title:
A review of the Federal Bureau of Investigation's use of exigent letters and other informal requests for telephone records
publisher:
U.S. Dept. of Justice, Office of the Inspector General, Oversight and Review Division
date:
Record modified: 2011-09-08
date:
Record created: 2010-04-08
date:
Issued: 2010
description:
description:
description:
description:
description:
Title from title screen (viewed Mar. 24, 2010).; Redacted.; "January 2010."; Harvested from http://www.justice.gov/oig/special/s1001r.pdf on April 8, 2010.; Includes bibliographical references.
description:
Extent: xii, 289, [4] p. : ill., digital, PDF file.
description:
Contents: Ch. 1. Introduction -- Ch. 2. The FBI's use of exigent letters and other informal requests for telephone records -- Ch. 3. Additional uses of exigent letters and other informal requests for telephone records -- Ch. 4. The FBI's attempts at corrective actions regarding exigent letters -- Ch. 5. OIG findings on FBI management failures and individual accountability -- Ch. 6. Conclusions and recommendations -- Appendix.
description:
Abstract: A report describing the results of the Department of Justice's investigation of the FBI's use of exigent letters and other informal requests, instead of National Security Letters or other legal process, to obtain the production of non-content telephone records from employees of three communications service providers.
subject:
United States. Federal Bureau of Investigation--Management--Evaluation
subject:
Terrorism--United States--Prevention
subject:
Telecommunication--Access control--United States
subject:
Privacy, Right of--United States
subject:
National security--United States
subject:
Confidential communications--United States
relation:
OCLC No.: 605049290
relation:
Mode of access: World Wide Web.; System requirements: Adobe Acrobat Reader.
type:
application/pdf
type:
Text
type:
PDF-1.5
source:
http://www.justice.gov/oig/special/s1001r.pdf
language:
eng
rights:
rights:
rights:
This item is a work of the United States government. Under Section 105 of the United States Copyright Act, it is not subject to copyright.
identifier:
s1001r