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WIRETAPS UP; OFFICIALS CITE TECHNOLOGY
WASHINGTON - The number of court-authorized wiretaps jumped 19 percent last
year as investigators pursued drug and other cases against increasingly
tech-savvy suspects. Every surveillance request made by authorities was
granted.
Federal and state judges approved 1,710 applications for wiretaps of wire,
oral or electronic communications last year, and four states - New York,
California, New Jersey and Florida - accounted for three of every four
surveillance orders, according to the Administrative Office of the U.S.
Courts. That agency is required to collect the figures and report them to
Congress.
The numbers, released Thursday, do not include court orders for
terror-related investigations under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance
Act, known as FISA, which reached a record 1,754 warrants last year,
according to the Justice Department.
In nonterrorist criminal investigations, federally approved wiretaps
increased 26 percent in a year, to 730 applications, while state judges
approved 980 wiretaps, an increase of 13 percent.
Department of Justice spokesman Kevin Madden said the numbers reflect "an
increase in the resources geared toward targeting very serious federal and
state offenses for which electronic surveillance is often the most, and
sometimes the only, effective investigative method."
Timothy Edgar, legislative counsel for the American Civil Liberties Union,
said traditional law-enforcement work is catching up with increases in
anti-terror wiretaps.
"We're still seeing a huge trend toward increased surveillance," Edgar said.
Evan Barr, a former federal prosecutor in New York City, now in private
practice, said authorities are responding to changes in the ways criminal
suspects use technology.
"Drug dealers now are making use not just of traditional cell phones but a
variety of devices, including Blackberries, pagers and Nextels. So most
likely these increased wiretap numbers simply reflect law enforcement's
continuing efforts to keep pace with both the tactics and technology that
is being used on the street," Barr said.
Officials said most of the applications, some 1,308, were for drug
investigations, while racketeering or gambling wiretaps accounted for a
combined 128 wiretaps across the country.
Homicides and assaults produced 48 wiretap orders.
Some 1,507 wiretaps - or about 9 out of every 10 - targeted portable
devices, such as cell phones and pagers.
By the end of the year, the surveillance had generated 4,506 arrests and
634 convictions based on wiretap evidence.
