constitutionally sound manner is what we're 
talking about. So what would you do? You would ask the system 
what?
    Mr. Abbate. We would be looking connections around the 
world and specifically in the United States. We would want to 
know if that terrorist is working with someone----
    Senator Graham. So if he called----
    Mr. Abbate [continuing]. In the United States.
    Senator Graham [continuing]. John Doe in Cleveland, Ohio, 
and you pinged the system, and there is communications between 
the terrorist's device and John Doe in Cleveland, Ohio, what 
would you do next?
    Mr. Abbate. We would do all the investigative steps that 
you would expect. Physical surveillance----
    Senator Graham. Would you have to get a warrant?
    Mr. Abbate. If we were going to seek technical surveillance 
on the U.S. person, absolutely we would.
    Senator Graham. Okay. So if a terrorist is talking to 
someone inside the United States, and we pick it up from 702, 
if you want to follow the American on the other end of the 
phone, you'd potentially have to get a warrant. Is that 
correct?
    Mr. Abbate. Yes, Senator.
    Senator Graham. Okay. But just asking the question about 
whether or not there was a contact does not require a warrant? 
Does that make sense?
    Mr. Abbate. Yes.
    Senator Graham. Okay. So if an American is involved with a 
foreign person overseas, and there's evidence of an American 
being involved--we don't know what the nature of the 
involvement is, we'd like to know more--you can ask the system. 
But if you're really focusing on the American as being up to no 
good, you have to get a warrant. Is that fair to say?
    Mr. Abbate. That is correct, Senator. Once the focus turns 
to the U.S. person, the person inside the United States.
    Senator Graham. The only reason I mention this is that 702 
is not designed to avoid a warrant requirement against people 
you have to get warrants for. Is that correct? The goal of 702 
is to find out about what bad guys or bad girls may be up to 
overseas regarding us here at home, our interests throughout 
the world, and do something about it before it's too late. Is 
that the general nature of 702?
    Mr. Abbate. Yes, Senator.
    Senator Graham. Okay. Now, you're going to have to prove to 
this Committee that when you query about American citizens in 
that system, that you're not just being lazy getting around the 
law, and these abuses need to stop.
    So count me in with Senator Durbin. I want to know more 
about how to have guardrails. But to the Members of this 
Committee, if we lose this tool, we will pay a heavy price.
    Chair Durbin. Senator Whitehouse.
    Senator Whitehouse. Thank you very much. Thank you all for 
being here. Mr. Olsen, you and I were both engaged in that 2008 
initial process back when I was on the Intelligence Committee 
as well as the Judiciary Committee. So let me just join Mr. 
Abbate in his feelings of dismay that these errors have been 
allowed to take place. I've been a constant supporter of 702, 
and it's very frustrating, years into the process, to have 
these errors continue.
    You've mentioned, the panel has mentioned the role of 702 
in finding out about atrocities committed by Russia in Ukraine. 
Can you tell me if that information has yet been shared with 
the International Criminal Court?
    Mr. Olsen. I'm not sure. I defer to my colleagues about 
whether it has or not. Yes.
    Senator Whitehouse. The reason I'd like an answer to that 
is that this Committee, Senator Graham, Chairman Durbin, saw to 
it that a law was passed lifting the ban on cooperation with 
the International Criminal Court as it regards, specifically, 
Russian atrocities in Ukraine.
    And our understanding from the last conversation we had was 
that the Department of Defense was stopping the executive 
branch from complying with that law passed by Congress.
    And if that is still the case, then we'd like an answer to 
that. So can we get an answer to that in a timely fashion for 
the Committee?
    Mr. Olsen. Yes.
    Senator Whitehouse. It's the law of the country for the 
executive branch to cooperate with the International Criminal 
Court as regards the investigation into Russian crimes. The 
failure of the executive branch to abide by that law, I 
believe, because of the recalcitrance of one agency, just isn't 
consistent with the way things are supposed to work in our 
democracy. So I hope that we've put an end to that problem or 
solved it. But if not, we're going to continue to press on that 
question.
    Mr. Olsen, there are three areas that we've talked about 
with regards to 702 that are not presently in the 702 statute.
    One is its use to pursue the international organizations 
that are responsible for bringing fentanyl into the country and 
for thousands of American deaths. You are currently using the 
program to target those organizations. Correct?
    Mr. Olsen. The program is being used, Senator, for the 
purpose of gaining intelligence on fentanyl distribution 
focusing on individuals and groups outside the United States 
who are not U.S. persons.
    Senator Whitehouse. So let me make a recommendation that 
you add to 702 a specific authorization for that purpose. I 
think that would be welcome.
    Second, you've announced a considerable number of repairs 
and reforms, including the FBI unclassified congressional 
notice that we received today. Those are all being accomplished 
administratively. Correct?
    Mr. Olsen. That's correct, at this point.
    Senator Whitehouse. I would strongly recommend that you 
take as many of those as you feasibly can and bake them into 
the law. So work on an amendment that incorporates those 
reforms so that it now is part of the 702 law that we will be 
voting on.
    The third is that you have mentioned the role of 702 in 
supporting American victims of foreign intelligence breaches. 
Very often it's a company that is having information stolen out 
of it. Often, by PRC-related entities. And the way you find out 
about it is that through 702, you pick up the contact with the 
American company. Now you have the ability to go to the 
American company and say, ``Hey, you have a problem,'' and help 
them defend themselves. Is that an accurate description of the 
way that transpires?
    Mr. Olsen. Absolutely. Both through direct means as well as 
cyber means is the way we've seen those types of intrusions 
occur.
    Senator Whitehouse. Yes. So I would also recommend that you 
add to 702 specific authority related to the support for 
American victims. There's no reason that should hide that 
aspect of the program under a bushel. And once it's part of the 
program, there's no doubt that that's a legitimate way for the 
executive branch to proceed. With that, my time is up. I thank 
you, all, for your service and yield back to the Chairman.
    Chair Durbin. Thanks, Senator Whitehouse. Senator Grassley.
    Senator Grassley. Mr. Fonzone, you can't have meaningful 
discussions about reauthorizing 702 when Government reports and 
court opinions are heavily redacted and hidden from the public. 
Will you commit to declassifying information about the FISA 
abuses and procedures before the 702 reauthorization deadline? 
And if you can't say yes to that, why not?
    Mr. Fonzone. Yes, Senator. Thank you. I think we--we have 
recently released a FISC opinion that released--that 
declassified a bunch of information. And the law already 
requires us to review FISC opinions for declassification and 
release them to the public. And we're committed to making more 
information public about Section 702 to assist Congress and the 
public in its consideration of renewing this authority.
    Senator Grassley. Mr. Olsen, I heard you say in your 
opening statement about processes you're taking to make sure 
that people that abuse this process are going to be held 
accountable. You heard about the 278,000 times that it was 
violated. What is the Justice Department doing to punish folks 
who have already abused FISA?
    Mr. Olsen. Senator, thank you for that question. And, 
again, compliance includes rules and procedures. But it only 
works if you have accountability.
    And that's why the FBI has instituted a comprehensive 
approach to accountability for the agents and analysts who use 
FISA but abuse the rules. It's on a spectrum for intentional 
misuse. Agents and analysts can be fired. In fact, one person 
was fired for wrongfully violating the rules intentionally with 
respect to FISA.
    But the vast majority of the mistakes we've seen are not 
intentional. And the FBI has announced today--Deputy Director 
Abbate talked about a three-strikes approach of escalating 
penalties that include notes in a personnel file, loss of 
access to FISA data, and other measures, including retraining 
to ensure that individuals are tracked over time if they're 
repeat offenders. So there's, again, a range of repercussions 
and discipline. And I know the deputy director and the director 
of the FBI take this very seriously.
    Senator Grassley. Okay. Mr. Abbate, I'd like to have you 
describe for me the process and procedure that the FBI should 
normally follow when receiving criminal allegations from a 
trusted FBI source that an office holder engaged in bribery. 
For example, if the allegations include reference to evidence 
that would prove or disprove the bribery scheme, would standard 
operating procedure require the FBI to seek out that evidence?
    Mr. Abbate. Senator, in any instance where we receive 
information, an allegation, or a complaint, you know, we apply 
the standards and the Attorney General guidelines, and our 
DIOG, and determine whether the information received, the 
allegation, or the complaint meets the threshold for the 
opening of an investigation.
    We consult appropriately with our field office, with our 
program management elements at headquarters, with our Office of 
General Counsel, and then we take it from there based on the 
information whether it meets the standard.
    Senator Grassley. So that's the investigation process that 
should have been followed with respect to the 1023. Apparently, 
that process wasn't followed. For the sake of restoring 
credibility, the FBI must explain itself sooner rather than 
later.
    Mr. Olsen, this is my last question. The Washington Post 
reported your involvement in Mar-a-Lago raid. It wrote that, 
quote, ``FBI agents on the case worried that prosecutors were 
being overly aggressive,'' and further, quote, ``Olsen appealed 
to senior officials in FBI headquarters to push their agents to 
conduct the raid.'' Did you communicate with senior officials 
at FBI headquarters to push their agents to search Mar-a-Lago?
    Mr. Olsen. Senator, our solemn responsibility in every case 
is to follow the facts, and the law, and to do so without fear 
or favor. We are absolutely committed to the impartial 
administration of justice, and to upholding the rule of law, 
which includes applying the law equally to everybody. As I'm 
sure you can appreciate, that matter is under the auspices of 
the Office of the Special Counsel----
    Senator Grassley. Is The Washington----
    Mr. Olsen [continuing]. And I'm not going to comment 
further on it.
