A commission investigating one of the biggest spying scandals in American history has concluded that the Federal Bureau of Investigation has "serious security deficiencies".

Robert Hanssen, a former FBI agent who confessed last year to selling secrets to Russia, described the intelligence agency's computer security as "pathetic", a report from the commission said.



What I did is criminal, but it's criminal negligence what they've done on that system

Former FBI agent Robert Hanssen

"Security was lax... [in] that you could bring documents out of FBI headquarters without... ever having a risk of being searched, or looked at," the counter-intelligence expert is quoted as saying. The Commission for the Review of FBI Security Programs was set up at the request of Attorney-General John Ashcroft in response to the high-profile breach, which the investigators describe as "possibly the worst intelligence disaster in US history". During 22 of his 25 years working for the FBI, Mr Hanssen trawled the agency's computer systems and passed documents and computer disks to the Soviet Union and Russia. He pleaded guilty to 15 counts of espionage as part of a deal in which he was spared the death penalty on condition that he gave a full account of his spying activities. "What I did is criminal, but it's criminal negligence... what they've done on that system," he told the commission chaired by former FBI and Central Intelligence Agency Director William Webster. "Any clerk in the bureau could come up with stuff on that system," Hanssen said. 'Low priority' The commission's 107-page report was published on Thursday. "During our review of FBI security programs, we found significant deficiencies in bureau policy and practice," the investigators wrote.