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  • 8
    Jun
    2013
    8:46pm, EDT

    Obama, Chinese president talk North Korea, cybersecurity at summit

    Evan Vucci / AP

    President Barack Obama walks with Chinese President Xi Jinping at the Annenberg Retreat of the Sunnylands estate Saturday, June 8, 2013, in Rancho Mirage, Calif.

    By Daniel Arkin, Staff Writer, NBC News

    President Barack Obama and Chinese President Xi Jinping finished a second round of talks Saturday, bringing to a close a two-day summit said to have been a warm and laid-back counterpoint to the oftentimes frigid and tense relationship between the two global superpowers.

    North Korea and cybersecurity were among the key issues discussed in a series of wide-ranging and largely informal conversations at the Sunnylands desert retreat near Palm Springs, Calif.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Obama and Xi did not make statements to the press after their talks wrapped up at noon Saturday, but the Chinese leader said Friday that he and Obama “reached important consensus on these issues,” potentially setting the stage for a stronger alliance between the two nations after nearly a half-century of mutual mistrust.

    The two leaders reportedly found common ground on North Korea, concurring that that nation’s purported nuclear program represents a threat to both the Asia-Pacific region and the United States -- and must be dismantled.

    “They agreed that North Korea has to denuclearize, that neither country will accept North Korea as a nuclear-armed state and that we would work together to deepen cooperation and dialogue to achieve denuclearization,” White House national security adviser Tom Donilon told reporters Saturday.


    Although neither country has much to gain from rookie leader Kim Jong Un’s saber-rattling, China has historically close ties with Pyongyang. But Xi has indicated a growing frustration with North Korea’s belligerent behavior.

    “China has taken a number of steps to send a clear message to North Korea,” Donilon said Saturday. Obama and Xi signaled their intention to see “enhanced cooperation” between the U.S. and China on the nuclear issue, he added.

    Cybersecurity was high on the agenda over the course of the summit. Obama pressed Xi on allegations that Chinese hackers have targeted U.S. military secrets, industrial data and intellectual property – even as the White House faces controversy over the federal government’s reported surveillance of emails and phone records.

    Obama reportedly told Xi that if U.S. cybersecurity concerns are not sufficiently addressed, it “was going to be a very difficult problem in the economic relationship and was going to be an inhibitor to the relationship really reaching its full potential,” Donilon told reporters at the conclusion of Saturday’s talks.

    Chinese officials, meanwhile, said the Chinese government opposed all manner of cyber attacks and claimed no responsibility for prior attacks against the U.S.

    “Cybersecurity should not become the root cause of mutual suspicion and frictions between our two countries. Rather, it should be a new bright spot in our cooperation,” said Yang Jiechi, Xi’s senior policy advisor, according to The Associated Press.

    Although no concrete policy proposals about cybersecurity emerged from the talks, Obama and Xi made progress on the issue of climate change, announcing that the U.S. and China will team up to reduce hydroflurocarbons, a greenhouse gas commonly used in household appliances and industrial machinery.

    Obama and Xi met face-to-face for roughly eight hours over the course of two days, an unusually lengthy amount of time for both world leaders, interrupted only for a dinner prepared by celebrity chef Bobby Flay and a morning ramble through the gardens of Sunnylands, a 200-acre estate built by the late billionaire Walter Annenberg.

    During their stroll Saturday, Obama and Xi paused to sit on a wooden park bench – carved from Redwoods native to California – presented to Xi as a gift. The bench was inscribed with the location and date of their good-natured meeting.

    Before saying goodbye, Obama had tea with Xi and his wife, Peng Liyuan.

    NBC News' Matthew DeLuca and M. Alex Johnson, and The Associated Press, contributed to this report.

    Related:

    • Chinese hacked Obama, McCain campaigns, took internal documents, officials say
    • China labels US the 'real hacking empire' after Pentagon report
    • China says it has 'mountains of data' pointing to US hacking

    51 comments

    sigh ... the article "told" me that, as usual, Obama is all show and no go. He doesn't "do," he just chatters meaninglessly.