    Senator Grassley. Is The Washington Post right or wrong?
    Mr. Olsen. That's a matter that's pending, and it's an 
ongoing matter, and it's being handled by the Office of the 
Special Counsel. So I'm sure you can understand that I'm not 
going to comment further.
    Senator Grassley. Thank you. I yield.
    Chair Durbin. Senator Klobuchar.
    Senator Klobuchar. Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman. Thank 
you, all of you, for your good work.
    I'll start with you, Deputy Director Cohen. I know Senator 
Whitehouse asked you--asked Mr. Olsen about the use of 702 when 
it comes to drug trafficking. And I wanted to kind of dig down 
on that just because we're seeing more and more fentanyl kill 
people, and also more available on the internet. Sometimes, 
many times, unknowingly, when people are purchasing other pills 
that shouldn't be on those platforms.
    Without getting into specifics, how is data collected under 
Section 702 been used to disrupt trafficking networks, and 
prevent fentanyl and its precursor chemicals from entering our 
communities? What work is being done?
    Mr. Cohen. Thank you for that question, Senator Klobuchar. 
So we use Section 702 collection on foreign persons overseas, 
query the database to identify individuals tied to 
organizations that are involved in drug trafficking and 
fentanyl production in particular.
    It helps us illuminate where the precursor chemicals are 
coming from. Often from China. How those chemicals get to 
overseas. Oftentimes to Mexico. Not invariably, but oftentimes 
to Mexico. As well as how some of the pill presses that are 
used to manufacture fentanyl are acquired. Again, overseas, and 
brought into Mexico for use including by, you know, 
organizations such as the Sinaloa Cartel.
    Senator Klobuchar. I think that's really----
    Mr. Cohen. That really helps us----
    Senator Klobuchar [continuing]. Important to know for those 
just talking to families of lost kids who purchasing drugs on 
the internet, that the platforms are being used----
    Mr. Cohen. Yes.
    Senator Klobuchar [continuing]. By these cartels. You don't 
have to go into that. But these cartels are actually involved 
in this. So it's not like they can get all their justice in the 
U.S. And in order to stop this, we're going to have to stop it 
from coming in--the ingredients and some of the other 
substances. Is that correct?
    Mr. Cohen. That's correct, Senator.
    Senator Klobuchar. Okay. Deputy Director Abbate, I 
appreciated Senator Durbin's words about making sure that these 
reforms continue, and that they are. I appreciated what you 
announced today, and that there'll be changes to the existing 
702 authority.
    Could you talk about how the reforms the FBI implemented 
resulted in measurable improvements in the FBI's compliance? 
Number one. And then number two, is there a lag in the publicly 
available data such that the most recent FISC Section 702 
certification does not accurately inform the public?
    Mr. Abbate. Thank you, Senator. Yes. With respect to the 
reforms that we've already put in place--as the Assistant 
Attorney General noted--we've seen significant progress. Just 
the one that Mr. Olsen cited on having our personnel opt in 
year over year resulted in a 90-something percent decrease in 
overall U.S. person queries.
    So we've seen significant progress there along with the 
other reforms that we've implemented on batch queries which are 
anything more than one. We had put in place a requirement that 
for any batch queries over 100, it would require attorney 
review from our Office of General Counsel. I've taken that even 
further now because I saw some recent examples, again, where I 
was disappointed in the compliance error. So we've actually cut 
that down now so that any batch query of any number is going to 
require attorney review from our Office of General Counsel 
going forward.
    We're also requiring written justifications for our 
personnel when they're endeavoring to make a U.S. person query. 
And we're going to continue to iterate on that. We view it as 
an ongoing process, and we're open to any and all further 
reforms in working with the Committee and Members here. And 
we're not going to stop until we've achieved 100 percent 
compliance.
    Senator Klobuchar. Okay. I was going to ask Mr. Olsen if 
you wanted to add anything. But before that, quick, how has the 
FBI used Section 702 to critical infrastructure and businesses 
to protect them from ransomware and other cyber threats? 
Because we certainly have been seeing a surge in those.
    Mr. Abbate. Yes, Senator, as we said, it's a vital tool. 
Some examples have already been provided with regularity that 
we see that. It's helped us literally identify potential 
victims, and victims in the United States--both individuals and 
companies who are either being targeted for cyberattack, or in 
the midst of an attack, or already have been.
    It's allowed us to get in front of that, particularly with 
regard to our critical infrastructure to warn victim companies 
before they're hit and prevent the harm from occurring from 
adversaries like China, Russia, Iran, North Korea. And it's 
been--without it, we would not have been able to have achieved 
that goal----
    Senator Klobuchar. Okay, because you've----
    Mr. Abbate [continuing]. And to protect our country's----
    Senator Klobuchar [continuing]. Had some major 
prosecutions. Could I just ask Mr. Olsen? It appeared he had 
something you wanted to add on the reform front.
    Mr. Olsen. If I may, just two quick points, Senator. One on 
your cyber question. One example is the notorious Colonial 
Pipeline attack where 702 collection helped us both identify 
the hacker, and it enabled us to recover most of the ransom 
money that had been paid.
    Senator Klobuchar. Mm-hmm.
    Mr. Olsen. Second, your question about the certification 
and the FISC opinions.
    Senator Klobuchar. Yes.
    Mr. Olsen. There is a 2023 opinion that is now going 
through the declassification process that will come out 
shortly, and which does identify some additional improvements 
in FBI compliance. Not 100 percent. There are still problems 
and things that we're still working on. That's part of the 
deal. But it does identify that the FBI has continued to 
improve its compliance over the past year.
    Senator Klobuchar. Okay. Thank you very much.
    Chair Durbin. Senator Cornyn.
    Senator Cornyn. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I haven't heard 
anyone say that 702 is not essential to our national security, 
and I believe that it is essential to our national security. So 
I'm delighted to hear that people are saying that--not claiming 
that we can do away with it.
    But what you're also hearing is, is a lot of skepticism, 
even distrust of the intelligence community based on abuses 
that have been well documented. And, as you know, once that 
trust is lost, it's hard to earn it back.
    So we're at a little bit of a crossroads here. I'll remind 
you that it was just a few years ago where we tried to 
reauthorize Section 215 of the Foreign Intelligence 
Surveillance Act and were unable to build a political consensus 
to do that.
    So I do believe your testimony that this is important to 
our national security. So the question is, how do we work 
together to regain the public's trust, and the confidence of 
Members of Congress who'll be asked to vote in favor of some 
reforms?
    Mr. Abbate, just--you've talked about the work that's been 
done at the FBI. And I had the opportunity to go look at how 
the FBI's reforms--not the ones you mentioned today, but the 
others in terms of querying FISA information--how those work. 
Would you have, or the FBI Director have any objection if those 
reforms that you've announced, that the FBI has announced, were 
codified and written into the law, as opposed to just policies 
of the agency?
    Mr. Abbate. Thank you, Senator, first for visiting with us 
at FBI headquarters, and taking the time. We would not have any 
objection at all from the FBI standpoint to codifying any and 
all of the reforms that we put in place, and future ones, as 
well.
    Senator Cornyn. And Mr. Abbate, I was struck by the fact 
that when the FBI is doing an investigation, an agent's not 
just sitting down and doing a query of foreign intelligence 
information lawfully collected. You're actually engaged in 
querying more than 100 different databases. Is that correct?
    Mr. Abbate. Yes, Senator. I don't know the exact number of 
databases, but we do have quite a few.
    Senator Cornyn. And so this is not agents sitting down and 
just looking at foreign intelligence surveillance. They're 
looking for all the data points to be able to put together an 
investigation into potential intelligence vulnerabilities or to 
pursue perhaps crimes.
    So there has been some suggestion--and I'll throw this open 
maybe to Mr. Olsen. There's something known as Executive Order 
12333, which, again, by definition is something that the 
President of the United States has done without congressional 
input or interaction.
    But there's been a question raised as whether--if 702 were 
to go away, does Executive Order 12333 provide the tools 
necessary to protect our country?
    Mr. Olsen. I'll answer, and maybe Mr. Fonzone might have an 
answer to this, as well, in his role as General Counsel for the 
DNI. But the short answer, Senator, is no. And the reason the 
answer is no, and flatly no, is that Executive Order 12333 does 
not allow for the critical piece that 702 does. And that is 
compelling the support and compliance of private electronic 
communication service providers.
    In other words, the real genius behind Section 702 was, 
yes, it's focused outside the United States on non-U.S. 
persons. But it also allows the Government to compel the 
assistance of a provider inside the United States, which are 
often the ones that are providing support or, you know, 
communication support to the individuals that we're targeting 
outside the U.S.
    Senator Cornyn. Mr. Cohen, obviously, Congress is very much 
engaged on a bipartisan basis in supporting the Ukrainian 
people from--on the basis--in light of the Russian invasion of 
their country. And the other sort of major issue that seems to 
enjoy broad bipartisan consensus is defending our country 
against the aggression of the People's Republic of China. Could 
you speak to how 702 is important in terms of both of those 
matters?
    Mr. Cohen. Senator Cornyn, I will say for both of those 
efforts, 702 is involved. I can go into more detail when we go 
into closed session.
    But we, and with our colleagues in the intelligence 
community, rely on 702 to identify foreign intelligence 
information that is useful for our analytic work in providing 
products to Congress and to the administration in the Ukraine 
context to understanding what's happening there, as well as a 
whole host of products that we write with respect to the 
challenge that we're facing from the People's Republic of 
China. But I'm happy to go into more detail in the closed 
session.
    Senator Cornyn. Thank you. Thank you.
