Gov’t Spying May Not Come Cheap: How Much Snooping Costs Taxpayers
- The government can’t say exactly how much it reimburses telecoms for surveillance activity, but AT&T estimated it received $24 million in reimbursements between 2007 and 2011, while Verizon’s estimate was between $3 million and $5 million.
- The amount charged varies by company and by surveillance service being requested — wiretapping costs more than accessing email records, for example.
- Some argue there is a balance to be struck between the companies charging the government for this information, which takes time and resources to collect, and ensuring it doesn’t become a profit driver for them.
- Ultimately, it is tax payer dollars that the government is using to pay the fees for this surveillance info.
WASHINGTON (TheBlaze/AP) — How
much are your private conversations worth to the government? Turns out,
it can be a lot, depending on the technology.
In the era of intense government
surveillance and secret court orders, a murky multimillion-dollar market
has emerged. Paid for by U.S. tax dollars, but with little public
scrutiny, surveillance fees charged in secret by technology and phone
companies can vary wildly.
AT&T, for example, imposes a $325
“activation fee” for each wiretap and $10 a day to maintain it. Smaller
carriers Cricket and U.S. Cellular charge only about $250 per wiretap.
But snoop on a Verizon customer? That costs the government $775 for the
first month and $500 each month after that, according to industry
disclosures made last year to Rep. Edward Markey, D-Mass.
Meanwhile, email records like those
amassed by the National Security Agency through a program revealed by
former NSA systems analyst Edward Snowden probably were collected for
free or very cheaply. Facebook says it doesn’t charge the government for
access. And while Microsoft, Yahoo and Google won’t say how much they
charge, the American Civil Liberties Union found that email records can
be turned over for as little as $25.

In
this June 21, 2013 file photo, a banner supporting Edward Snowden, a
former CIA employee who leaked top-secret documents about sweeping U.S.
surveillance programs, is displayed at Central, Hong Kong’s business
district. (Photo: AP/Kin Cheung, File)
Watch AP’s report on the cost of surveillance:
Industry says it doesn’t profit from
the hundreds of thousands of government eavesdropping requests it
receives each year, and civil liberties groups want businesses to
charge. They worry that government surveillance will become too cheap as
companies automate their responses. And if companies gave away customer
records for free, wouldn’t that encourage uncalled-for surveillance?
But privacy advocates also want
companies to be upfront about what they charge and alert customers after
an investigation has concluded that their communications were
monitored.
“What we don’t want is surveillance to
become a profit center,” said Christopher Soghoian, the ACLU’s
principal technologist. But “it’s always better to charge $1. It creates
friction, and it creates transparency” because it generates a paper
trail that can be tracked.

Telecom
network cables are pictured in Paris, on June 30, 2013. The European
Union angrily demanded answers from the United States over allegations
Washington had bugged its offices, the latest spying claim attributed to
fugitive leaker Edward Snowden. German weekly Der Spiegel said its
report, which detailed covert surveillance by the US National Security
Agency (NSA) on EU diplomatic missions, was based on confidential
documents, some of which it had been able to consult via Snowden.
(Photo: THOMAS COEX/AFP/Getty Images)
Regardless of price, the surveillance
business is growing. The U.S. government long has enjoyed access to
phone networks and high-speed Internet traffic under the U.S.
Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act to catch suspected
criminals and terrorists. More recently, the FBI has pushed technology
companies like Google and Skype to guarantee access to real-time
communications on their services. And, as shown by recent disclosures
about the NSA’s surveillance practices, the U.S. intelligence community
has an intense interest in analyzing data and content that flow through
American technology companies to gather foreign intelligence.
The FBI said it could not say how much
it spends on industry reimbursements because payments are made through a
variety of programs, field offices and case funds. In an emailed
statement, the agency said when charges are questionable, it requests an
explanation and tries to work with the carrier to understand its cost
structure.
Technology companies have been a focus
of law enforcement and the intelligence community since 1994, when
Congress allotted $500 million to reimburse phone companies to retrofit
their equipment to accommodate wiretaps on the new digital networks.
But as the number of law enforcement
requests for data grew and carriers upgraded their technology, the cost
of accommodating government surveillance requests increased. AT&T,
for example, said it devotes roughly 100 employees to review each
request and hand over data. Likewise, Verizon said its team of 70
employees works around the clock, seven days a week to handle the
quarter-million requests it gets each year.

Daniel
Bryant, center, joins a small group at Klyde Warren Park to protest the
National Security Agency’s surveillance program Thursday, July 4, 2013
during a “Restore the Fourth” rally in Dallas. (Photo: AP/The Dallas
Morning News, Rex C. Curry)
To discourage gratuitous requests and
to prevent losing money, industry turned to a section of federal law
that allows companies to be reimbursed for the cost of “searching for,
assembling, reproducing and otherwise providing” communications content
or records on behalf of the government. The costs must be “reasonably
necessary” and “mutually agreed” upon with the government.
From there, phone companies developed
detailed fee schedules and began billing law enforcement much as they do
customers. In its letter to Markey, AT&T estimated that it
collected $24 million in government reimbursements between 2007 and
2011. Verizon, which had the highest fees but says it doesn’t charge in
every case, reported a similar amount, collecting between $3 million and
$5 million a year during the same period.
Companies also began to automate their
systems to make it easier. The ACLU’s Soghoian found in 2009 that
Sprint had created a website allowing law enforcement to track the
location data of its wireless customers for only $30 a month to
accommodate the approximately 8 million requests it received in one
year.
Most companies agree not to charge in
emergency cases like tracking an abducted child. They aren’t allowed to
charge for phone logs that reveal who called a line and how long they
talked – such as the documents the Justice Department obtained about
phones at The Associated Press during a leaks investigation – because
that information is easily generated from automated billing systems.
Still, the fees can add up quickly.
The average wiretap is estimated to cost $50,000, a figure that includes
reimbursements as well as other operational costs. One narcotics case
in New York in 2011 cost the government $2.9 million alone.
The system is not a true market-based
solution, said Al Gidari, a partner at the law firm Perkins Coie who
represents technology and telecommunications companies on privacy and
security issues. If the FBI or NSA needs data, those agencies would pay
whatever it takes. But Gidari said it’s likely that phone and technology
companies undercharge because they don’t want to risk being accused of
making a false claim against the government, which carries stiff
penalties.
Online companies in particular tend to
undercharge because they don’t have established accounting systems, and
hiring staff to track costs is more expensive than not charging the
government at all, he said.
“Government doesn’t have the manpower
to wade through irrelevant material any more than providers have the
bandwidth to bury them in records,” Gidari said. “In reality, there is a
pretty good equilibrium and balance, with the exception of phone
records,” which are free.
Not everyone agrees.
In 2009, then-New York criminal
prosecutor John Prather sued several major telecommunications carriers
in federal court in Northern California in 2009, including AT&T,
Verizon and Sprint, for overcharging federal and state police agencies.
In his complaint, Prather said phone companies have the technical
ability to turn on a switch, duplicate call information and pass it
along to law enforcement with little effort. Instead, Prather says his
staff, while he was working as a city prosecutor, would receive
convoluted bills with extraneous fees. The case is pending.
“They were monstrously more than what
the telecoms could ever hope to charge for similar services in an open,
competitive market, and the costs charged to the governments by telecoms
did not represent reasonable prices as defined in the code of federal
regulations,” the lawsuit said.
The phone companies have asked the
judge to dismiss the case. Prather’s lawsuit claims whistle-blower
status. If he wins, he stands to collect a percentage – estimated
anywhere from 12 percent to 25 percent – of the money recovered from the
companies.
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