Australian Spy Agency Reaches Out And Touches Self In Warrantless Wiretap Misfire

from the calls-are-coming-from-inside-the-house! dept

ASIO -- Australia's NSA -- runs the tightest spying ship in the spying-ship-spying-on-spying-ships business. It's all detailed in one tiny paragraph hidden 26 pages deep in an 100+ page Inspector General's report. [pdf link]

"ASIO intercepted, without warrant, calls made from one of its own regional offices due to a technical error. The data was deleted and processes put in place to ensure it does not happen again."

The Bill introduces the concept of a "delayed notification search warrant" -- often referred to in the United States as a 'no-knock warrant' -- which would allow Australian Federal Police to search premises without prior warning and "without having to produce the warrant at the time of entry and search".

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I'm not sure what tipped the spooks off. Maybe it was the range of the familiar voices (possibly their own, even!) heard during the transcription process. Or maybe it was the embarrassing moment where one ASIO agent admitted to the agent at the other end of the line that he was a "long-time listener" but a "first-time caller," shortly before the feedback loop made the call too painful to continue.The above screw-up didn't violate the privacy of anyone but a few privacy-violators and the Inspector General readily notes that this sort of thing won't be happening again. Presumably, future warrantless interception will be checked against the very short list of DO NOT SPY numbers, most of which should be readily apparent by their in-house extension numbers.The report quickly moves on from this little embarrassment but failing to clarify whether it was theor thethat was the problem. A "we don't spy on ourselves" policy would make sense but wouldn't necessarily be a violation of the Telecommunications (Interception and Access) Act. On the other hand, the warrant requirement for ASIO is basically an impediment no thicker than the ink applied by a rubber stamp -- all that stands between what the agencyto do and what it's. As the laws governing ASIO's surveillance stand now, a warrant is nothing more than a nice afterthought Maybe the warrant was still in transit, or maybe ASIO though the interception of its own calls fell under one of its other broad warrants, some of which could easily be interpreted as pertaining todevice connected to the Internet.But these areyear's laws and that isyear's violation, so it still doesn't add up. What it does do is throw some hazy light on an agency that thrives in the dark and just successfully ushered in a brave new world of domestic surveillance. This incident proves a valuable point about trust (namely: don't) and answers an important rhetorical question: Who watches the watchers?Clearly, the watchers do.Sometimes.But only inadvertently.And it won't happen again.

Filed Under: asio, australia, privacy, spying, surveillance