    Chair Durbin. Thank you, Senator Cornyn. Senator 
Blumenthal.
    Senator Blumenthal. Thanks, Mr. Chairman. I will be 
interested in hearing how 702 has been useful with respect to 
both Ukraine and China. I can certainly understand as to China. 
I wonder if you could give us a little bit more, even in this 
public setting, about how it's been important to our assistance 
to Ukraine and its fight against Russia's criminal murderous 
aggression.
    Mr. Cohen. Senator, let me--let me take a shot at that. But 
mindful that I do think that some of the real substance would 
be better discussed in closed session. So, what I will say--and 
picking up a little bit on the answer to the prior question--is 
that our adversaries, whether they're Russians, Chinese, 
Iranians, North Koreans, terrorist organizations, make use of 
U.S. communications service providers.
    And if there is a reason for believing that we have a, you 
know, some foreigner operating overseas who is using a 
communication service that is provided by a U.S. service 
provider, we are more likely--the NSA will target that foreign 
person overseas to collect the intelligence that's--collect 
those communications.
    We can then query the database of information that is 
collected on those foreign persons overseas. We run queries, 
NSA runs queries, obviously the FBI runs queries against this 
database of information that is collected when it is reasonably 
likely to retrieve foreign intelligence information.
    And we do that in the Ukraine context. We do that in the 
context of the People's Republic of China, and in other 
contexts where we have national security concerns.
    Senator Blumenthal. And in the Ukraine context, we can play 
a part in supporting Ukraine through sharing our intelligence. 
Correct?
    Mr. Cohen. There's a whole host of ways in which we're 
supporting the Ukrainian government with intelligence sharing, 
and, you know, it involves, you know, the full swath of 
collection that the United States is involved in.
    Senator Blumenthal. Let me ask you, as you may know, and I 
think we've talked about it in our conversations in my office. 
I've been a longtime advocate of some more robust adversarial 
process within the Section 702 FISA procedure.
    In 2015, Congress took an important step in codifying the 
amicus responsibility. My numbers are from 2015 to 2020. There 
were 1,200 FISA applications, but just 19 amicus appointments. 
And in 2017, the only amicus at the time with significant 
criminal defense experience in the FISA context resigned 
because he hadn't been assigned to a single case.
    Those numbers tell me that the present amicus process is 
not providing really robust or sufficient adversarial 
procedure, when we all know as lawyers that our justice system 
thrives on the adversarial procedure.
    This area is the one part of our justice system where we 
have no such adversarial process because the subjects of 702 
collection likely will never learn that they've been the 
subject of this process. So what is your position on this 
issue? I think I know what it is, but I'd like you to state it 
for the record, if you would, sir.
    Mr. Cohen. Senator, is that a question for Mr. Olsen or for 
me?
    Senator Blumenthal. Whoever would like to answer it.
    Mr. Cohen. Why don't, why don't I turn it over to Mr. 
Olsen, who----
    Mr. Olsen. I'm happy to answer that question, Senator. I 
represent--I lead the National Security Division and we 
represent the Government before the Foreign Intelligence 
Surveillance Court. So we're directly involved in the process 
that you describe.
    First, we are open to reforms, as I said at the beginning, 
that preserve the essential effectiveness of Section 702. So if 
there are reforms, for example, to the FISA Court process, 
we're happy to engage with you and other Members of Congress as 
we think through how those would work.
    When it comes to the amicus process, the FISA Court can ask 
for an amicus to be appointed in any case. And they do so in 
any case involving a novel or complex interpretation of FISA. 
And that's the cases that are the hard cases where they do have 
an adversarial process through the amicus appointment.
    The vast majority of FISA applications are basically the 
same as the ex parte process that occurs in a Title III 
criminal application, which is not an adversarial process, but 
rather criminal matter.
    Senator Blumenthal. It's not, but eventually there is 
likely to be a challenge.
    Mr. Olsen. That's correct.
    Senator Blumenthal. And in this instance, there's likely to 
be no challenge. And so the privacy interests arise not only 
where there's some new major novel interpretation of law. But 
as you well know--you know a lot more than I do, at least--the 
case-by-case decisions often turn on interpretations of law 
that are challengeable. And that's why an adversarial process 
would provide a lot of reassurance, I think, to this Committee 
and the American people.
    Mr. Olsen. Again, we're open to having this conversation 
and engaging with you on this. I do--it is my view that the 
vast majority of FISA applications are basically facts against 
the probable cause standard. They don't involve novel 
interpretations of the law, and they are done on a level of--
with a degree of urgency, you know, multiple times a week that 
would--that does not lend itself to the sort of adversarial 
back and forth process that an amicus would introduce. And it 
would--so there is some serious risk to having, for example, an 
amicus in every case.
    Senator Blumenthal. Thank you. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
    Chair Durbin. Thank you, Senator Blumenthal. Senator Lee.
    Senator Lee. Over the past 12\1/2\ years, I've raised 
significant concerns in hearing, after hearing, after hearing 
about FISA, and the FBI's shocking disregard for Americans' 
constitutional rights and civil liberties.
    I've been given basically the same answer by FBI Directors, 
and Attorneys General, and other officials during three 
Presidential administrations involving both major political 
parties.
    The answer every time is a variation, more or less, of the 
following: ``Just trust us. Don't worry. We've got good people, 
law abiding people running this. And we've got lots and lots of 
procedural safeguards in place to prevent this type of abuse 
that you're facing here.'' ``These aren't the droids you're 
looking for''--that's what we're told.
    Here again today [holds up document], just the last 24 
hours, we got a new policy. This one's finally going to fix it, 
you tell us. This one--this one's going to do it.
    Meanwhile, what's happened? Well, in 2019, Inspector 
General Horowitz issued a shocking report confirming a lot of 
what I had feared over the years but had found it difficult to 
prove. A report regarding Crossfire Hurricane, the FBI's secret 
surveillance of Donald Trump's 2016 Presidential campaign, and 
then a subsequent memorandum dealing with the FBI's failure to 
maintain the so-called ``Woods files,'' which a Woods file is 
basically the evidentiary record underlying a FISA order 
request in violation of FBI policy.
    Year after year, in hearing after hearing, we hear of 
instances of noncompliance. Including the disclosure just last 
month that the FBI illegally surveilled 19,000 donors to a 
congressional campaign, Americans participating in protests in 
the summer of 2020, Americans who were in Washington, DC, on 
January 6th, 2021, and even a sitting Member of Congress.
    Hundreds of thousands of searches of Americans' private 
communications and information are conducted each and every 
year without a probable cause warrant. Frankly, without any 
warrant if conducted under Section 702.
    Now, let me be very clear. That number should not just be 
going down. That number should be zero. Every, quote, unquote, 
``noncompliant search'' involving U.S. persons violates an 
American citizen's constitutional rights.
    And yet every year the FBI claims that we should just trust 
the FBI to fix the problems internally. Well, first they tell 
us there are no problems. Then they tell us we will fix them 
because we've got good people, and we've got new policies, and 
this time it's going to be different.
    Only later we find out that the FBI conducted more and more 
illegal searches in violation of Americans' constitutional 
rights than the last time we addressed the issue.
    So it's hard not to conclude that the only thing the FBI 
wishes it could fix here is the possibility of getting caught. 
This is what I find so insufferable. This is what I find so 
incredibly insulting.
    Look, I want to echo Senator Blumenthal's point a minute 
ago, and I hope every American can take note of this feature of 
this. This is unlike other court proceedings. We call it a 
court, and yet it doesn't have any of the trappings of an 
ordinary court. There is no adversarial process.
    We're told a moment ago by Mr. Olsen that it's okay. It's 
okay because the FISA Court has the ability to appoint an 
amicus anytime it feels necessary to do so. Well, why not in 
every case? And even if there is an amicus, what interest does 
the amicus have that's on par with the individuals affected?
    The bottom line is you collect all this data. And then 
after you store all that data, some of it involving 
communications, the content of individual phone calls, emails, 
text messages, whatever it is--the content. Not just the 
metadata, but the content. You can do a backdoor search on that 
without a warrant predicated on probable cause.
    That is itself an affront to the Constitution. That is 
itself something that is always going to lead to constitutional 
violations, and it must stop. We've got an opportunity this 
year to make necessary reforms, and we must do it.
    But while we've got you here, Mr. Olsen and Mr. Abbate, why 
should we ever trust the FBI and the DOJ when it comes to this 
issue, whether under the current administration or under future 
leadership? Why should we ever trust the FBI and the DOJ again 
to police themselves under FISA when they've shown us 
repeatedly for more than a decade that they cannot be trusted 
to do so?
    Mr. Olsen. Senator, thank you for the question. Obviously, 
Section 702 is an invaluable intelligence tool. That's beyond 
dispute. It's also one that's very powerful, and it must be 
used responsibly. And I share the frustration that you express 
with the lack of compliance that we've seen in past years from 
the FBI. I'm not here to defend those compliance problems.
    What I can tell you is that those compliance problems 
predate some of the very significant changes that the FBI has 
put in place. I will not say that compliance problems will be 
zero next year. We are not saying, as I think you mentioned, 
that we'd say we're done. This is an ongoing process. We will 
continue to try to improve. We will work with you, and your 
staff, and other Members of Congress to make sure that we're 
implementing procedures and policies, training, and other 
measures to continue to drive down these errors and compliance 
problems.
    But in the end, the tool itself is so incredibly important 
to our national security that I believe that its essential 
effectiveness must be preserved.
    Senator Lee. Mr. Abbate.
