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Part 3: Carl Cameron
Investigates
Monday, December 17, 2001

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sThis partial transcript of
Special Report with Brit Hume, Dec. 13, was
provided by the Federal Document Clearing House. Click
here to order the
complete transcript.
Part 3 of 4
BRIT HUME, HOST:
Last time we reported on an Israeli-based company called
Amdocs Ltd. that generates the computerized records and
billing data for nearly every phone call made in
America. As Carl Cameron reported, U.S. investigators
digging into the 9/11 terrorist attacks fear that suspects may
have been tipped off to what they were doing by information
leaking out of Amdocs.
In tonight's report, we learn that the
concern about phone security extends to another company,
founded in Israel, that provides the technology that the U.S.
government uses for electronic eavesdropping. Here is
Carl Cameron's third report.
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
CARL CAMERON, FOX NEWS
CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): The company is
Comverse Infosys, a subsidiary of an Israeli-run private
telecommunications firm, with offices throughout the
U.S. It provides wiretapping equipment for law
enforcement. Here's how wiretapping works in the U.S.
Every time you make a call, it passes
through the nation's elaborate network of switchers and
routers run by the phone companies. Custom computers and
software, made by companies like Comverse, are tied into that
network to intercept, record and store the wiretapped calls,
and at the same time transmit them to investigators.
The manufacturers have continuing access to
the computers so they can service them and keep them free of
glitches. This process was authorized by the 1994
Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act, or
CALEA. Senior government officials have now told
Fox News that while CALEA made wiretapping easier, it has led
to a system that is seriously vulnerable to compromise, and
may have undermined the whole wiretapping system.
Indeed, Fox News has learned that Attorney
General John Ashcroft and FBI Director Robert Mueller
were both warned Oct. 18 in a hand-delivered letter from 15
local, state and federal law enforcement officials, who
complained that "law enforcement's current electronic
surveillance capabilities are less effective today than
they were at the time CALEA was enacted."
Congress insists the equipment it installs
is secure. But the complaint about this system is
that the wiretap computer programs made by Comverse
have, in effect, a back door through which wiretaps themselves
can be intercepted by unauthorized parties.
Adding to the suspicions is the fact that
in Israel, Comverse works closely with the Israeli
government, and under special programs, gets reimbursed
for up to 50 percent of its research and development costs
by the Israeli Ministry of Industry and Trade. But
investigators within the DEA, INS and FBI have all told
Fox News that to pursue or even suggest Israeli spying
through Comverse is considered career suicide.
And sources say that while various F.B.I.
inquiries into Comverse have been conducted over the
years, they've been halted before the actual equipment
has ever been thoroughly tested for leaks. A 1999
F.C.C. document indicates several government agencies
expressed deep concerns that too many unauthorized
non-law enforcement personnel can access the wiretap
system. And the FBI's own nondescript office in
Chantilly, Virginia that actually oversees the CALEA
wiretapping program, is among the most agitated about
the threat.
But there is a bitter turf war internally
at F.B.I. It is the FBI's office in Quantico,
Virginia, that has jurisdiction over awarding contracts
and buying intercept equipment. And for years, they've
thrown much of the business to Comverse. A handful
of former U.S. law enforcement officials involved in
awarding Comverse government contracts over the years now
work for the company.
Numerous sources say some of those
individuals were asked to leave government service under
what knowledgeable sources call "troublesome
circumstances" that remain under administrative review within
the Justice Department.
(END VIDEOTAPE)
And what troubles investigators most,
particularly in New York, in the counter terrorism
investigation of the World Trade Center attack, is that
on a number of cases, suspects that they had sought to
wiretap and survey immediately changed their
telecommunications processes. They started acting
much differently as soon as those supposedly secret wiretaps
went into place Brit.
HUME: Carl, is there any reason to
suspect in this instance that the Israeli government is
involved?
CAMERON: No, there's not. But
there are growing instincts in an awful lot of law
enforcement officials in a variety of agencies who
suspect that it had begun compiling evidence, and a
highly classified investigation into that possibility
Brit.
HUME: All right, Carl. Thanks
very much.
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