    Mr. Abbate. Senator, thank you. I share your concerns as 
well, and I take this seriously. And with regard to the FISA 
702, since I've been in this role and under the leadership of 
Director Wray, we've made significant changes. Ones that have 
never been made before, and there has been a lot of progress. 
But we're not going to rest on our laurels. We're going to keep 
driving ahead, continue to implement reforms as required, 
taking guidance and counsel from the Committee and other 
Members.
    With regard to Crossfire Hurricane, what happened there was 
wholly unacceptable. We agree with the findings set forth by 
Inspector General Horowitz and Special Counsel Durham.
    We've acknowledged that in the past, and going--that's 2017 
and earlier, that conduct occurred--not under Director Wray's 
leadership or when I was in this position.
    We have an entirely new leadership team. We've implemented 
very strong corrective actions. The poor decision-making, the 
grave errors of judgment, the misconduct, the----
    [Gavel is tapped.]
    Mr. Abbate [continuing]. Lack of rigor, investigatively, 
that occurred there, totally unacceptable. We reject it.
    We hold people accountable for that now. And everything 
that we've done on the work, on the mission since that time, 
we've worked to avoid those mistakes, and apply the lessons 
learned of the past. And anyone we find who goes against that, 
they are not going to work in the FBI and they will be held 
accountable for that period.
    Senator Lee. Great to know. Congress has got to fix this 
problem and stop trusting the surveillance state to fix it. It 
can't. It won't. We know that because it hasn't.
    Chair Durbin. Thank you, Senator Lee. Senator Hirono.
    Senator Hirono. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Chairman, I 
share your concerns about the--regarding U.S. person queries 
without warrants, and the concerns expressed by a number of my 
other colleagues.
    So this is one of the reasons that I have not been able to 
vote for reauthorizing 702. And when I am thinking about a 
warrant in this context, I am thinking about something much 
less involved than a typical FISC order, and much more like the 
search warrants that are issued in countless courthouses in our 
country every day.
    Last year, Federal magistrate judges considered over 
140,000 search warrants. Probable cause is not a high bar, and 
magistrate judges are used to evaluating it. Different 
provisions of FISA already allow Federal magistrate judges to 
issue certain FISA orders, and I would support discussion about 
expanding that authority to this context.
    For Mr. Olsen, so you've had a chance to--we have met to 
talk about why can't we have a warrant requirement. The 
Department opposes a warrant requirement because you argue that 
many of the queries are done before the FBI has probable cause.
    Which says to me that if you had to meet a probable cause 
requirement, that would already decrease the number of 
applications. So do you have any reaction to the idea of using 
Federal magistrate judges in a warrant requirement process?
    Mr. Olsen. Thank you, Senator, and I appreciate the 
opportunity to meet with you, and your staff, and to discuss 
these important issues. The warrants requirement that has been 
discussed when it comes to Section 702, I think, is not 
workable, and not legally required. And let me explain why.
    First, every judge that's looked at this issue, every 
Federal judge, including judges on the FISA Court, have 
concluded that a warrant is not required under the Fourth 
Amendment for searching the lawfully collected data that is in 
the FBI holding. So there's no legal requirement.
    But putting that aside, because there are indeed privacy 
and civil liberties implications to the FBI searching with the 
U.S. person identifier. The fundamental problem is that such an 
approach would be unworkable.
    And I go back to the hypothetical that Senator Graham 
described. Which is, assume the military, our military, obtains 
a cell phone in Syria. And that cell phone has 100 phone 
numbers on it, 30 of them are, you know, U.S. phone numbers. 
And the person that they get it from is a suspected ISIS member 
who's plotting against the United States.
    There may not be, in fact, likely wouldn't be probable 
cause to search those phone numbers in the FBI database. But 
with time being of the essence, it's absolutely critical that 
the FBI, along with other components within the intelligence 
community, take those phone numbers and determine whether or 
not we have an ISIS operator inside the United States who's 
plotting an attack.
    So we would not have probable cause. We wouldn't be able to 
take that step. It's not legally required. And if we were 
required, the sheer number of such requests would simply 
overwhelm the system. There's no number of FISA Court judges or 
even magistrates who would have the clearances, for example, 
who could possibly manage the number of queries. So it's both 
not legally required, and it's not workable, and it wouldn't 
protect us.
    Senator Hirono. You mentioned that all of the courts that 
have addressed the issue of Fourth Amendment issues, that they 
have all found that Section 702 does not require such warrants. 
But I have information that that is actually not the case. I 
don't know what specific questions were before particular 
courts, but several judges, including a unanimous panel of the 
Second Circuit Court of Appeals, have raised constitutional 
concerns.
    And you note that you would want a U.S. person inquiry in 
the instance where there is a definite connection with the 
terrorists, for example. But how do you justify the querying of 
American protesters, for example, or people who have made 
contributions? I think that the 702 is way too broad. It does 
raise constitutional questions.
    And I'm just searching for some way that is not going to 
stop the legitimate reasons for why we need 702, but also to 
address the constitutional questions. And it occurs to me that 
maybe having magistrate judges who are very used to determining 
probable cause can be utilized in this regard so that we don't 
have the situation of protesters' information being accessed, 
or political contributors, that has no connection to 
terrorists, for example.
    So, you know, I am hopeful that we can figure out a way to 
find some way. I think I heard you say that you're okay with 
some reforms. And I know that the FBI recently put in a new 
procedure called--well, where you record the justification for 
all U.S. person queries. I would be interested to know what 
kind of recordation is it, and who determines whether 
justification was there. So perhaps maybe you can give me a 
little bit of enlightenment as to what this record the 
justification is?
    Mr. Abbate. Yes, Senator----
    Senator Hirono. Mr. Abbate.
    Mr. Abbate. Yes. Within our system, the automated system, 
when the FBI employee who's seeking to do the query, the 
written justification has to be input into the system. And it's 
retained there in the records, and recoverable forever with 
respect to that query.
    And we're making the system adaptations right now to fully 
put that into place, ensure that those records are retained, 
and that they're reviewable, and auditable.
    Senator Hirono. My time is up, but I would have a concern 
as to whether there is any kind of a third party--independent 
third-party person who reviews whether there was justification. 
Thank you----
    Mr. Olsen. If I may----
    Senator Hirono [continuing]. Mr. Chairman.
    Mr. Olsen [continuing]. Just very briefly, Senator, that's 
in fact, what the lawyers in the National Security Division do. 
The lawyers who work for me do exactly those audits of the FBI 
queries--about half the field offices each year. We review all 
of the queries that were done, and we review those 
justifications--those written justifications to ensure that 
they meet the legal standard for searching the data. So, again, 
I appreciate your interest, and I look forward to working with 
you further on this.
    Senator Ossoff [presiding]. Senator Kennedy is recognized 
for 5 minutes.
    Senator Kennedy. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I guess my 
comments will be directed to Mr. Abbate. Am I saying that 
right?
    Mr. Abbate. Yes, Senator.
    Senator Kennedy. And Mr. Olsen. Perhaps to all of you. No 
fair-minded person can doubt the efficacy of Section 702. But 
here's the problem you've got. Just when the FBI--which I 
think--which I think is the most effective law enforcement 
agency in all of human history.
    Just when the--but people are people, and just when the FBI 
has rebuilt itself after former Director Hoover, along comes 
Mr. Wray's predecessor who clearly did not understand how to 
exercise power, either intelligently or maturely.
    He decides to investigate in a public way, not only one, 
but both candidates for President of the United States. And to 
do it publicly, and to leak like the Titanic. He investigates 
the Republican nominee with the flimsiest of evidence that has 
been manufactured that he--the FBI Director at that time--
didn't even bother to examine. And then he turns to the 
Democratic nominee with respect to her email servers, 
investigates her, calls a press conference, says, well, I--I, 
not we, I am not going to prosecute her, but--but she needs to 
clean up her act. She's been negligent.
    And then a little time goes by, and he opens up the 
investigation again in a public way on the Democratic nominee. 
And says, I'm opening this up. And a few days later, he closes 
it down. Might have cost her the election.
    And then we start having reports predictably come out after 
that. The Durham report, the Mueller report, the Horowitz 
report. And it did extraordinary damage to the FBI, and 
frankly, to the Department of Justice.
    Now, Mr. Wray, who I supported to replace Mr. Comey, has 
said he has reformed the FBI. We just don't know how. We have 
no idea. I don't have any idea. I do know stuff keeps 
happening.
    I mean, one of your agents that was involved in the Mr. 
Hunter Biden's investigation goes on social media, apparently 
for a long period of time, and trashes all Republicans. He got 
fired only because Senator Grassley caught him.
    And all this hurts you. And it makes a fair-minded American 
look at this and go, ``Whoa, you know, this is enormous power 
you have, and it can be used for the greater good, but it also 
can hurt people.'' And we've got to come up with a way to make 
sure that the right people are using this law enforcement tool. 
And that's--that's the problem you've got, gentlemen.
    If I were you--I'm not. I don't have your expertise, and I 
thank you all for your service. But if I were you, I'd try to 
be coming up with a way to suggest to Congress how you can 
check this power that you have so that the FBI, and the 
Department of Justice, and the other agencies can regain their 
reputation, and tell us what you think.
    That doesn't mean we won't come with our own ideas. You 
know, Senators don't take orders. Most of them barely take 
suggestions, but it would be helpful to me if you would come up 
with your own ideas to address these concerns. Not just our 
concerns, but the concerns of the American people.
    I don't want to live in a country where if the FBI knocks 
on your door, the first thing you have to do is wonder whether 
the agent is a Republican or a Democrat. And thanks to Mr. 
Wray's predecessor, that's where we are, folks. I know that's a 
cold issue truth, but I think that's the truth.
    So I'm going to read your testimony. I need to learn more 
about this, but help us figure out this problem. Thank you, 
gentlemen.
    Senator Ossoff. Chair Durbin has stepped out and left me to 
chair in his stead. And I'm also going to spend my----
    Senator Kennedy. I like you better. You're doing a hell of 
a job.
    Senator Ossoff. Not in public, Senator Kennedy, please.
    [Laughter.]
    Senator Kennedy. You're doing a hell of a job.
    Senator Ossoff. Okay. So I have the privilege of sitting on 
both the Judiciary and Intelligence Committees. And let me just 
start by saying I think there's no serious doubt about the 
collection value of this overarching authority. And the most 
important question that we need to be focused on at this 
hearing is U.S. person queries. That is the principal source of 
concern for me, and I think for many of my colleagues.
    And Mr. Olsen, it's the case, is it not, that the FBI can 
query this database for U.S. person communications simply 
seeking evidence of a crime? It does not have to be a national 
security investigation. Correct?
    Mr. Olsen. It is correct, Senator. Thank you for the 
question that the FBI can search using a U.S. person identifier 
for either foreign intelligence or evidence of a crime. But 
there must be a reasonable basis to believe that there is 
information in the Section 702 data that would be responsive to 
such a query.
    Senator Ossoff. Yes. Why should there not be a warrant 
requirement for these searches, which are known as crime only 
searches, whereby FBI agents are seeking the communications of 
Americans either considering opening a criminal investigation 
or in the midst of a predicated criminal investigation? Why 
should there not be a warrant requirement for such a U.S. 
person query?
    Mr. Olsen. So stepping back for a moment, if I may, just to 
provide----
    Senator Ossoff. Just for a moment.
    Mr. Olsen [continuing]. Very quickly. Section 702 is a 
foreign intelligence tool.
    Senator Ossoff. Yes.
    Mr. Olsen. It's not a law enforcement----
    Senator Ossoff. Right.
    Mr. Olsen [continuing]. Tool.
    Senator Ossoff. So why is it used for domestic law 
enforcement purposes?
    Mr. Olsen. It has been used exceedingly rarely where a 
query using a U.S. person identifier would have identified 
information that did not have a foreign intelligence purpose. 
So outside of the national security realm, not involving a 
terrorism, or espionage, or cyber charge or investigation----
    Senator Ossoff. So it can be used for this purpose, and it 
has been used for this purpose.
    Mr. Olsen. In 2022, it was 16 different times--14 of those 
times where it was used for evidence of a crime only were where 
the U.S. Government had an affirmative discovery obligation to 
search.
    Senator Ossoff. Well, we'll get into those numbers in a 
second.
    Mr. Olsen. Yes.
    Senator Ossoff. But it begs the question, if it's so rare, 
as you state, why not go get a warrant?
    Mr. Olsen. I think the initial idea was that there would be 
occasions, perhaps, where an agent or an analyst would find 
evidence of a crime only--not national security information--in 
the 702 data and would want to be able to use that.
    And it has happened that an agent found evidence of child 
abuse while looking at Section 702 data. So pure evidence of a 
crime that they were then able to follow----
    Senator Ossoff. Different things. We are talking about 
seeking evidence of a crime only. We're not talking about 
encountering evidence of other crimes in the course of querying 
foreign intelligence information.
    Mr. Olsen. Okay.
    Senator Ossoff. We're talking about U.S. person queries 
whose sole purpose is investigating domestic crime. Why should 
that not require a warrant?
    Mr. Olsen. The reason for not requiring a warrant is that 
this is lawfully collected information that is in the FBI 
holdings. And to simply wall off the FBI, for example, in the 
child abuse context from seeing that information and using it 
would prevent them from----
    Senator Ossoff. Yes.
    Mr. Olsen [continuing]. Being able to follow up----
    Senator Ossoff. That's a different fact pattern. That's 
encountering evidence of a crime in the course of conducting 
foreign intelligence investigations. This is a question I think 
that the Committee needs to look into.
    I want to talk about this question of justification. We got 
a document last night about 12 hours before this hearing 
announcing some new reforms. I want to read back something that 
you said to Chair Durbin in this hearing. You said, ``Starting 
in 2021, the FBI agent or analyst had to actually affirmatively 
take the step that I'm going to conduct a search using a U.S. 
person identifier. And then say why that was reasonably likely 
to return foreign intelligence information.'' This is the 
justification for the query, but has to be entered into the 
system.
    But it's the case, isn't it, that until 12 hours ago, when 
we received this, they only had to enter that justification if 
they actually looked at the results. They did not have to enter 
that justification to enter the query. Correct?
    Mr. Olsen. That's correct. It was only if there was 
responsive information from the query. At that point there 
would be the obligation to----
    Senator Ossoff. Right.
    Mr. Olsen [continuing]. Justify it.
    Senator Ossoff. So they can--they can enter the query and 
they're going to see substantive information before they view 
the full results. Aren't they going to see a number of results? 
They may see some metadata. They may even see some preview 
content. Correct?
    Mr. Olsen. I don't believe that there would be any 
opportunity to review any content of what was produced in 
response to the query before entering the justification.
    Senator Ossoff. No metadata?
    Mr. Olsen. I'm not sure about that. It--I'm not----
    Senator Ossoff. Well, it's metadata either way. Isn't it? 
Because it reveals whether or not the U.S. person being 
investigated has had contact with anyone in the FBI's portion 
of the underlying 702 database. Correct?
    Mr. Olsen. It may simply be sent. I don't know the exact 
answer, but----
    Senator Ossoff. So I'm out of time, but I----
    Mr. Olsen [continuing]. It may simply be a response that 
there is responsive information in the data, but nothing 
further.
    Senator Ossoff. I'm out of time. But, let me just--so as I 
said at the beginning, I don't have any doubt about the foreign 
intelligence value of this. But the U.S. person query aspect of 
this is really concerning to the Congress. I don't think you've 
effectively made the case that there shouldn't be a warrant 
requirement whether or not it is constitutionally required for 
a U.S. person search that is crime only.
    And it just--it undermines the feeling about transparency. 
When you and your colleagues making the rounds for the last few 
months about, you know, touting the reforms you've implemented, 
have been explaining to us that, well, ever since the reforms 
were made, we have to state a justification for the query----
    [Gavel is tapped.]
    Senator Ossoff [continuing]. When it turns out that you 
only had to state the justification for the query if you 
actually decided to look at what the search revealed.
    So U.S. person queries is an area ripe for statutory 
changes, Mr. Chairman. Thank you.
    Chair Durbin [presiding]. Thanks, Senator Ossoff. Senator 
Cruz.
    Senator Cruz. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Gentlemen, every day 
when I'm home in Texas, I hear from Texans who are deeply 
dismayed about the growing politicization and weaponization of 
the Department of Justice and the FBI. If you are not, every 
one of you should be deeply concerned about the damage being 
done to the integrity of the institutions in which you operate.
    My office hears regularly from FBI agents and from 
assistant U.S. attorneys who are likewise concerned about the 
politicization and weaponization of the Department of Justice 
and the FBI. And this is profoundly damaging to the rule of law 
in our Nation.
    Last month, a whistleblower brought to light the existence 
in the FBI of a report in FD-1023 in which the informant 
alleges that President Biden and his family members engaged in 
a $5 million bribery scheme during his time as Vice President. 
Deputy Director Abbate, is it true that the FBI has a report 
making those allegations?
    Mr. Abbate. I'm not going to comment on that, Senator.
    Senator Cruz. And why is that?
    Mr. Abbate. I'm just not going to comment on information we 
received, investigations----
    Senator Cruz. You owe an----
    Mr. Abbate [continuing]. On ongoing matters.
    Senator Cruz [continuing]. Obligation to the American 
people to be candid about evidence of corruption by the 
President of the United States.
    Mr. Abbate. This is an area that I'm not going to get into 
with you, Senator.
    Senator Cruz. Well, I understand you don't want to. And 
that's why people are mad at the FBI. Because you're 
stonewalling and covering up serious allegations of evidence of 
corruption from the President.
    Yesterday, Senator Chuck Grassley stood on the Senate floor 
and alleged that there are 17 recordings of this informant from 
Burisma, Ukrainian natural gas company, 15 of them are 
recordings--voice recordings of him talking to Hunter Biden. 
Two of them are voice recordings of him talking to Joe Biden. 
Deputy Director Abbate, does the FBI have 17 voice recordings 
laying out evidence of a bribery scheme?
    Mr. Abbate. Senator, I would add also that we've worked 
with the House Oversight Committee----
    Senator Cruz. Yes, this is the Senate. We're the other----
    Mr. Abbate [continuing]. To provide the documents that you 
are----
    Senator Cruz [continuing]. Side of the Capitol. This is the 
Senate. Do you have those 17 recordings?
    Mr. Abbate. I'm not going to comment on any investigative 
matter, Senator----
    Senator Cruz. See, that's----
    Mr. Abbate [continuing]. Period.
    Senator Cruz [continuing]. The problem. The FBI--and I've 
had this conversation with Chris Wray, too, this is why you are 
damaging the institution. The American people have a right to 
know whether there is serious, credible evidence that the 
President of the United States took a $5 million bribe. And by 
the way, if it's false--Chairman Durbin just rolled his eyes.
    Chair Durbin. He watches me pretty closely.
    Senator Cruz. If Chairman Durbin were interested in the 
rule of law, we would have a hearing on these allegations. But 
of course, the Democrats don't want a hearing on these 
allegations. And to be clear, if the allegations are false, you 
know who could disprove them? Joe Biden. He could call for this 
to be released publicly. But the FBI is stonewalling. Would 
you----
    Mr. Abbate. Two things----
    Senator Cruz [continuing]. Agree----
    Mr. Abbate [continuing]. Senator.
    Senator Cruz. Sure.
    Mr. Abbate. No one's stonewalling. The 1023----
    Senator Cruz. You just said you refused----
    Mr. Abbate [continuing]. Was provided in response----
    Senator Cruz [continuing]. To answer the question.
    Mr. Abbate [continuing]. To a subpoena by the Oversight 
Committee.
    Senator Cruz. Okay. Then why did you refuse to answer my 
question?
    Mr. Abbate. The pertinent information is there, and I 
reject your assertion that----
    Senator Cruz. Why did you refuse----
    Mr. Abbate [continuing]. The FBI is politicized.
    Senator Cruz [continuing]. To answer my question?
    Mr. Abbate. I just answered your question.
    Senator Cruz. Okay. So, yes, you have a 1023. Do you have 
the 17 recordings, yes or no?
    Mr. Abbate. I'm not going to get further into that, 
Senator.
    Senator Cruz. So you're stonewalling. You can't say, I'm 
not refusing to answer your question, but I won't answer your 
question.
    Mr. Abbate. I'm going to answer within the parameters that 
we operate in, sir.
    Senator Cruz. That's the problem. The FBI has right now an 
unlimited hubris that you believe you are unaccountable. You 
don't believe you're accountable to the United States Congress, 
and you don't believe you're accountable to the American 
people. And you are doing damage.
    The FBI is a great institution. When I go home to Texas, 
people ask me, should we abolish the FBI? Now, I tell them, no, 
because you have heroes and patriots working for you that are 
catching child predators, that are catching terrorists. But 
you're sitting there happily erecting a wall to protect Joe 
Biden.
    Will you provide to this Committee--not the House, the 
Senate Judiciary Committee, will you provide the FD-1023? And 
will you provide the 17 recordings so we can assess what is the 
evidence--the specific, credible evidence that Joe Biden 
personally took a $5 million bribe from a foreign national?
    Mr. Abbate. Senator, we will work with this Committee, you 
and other Members, to provide the information within the 
parameters of the process.
    Senator Cruz. Will you provide the FD-1023, yes or no?
    Mr. Abbate. I will take that back, and we will work with 
our team to----
    Senator Cruz. So you're not answering that. Will you 
provide the 17 recordings?
    Mr. Abbate. We will take that back, and we'll work with you 
and your staff----
    Senator Cruz. So you're not answering that, either. Did you 
investigate in any way, shape, or form these allegations?
    Mr. Abbate. Senator, once again, I'm not going to comment--
--
    Senator Cruz. So you're not going to say----
    Mr. Abbate [continuing]. On an ongoing investigation.
    Senator Cruz [continuing]. Whether you did your job?
    Mr. Abbate. We do our job to the very best of our ability--
--
    Senator Cruz. Well, not here. You're not answering a single 
question to the American people. And you may think this is 
esoteric. I promise you, millions of Americans are concerned.
    You know who isn't concerned? Not a single Senate Democrat. 
We're going to go through this whole hearing. Not one Democrat 
will ask a question about this. You know who else isn't 
concerned? The corporate media who is joining with the 
Democrats in covering up this evidence.
    If Joe Biden is innocent, the evidence should be made 
public and demonstrate that he's innocent. But if he is not, is 
it true this informant who alleged that he personally took a 
bribe was an informant the FBI had relied upon previously in 
other investigations, yes, or no?
    Mr. Abbate. Senator, in each and every investigation that 
we have, all the work that we do----
    Senator Cruz. I asked a yes or no question.
    Mr. Abbate [continuing]. The expectation is that every 
logical avenue----
    [Gavel is tapped.]
    Mr. Abbate [continuing]. Of investigation be----
    Senator Cruz. I asked you----
    Mr. Abbate [continuing]. Pursued to its fullest----
    Senator Cruz [continuing]. A yes or no question. Are you 
going to answer it?
    Mr. Abbate. I'm answering your question.
    Senator Cruz. Was the informant one you had relied on 
previously in other investigations, yes or no?
    Mr. Abbate. Senator, we run down every piece of 
information----
    Senator Cruz. You're not answering it then?
    Mr. Abbate [continuing]. And review it----
    Senator Cruz. You're refusing to answer----
    Mr. Abbate [continuing]. Objectively----
    Senator Cruz. So you're refusing to answer the question?
    Mr. Abbate [continuing]. To the fullest extent possible----
    Senator Cruz. You're refusing----
    Mr. Abbate [continuing]. Relentlessly----
    Senator Cruz [continuing]. To answer the question.
    Chair Durbin. Senator, your time has expired.
    Mr. Abbate [continuing]. And in the correctly allowed 
instances.
    Chair Durbin. Senator, your time has expired.
    Senator Cruz. Disgraceful. It's disgraceful, Deputy 
Director Abbate. Disgraceful.
    Chair Durbin. Senator, your time has expired. Senator 
Tillis.
    Senator Tillis. Chairman, I think Senator Blackburn goes 
before me or Senator Welch. I appreciate the opportunity, but.
    Chair Durbin. Thank you, Senator Tillis. It's Senator Welch 
is next.
    Senator Welch. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I want to thank all 
the witnesses. I'm sitting in a seat that was previously 
occupied by Senator Leahy, who was a champion of civil 
liberties, and a strong supporter of law enforcement, his own 
prosecution background.
    But he, and with the great support of Vermonters, very much 
was concerned about the civil liberty questions that are 
raised. And I've heard from all of the witnesses you share that 
concern, and I certainly do. What Chairman Durbin said in his 
opening remarks in expressing his very serious concern about 
the extraordinary breaches, I share that.
    So a couple of things. One, Senator Cornyn had asked about 
codifying in statute reforms that have been made. And my 
understanding--I think this goes to you, Mr. Olsen--is that you 
would be supportive of any of the reforms that have been made 
to date being codified in statute so it wasn't another episode 
of, ``Trust me, and we'll try to get it right'' ?
    Mr. Olsen. I think that's exactly as the deputy director 
said. I mean, the fundamental point is we are open to engaging 
on reforms and implementing reforms that don't undermine the 
essential effectiveness of Section 702. Certainly----
    Senator Welch. But codifying them.
    Mr. Olsen. And among those would be, right, putting in 
statute where it makes sense to do so. Some of the changes or 
the changes that the FBI has implemented on its own to ensure 
compliance.
    Senator Welch. You know, I just want to make certain that 
we're on the same page here----
    Mr. Olsen. Yes.
    Senator Welch [continuing]. Because it's one thing to say 
trust us, we've learned, and will be good in the future. It's 
another thing to have the force of law behind it.
    Second thing----
    Mr. Olsen. And if I may just say, the rule of--I'm being a 
little--I'm hesitating only because as the lawyer here next to 
Mr. Abbate, I just want to make sure that--we'd want to make 
sure that the language in any statute is----
    Senator Welch. Well, no----
    Mr. Olsen [continuing]. Appropriate, of course.
    Senator Welch [continuing]. That goes without saying.
    Mr. Olsen. Yes.
    Senator Welch. Now, another thing, I know Senator Leahy and 
Senator Lee worked on an amicus amendment, as I understand it. 
Senator Lee--and by the way, he very much appreciated working 
with you on that. He's told me. My understanding is you're 
resistant to that, you're saying for practical reasons.
    But keep in mind, I think the motivation Senator Leahy 
had--I'll speak for my conversation with him, and I've heard 
Senator Lee express it--the interest of maintaining Fourth 
Amendment protections for citizens is constitutional and 
inviolate. So I would expect to advocate for that. Again, you 
answered the question, but I just want to bring that to your 
attention.
    You know, the heart of this is this question of whether 
there is an exception on the warrant protection when a U.S. 
citizen gets swept into this. And I know Mr. Ossoff asked in my 
absence about the warrant protection, but I am wanting to go 
back on that. Why can't we have a warrant when it does involve 
a U.S. citizen?
    And can you make distinctions between a situation where 
there's imminent urgency, and obviously that requires a 
different kind of action versus those situations where 
information comes up. My telephone number is on a telephone 
that's been captured on the battlefield, but there's no urgent 
matter that has to proceed with action. What's the problem with 
providing a continuation of the warrant protection that is 
available to all U.S. citizens outside of FISA?
    Mr. Olsen. Maybe Mr. Fonzone might have more to add to 
this. But let me just say, stepping back, so it's really 
important for me to be clear that when it comes to the 
targeting decision, the initial decision to target, that is 
outside of the Fourth Amendment. Because the targeting 
decisions are focused on non-U.S. persons overseas. It's only 
when the FBI receives----
    Senator Welch. No, I understand that.
    Mr. Olsen [continuing]. A small--yes. It's only 3 percent 
of all of the 702 collection that FBI has access to where it's 
related to an open FBI investigation. So they have 3 percent of 
the lawfully collected information. And it's very common rather 
than rare that the need to search that data, whether it's an 
ongoing cyberattack, for example, or an espionage effort, that 
it is not a degree of urgency to quickly be able to say at the 
very earliest stage of an investigation: We need to understand, 
is this technical identifier associated with this cyberattack? 
Is this hitting other, you know, hospitals or energy companies?
    Senator Welch. Well, my time is coming up, and we'll have 
to--there's real practical questions here. But I go back to 
this absolutely astonishing situation where folks who showed up 
here in Washington that was totally domestic, or Black Lives 
Matter, totally domestic, were searched.
    And, like, how in the world did that happen? Somebody just 
felt like doing it or what? I know my time is up. So I'm going 
to have to stop. But I just want to convey my ongoing concerns 
which I think many of the Committee Members share. Mr. 
Chairman, thank you very much.
    Chair Durbin. Thanks, Senator Welch. Senator Blackburn.
    Senator Blackburn. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Abbate, I 
want to come to you because Tennesseans are incredibly 
concerned about the politicization of the FBI. And they have 
watched the FBI target parents, people of faith, people with 
conservative values. And I am often asked what group is going 
to be next, and how did we get to this point?
    Because they have watched the FBI, under your leadership, 
draw their guns on a pro-life advocate. That was stunning to 
them. That was done in front of his wife and children. They 
have labeled parents interested in education as domestic 
terrorists. And all parents should be interested and are 
interested in their children's education. They watched the raid 
on a former President and a political opponent on his home.
    And these have confirmed their worst fears: that there are 
indeed two tiers of justice, and that there is a political 
cabal within the FBI that sees it that way. Because when 
Hillary Clinton mishandled information, and she wiped her email 
server with a tool called BleachBit, and then beat the mobile 
devices with a hammer and destroyed those SIM cards, you all 
basically said there's nothing to see here. There is nothing to 
question.
    And when President Biden mishandled classified documents, 
there was no raid on his home or on his offices. But you see 
how President Trump has been handled with this. So it looks 
like the old playbook of distract and deflect. And the American 
people have a right to be concerned about this.
    Now, I want to talk about Senator Grassley's information 
from yesterday. Because when the FBI produced the document that 
you referred to earlier relating to the Biden bribery 
allegations, and you gave that to House Oversight, you all 
redacted any reference to the fact that the foreign national 
who allegedly bribed Joe and Hunter Biden had those 17 audio 
voice recordings. So first of all, why did you redact that part 
of the information?
    Mr. Abbate. Senator, first, as I said before, your 
assertion, or anyone who makes the assertion that the FBI is 
politicized, I reject it wholeheartedly. It's wrong, and it is 
not true. The work we do----
    Senator Blackburn. Okay, Mr. Abbate, then let me----
    Mr. Abbate [continuing]. And the people I see in the FBI--
--
    Senator Blackburn [continuing]. Ask you this. You said in 
your response to Senator Cruz that you and the FBI do your job 
to the best of your ability. So why don't you tell me what your 
job is? Is it to defend and shield Joe Biden? Or is your job to 
protect this country and the Constitution of the United States? 
Which is it?
    Mr. Abbate. The job of the FBI is to protect the country, 
keep people safe, and uphold the Constitution of our great 
country----
    Senator Blackburn. So why are----
    Mr. Abbate [continuing]. Period.
    Senator Blackburn [continuing]. You using----
    Mr. Abbate. That's what we work to do every day 
objectively. There are not two standards of justice. There is 
only one. It's applied----
    Senator Blackburn. Practically and by perception----
    Mr. Abbate [continuing]. Equally to each and every person--
--
    Senator Blackburn [continuing]. There are two standards, 
very clear standards of justice in this country. We see it 
every single day. The American people see this every single 
day. They look at you and they see a politicized entity that is 
weaponizing an agency of the Federal Government against the 
American people.
    Mr. Abbate. That is not the FBI that----
    Senator Blackburn. They see this play out.
    Mr. Abbate [continuing]. I see, Senator.
    Senator Blackburn. That is not the FBI you see. There are a 
lot of good people that work for the FBI, but you have a 
political cabal there. So why did you decide to conceal the 
information in that revelation to the House Oversight 
Committee? Why did you redact all of that rep--pertaining to 
the phone calls?
    Mr. Abbate. We have exceptional people----
    Senator Blackburn. You're not----
    Mr. Abbate [continuing]. In the FBI, the very best----
    Senator Blackburn [continuing]. Answering the question. Why 
did you redact that information?
    Mr. Abbate [continuing]. And they work relentlessly every 
day to keep----
    Senator Blackburn. You chose not to reveal----
    Mr. Abbate [continuing]. This country safe, and to protect 
people----
    Senator Blackburn [continuing]. That the calls----
    Mr. Abbate [continuing]. Period.
    Senator Blackburn [continuing]. Were there, and Senator 
Grassley found it out anyway. Is that accurate?
    Mr. Abbate. With regard to the document----
    Senator Blackburn. You chose to redact it, yes or no?
    Mr. Abbate. We often redact documents to protect----
    Senator Blackburn. So you chose----
    Mr. Abbate [continuing]. Sources and methods----
    Senator Blackburn [continuing]. To redact the fact that 
there are 17 voice recordings, two of those with the now 
President. You chose to redact that and not to give that to 
House Oversight.
    Mr. Abbate. I have----
    Senator Blackburn. Is that accurate?
    Mr. Abbate [continuing]. No idea if there are voice 
recordings or not. What I will tell you with respect----
    Senator Blackburn. You have no----
    Mr. Abbate [continuing]. To the document, the document was 
redacted to protect the sources. Everyone knows.
    Senator Blackburn. Well then, let----
    Mr. Abbate [continuing]. And this is a question of life----
    Senator Blackburn [continuing]. My time potentially 
expired----
    Mr. Abbate [continuing]. And death, potentially.
    Senator Blackburn [continuing]. But I think it would be 
helpful if when you came before us, if you were willing to 
answer the questions. It would help to remove the perception 
that the American people have because this is what they see. 
They see you do it every day. And that is politicizing the FBI 
and using it against the American people who don't happen to be 
named Biden, Clinton, or one of the elites. Thank you, Mr. 
Chairman.
    Chair Durbin. Senator Hawley.
    Senator Hawley. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Abbate, let me 
just stay with you. You just started to answer Senator 
Blackburn's question that not releasing the 1023 or talking 
about it as a matter of life and death. Question of life and 
death, you said. Explain.
    Mr. Abbate. It is potentially a question of life and 
death----
    Senator Hawley. For whom?
    Mr. Abbate [continuing]. With regard to the source of the 
information.
    Senator Hawley. So--okay. So now we've confirmed that the 
document exists. That's progress because the FBI Director 
initially denied that it exists.
    Mr. Abbate. No.
    Senator Hawley. Why did he do that?
    Mr. Abbate. We have already and previously acknowledged the 
existence of the documents.
    Senator Hawley. Yes. After you first denied it. Now, when a 
Member of this Committee read it. Right? The FBI Dir--let's 
just get the record straight. The FBI Director initially said 
it doesn't exist. Then Senator Grassley said, I've read it. 
Then he said, oh, okay, well, got you. I guess it does exist. 
Now, you're going back and forth with Members of this Committee 
what's in it. Why don't you just release it? Is it classified?
    Mr. Abbate. The document is not classified.
    Senator Hawley. Okay. Will you commit to releasing it?
    Mr. Abbate. Senator, we'll take that back, and we will work 
with you and this Committee----
    Senator Hawley. How about just a yes or no? Will you commit 
to releasing this unclassified document that alleges that the 
President of the United States--the President of the United 
States has taken $5 million or more in bribes from a foreign 
nation?
    Mr. Abbate. The document has already been released pursuant 
to a subpoena to the House Oversight Committee. We will----
    Senator Hawley. Has it been released to this Committee?
    Mr. Abbate [continuing]. Work with this Committee within 
the parameters that are established to meet----
    Senator Hawley. Will you release----
    Mr. Abbate [continuing]. The request.
    Senator Hawley [continuing]. The document to the public? 
It's unclassified. Don't you think the American people have a 
right to see it?
    Mr. Abbate. Senator, the document, as you know, contains 
sensitive information that has bearing on the life of the 
source of the information, potentially.
    Senator Hawley. You can redact the source's name. We do 
this all the time.
    Mr. Abbate. In some instances, Senator, and I know you know 
this, that is not sufficient to protect people. And that's what 
we strive and work to do each and every day. And I hope you 
would take that seriously, too.
    Senator Hawley. Oh, I take it very seriously. But I also 
take seriously the fact that your institution has repeatedly 
abused its authority, has repeatedly targeted political 
opponents.
    Your institution is the one that went to the door of pro-
life protesters with SWAT teams to try and intimidate people 
because of their speech.
    Your institution is the one that treated parents as 
domestic terrorists because of their speech.
    Your institution is the one that according to the court, 
the FISA Court, ran 278,000 unwarranted, probably illegal 
queries on Americans. Right? That was your institution. 
Correct?
    Mr. Abbate. There are--with respect to the compliance 
incidents, yes. Some of the other things you cited, we can take 
them one by one. They are not accurate.
    Senator Hawley. Compliance. You would characterize the 
unlawful querying 278,000 times of American citizens as 
compliance issues?
    Mr. Abbate. We've said before, I've said, that they're 
totally unacceptable.
    Senator Hawley. Who's been fired for it?
    Mr. Abbate. Individuals involved are handled through the 
disciplinary process.
    Senator Hawley. Who's been fired for it?
    Mr. Abbate. We have in the case of the unintentional 
instance where something similar happened, we have fired people 
in the past.
    Senator Hawley. I'm sorry, what does that word salad mean? 
The unintentional instance--what does that mean? Who's been 
fired for the 278,000 times that you improperly or illegally 
queried the database for American citizens?
    Mr. Abbate. When we find intentional incidents----
    Senator Hawley. Were you saying that the 278,000 queries 
were unintentional?
    Mr. Abbate. I believe that's correct.
    Senator Hawley. Wow, 278,000 times American citizens' 
information was queried by your agency unintentionally? That's 
your testimony?
    Mr. Abbate. I would want to go back and check that, 
Senator.
    Senator Hawley. Well, that's what you just told me.
    Mr. Abbate. My understanding is that the vast majority of 
the----
    Senator Hawley. Wait, that's different. You just said it 
was. You just said it was unintentional. Now it's the vast 
majority. Which is it? Do you know?
    Mr. Abbate. I would want to go back and check it.
    Senator Hawley. So you don't know?
    Mr. Abbate. My understanding is that likely all are--were 
unintentional----
    Senator Hawley. Likely all.
    Mr. Abbate [continuing]. In nature.
    Senator Hawley. So first it was all of them. Then it was 
vast majority. Now, it's likely all. So you don't know, is the 
answer to the question.
    Mr. Abbate. I don't know the answer as we sit here today, 
but I----
    Senator Hawley. You could have started with that, probably.
    Mr. Abbate [continuing]. Will find out and get back to you.
    Senator Hawley. Who was fired for the lies to the FISA 
Court for the Carter Page warrant. Who was fired for that? 
Anybody? Has anybody been held accountable for your institution 
deliberately lying to a FISA Court to get a wiretap on an 
ongoing Presidential campaign?
    Mr. Abbate. There is an ongoing disciplinary process with 
respect to individuals involved in that.
    Senator Hawley. Here's the deal. You're back in front of us 
asking for the reauthorization of extraordinary authorities. 
Multiple courts have uncovered extraordinary abuses perpetrated 
by your agency.
    You are, at the same, time concealing information about 
serious allegations made against the President of the United 
States even as your institution also targets his chief 
political opponent in an unprecedented way. Why would we ever 
give you the blank check that you want to continue surveilling 
American citizens in an improper manner? Why would we ever do 
that?
    Mr. Abbate. Senator, we're here to talk about reforms. 
Today, I did get confirmation that the query instances----
    Senator Hawley. No, we're not. We're here to talk about the 
reauthorization of Section 702. Why would we reauthorize it 
given your track record of abuse, and illegal improper 
surveillance, and political targeting? Why would we do that? 
Why would it be appropriate for this body to do that?
    Mr. Abbate. We've made significant reforms and implemented 
corrective measures. We've seen significant progress as a 
result of that, Senator. The----
    Senator Hawley. So you say.
    Mr. Abbate [continuing]. Queries that you mentioned early 
were, in fact, unintentional. That's what I was just told by my 
counterpart.
    Senator Hawley. That--that is an amazing----
    Mr. Abbate. That is to clarify your earlier question.
    Senator Hawley. So your testimony is the 280,000 queries of 
American citizens was unintentional. That's your final answer?
    Mr. Abbate. That's how they were assessed by that team that 
did the review. I'm not satisfied with that. That's----
    Senator Hawley. Yes. I don't believe that at all.
    Mr. Abbate [continuing]. Why we've implemented further 
measures as I announced earlier today.
    Senator Hawley. Yes. I don't believe that at all. And 
frankly, we've heard from your agency a thousand times that 
you're going to do better. We'll do better. You promised after 
the abuses of Title I you'd do better. And then we find out 
that in the meantime, you're illegally querying 280,000----
    [Gavel is tapped.]
    Senator Hawley [continuing]. American citizens' data. It's 
just--it's unbelievable. Frankly, everything you say is 
unbelievable.
    Chair Durbin. Senator Tillis.
    Senator Tillis. Thank you, Mr. Chair. Thank you all for 
being here, and thanks to all of the hardworking law and 
Federal law enforcement officers that I believe are 
overwhelmingly majority good patriots doing a great service and 
keeping our country safer.
    I appreciate the documents that you all sent over. 
Particularly, we can talk about what it's doing.
    A couple of months ago, I went over to the FBI. I saw a 
demonstration of many of the changes that you've implemented on 
the online query system. I think they're very promising. It 
also begs the question, why didn't we have it before? But we've 
corrected that mistake.
    Senator Cornyn mentioned codification. I had that 
discussion with the Department of the changes, Mr. Abbate, that 
you all have made. I also would encourage every Member to see 
this in action and go through the demonstration that I did. I 
think it's positive progress.
    But I had a question for you, Mr. Abbate, on the three 
strikes. I'm trying to figure out how we get to reauthorizing 
Section 702. It would be irresponsible of us to not figure out 
a way to do it. It's critically important. A very important 
tool.
    The three-strikes thing, though, kind of struck me as why 
should anybody get past one strike? I mean, and to me, there 
are, ``Oops, I just didn't know. I just finished training.'' 
Maybe that's a legitimate reason. But three strikes against the 
controls that you're putting in place before what action 
occurs? What happens with strike three? I'm assuming they're 
out, but what are they out of?
    Mr. Abbate. It could include everything up to dismissal, 
Senator. And I think it's important to clarify here. This 
three-strikes applicability refers to those that are deemed to 
be--those compliance errors that are--or incidents that are 
deemed to be unintentional. And it's an escalating approach 
with respect to the three strikes.
    If someone was to unintentionally commit an error like this 
three times, then they would be referred for greater discipline 
in addition to the things that come into play. Their FISA 
access would be removed upon the occurrence of the first 
incident. They would undergo full mandatory retraining. They 
would have to sit down and be counseled by one of the attorneys 
from our Office of General Counsel.
    And it gives us the ability to, you know, evaluate the 
conduct and determine whether it is truly unintentional or 
whether it should be elevated to the category of reckless or 
even intentional, which would warrant more severe disciplinary 
action.
    One of the things I've struggled with as I've looked at the 
compliance incidents--and this gets back to the other Senator's 
earlier question--those that are unintentional. Given the 
measures we've put in place now with the system adaptations, 
the prompts with regard to sensitive queries, the written 
justification, the parameters around batch queries and 
sensitive queries, and the opt-in, it's hard to imagine that it 
would be unintentional if someone pushes through all of those 
measures in order to run a query that is found to be 
noncompliant.
    And that's part of the strength of the sort of regime of 
reforms that we've put in place now. Because prior, and this 
was not satisfactory to any of us, many of them were 
categorized as unintentional when they may not have otherwise 
been, and they may have risen to the level of recklessness or 
even intentionality.
    Senator Tillis. Could you talk a little bit about--I think 
that with Crossfire--I mean, people have raised some concerns, 
and, I think, rightfully so about Crossfire Hurricane. We all 
know it. That was mostly Title I as opposed to Section 702. Do 
you agree with that, and can you explain the differences?
    Mr. Abbate. I do agree with that, Senator. That was Title I 
FISA. That's the traditional FISA where we go to the FISA 
Court. It involves a U.S. person, and I'll defer to my 
colleague here to get into legalities. But we are--in those 
instances, we go to the FISA Court. We have to establish 
probable cause in order to get authorization to implement 
surveillance on the individual targeted.
    Senator Tillis. Mr. Olsen, in response to, I think, one of 
Senator Ossoff's questions about this information being used in 
an investigation. You--I think you stated a relatively small 
number of people who are actually swept into that category. Can 
you elaborate a little bit more? And over time, are we seeing 
fewer of those? Is that because we're getting trained better, 
or it's just because we're honing our investigations?
    Mr. Olsen. Sure. When we were talking about is the FBI's 
authority to conduct a query of the data it has access to for 
simply evidence of a crime that is not national security 
related. It's exceedingly rare. And it's rare because there has 
to be a--we're talking about a database that is a foreign 
intelligence database.
    So the odds of finding simply evidence of a non-national 
security crime--bank robbery, public corruption--in a foreign 
intelligence database is just so unlikely. In the last 
recording period, there were 16 instances. But actually, 14 of 
those 16 instances was where the FBI had an affirmative 
obligation to search for evidence of a crime because of 
discovery or Brady obligations in an ongoing case.
    So it is not, obviously, the main purpose. It is--I would 
consider it sort of a backstop or failsafe if there is 
evidence, but a non-national security crime that the FBI would 
want to see or follow up on. But it's just so exceedingly rare. 
It's not the focus, certainly, of our efforts.
    Senator Tillis. My time has expired. But I would encourage, 
as I said after that demonstration of the changes that you've 
made, that we need to see a meaningful legislative proposal on 
the codification of all the measures that you put into place. 
And I think, probably based on the comments you have here, this 
is not an ideological dispute for the most part. You've got 
different people supportive, other people that want to go dark. 
We need the Department to fairly quickly get us some baseline 
text that those of us who want to get it reauthorized can begin 
to explain how we're addressing the problems that are legit 
problems. And every Member here who's frustrated has a reason 
to be. Thank you, all.
    Mr. Olsen. Thank you, Senator.
    Chair Durbin. Thanks, Senator Tillis. Pursuant to the 
procedures and traditions of the Committee when it comes to the 
debate of 702, we have a session reserved in the SCIF SVC 217 
as soon as we adjourn today. And I don't know, we think several 
colleagues are going to come to that meeting to ask questions 
that couldn't be discussed in open session.
    But I thank you for your cooperation, your attendance 
today, and I thank the Members for their participation. And the 
meeting of the Senate Judiciary Committee will stand in recess, 
subject to reconvening at SVC 217 upon arrival. Thank you.
    [Whereupon, at 12:21 p.m., the Committee recessed.]
    [Additional material submitted for the record follows.]

                            A P P E N D I X

Submitted by Chair Durbin:

  Advocacy For Principled Action In Government, et al., letter....    90

  American Civil Liberties Union, et al., statement...............    99

  Center for Democracy & Technology (CDT), statement..............   103

  Goitein, Elizabeth, statement...................................   108


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