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    Explore related topics: china, california, obama, xi, jinping, china-summit, sunnylands
  • 7
    Jun
    2013
    1:05pm, EDT

    Texas woman arrested in ricin letters to Obama, Bloomberg: Officials

    In a new twist, the woman who blamed her husband for sending ricin-laced letters to President Obama and New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg was charged Friday with sending the letters herself. NBC's Ann Curry reports.

    By Pete Williams and Matthew DeLuca, NBC News

    A Texas woman has been arrested in connection with the mailing of three letters containing a form of the poison ricin to President Obama, New York City Mayor Mike Bloomberg and the director of Mayors Against Illegal Guns, federal authorities said.

    Shannon Rogers Guess Richardson of New Boston, Texas, originally called the Federal Bureau of Investigation claiming that her husband had sent the letters, officials said. The investigators found that she had sent the letters herself, they said.

    Richardson is an actress with minor roles on television shows like The Walking Dead and the Vampire Diaries, and was arrested in Arkansas on charges that will be filed Friday afternoon, the authorities said. She has five sons, according to the New York Times.

    Her husband, Nathaniel Richardson, is an Army veteran

    Investigators have been probing who sent the three letters, all postmarked May 20 from Shreveport, La. and sent without a return address, authorities have said.

    Authorities are still investigating the three ricin-laced letters sent to Michael Bloomberg, President Obama, and a lobbyist, but Texas-based actress Shannon Rogers Guess has said her Army veteran husband Nathanial Richardson is behind the letters. NBC's Stephanie Gosk reports.

    The letters sent to Obama and Bloomberg were discovered during routine mail screenings processes. The letter to the director of Mayors Against Illegal Guns, Mark Glaze, was opened.

    “You will have to kill me and my family before you get my guns,” the message sent to Bloomberg read, according to NBC New York, which obtained a copy of the letter. “Anyone who wants to come to my house will get shot in the face. The right to bear arms is my constitutional God given right and I will exercise that right till the day I die.”

    The toxin ricin can be made from castor beans, has no antidote, and takes about 36 hours to kill.

    Mayors Against Illegal Guns is a group that advocates for stronger gun laws and was founded by Bloomberg.

    “I trust the police department and I feel perfectly safe,” Bloomberg said regarding the threatening letters on his weekly radio show in May. “I’ve got more danger from lightning than from anything else and I’ll go about my business.”

    In a separate case involving ricin in recent months, police arrested James Everett Dutschke, 41, on charges that he sent letters containing ricin to the president and other officials in a separate case. The martial arts instructor has pleaded not guilty, and his trial is set of July 29, Reuters reported.

    NBC News

    Letter addressed to New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg that was found to contain a form of the poison ricin. The letter is postmarked May 20 from Shreveport, La.

    Related:

    • Letter mailed to Pres. Obama tested positive for ricin
    • Mayor Bloomberg on ricin letters: I feel perfectly safe
    • Who sent ricin letters to Bloomberg, Obama?

    1041 comments

    Another fruitloop.

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    Explore related topics: texas, arrest, letter, bloomberg, obama, poison, ricin, new-boston
  • 7
    Jun
    2013
    11:24am, EDT

    Who is behind the snooping? And how long has it been going on?

    By Matthew DeLuca, Staff Writer, NBC News

    While the revelation of two ultra-secret government surveillance programs on Thursday raised outrage from some congressional lawmakers and admonitions for calm from others, Americans whose phone records are ostensibly being compiled by the National Security Agency were left mostly in the dark about who is gathering what information on them and how.

    Some subscribers to telecommunications provider Verizon might have been tempted to ask “Can you hear me now?” after a classified document was published in British newspaper The Guardian detailing a program under which a division of the company was ordered to hand over records to the NSA. Later in the day, chair of the Senate Intelligence Committee Sen. Dianne Feinstein said the program, which has been going on since at least 2009 she said, has foiled an unspecified number of terrorist attacks.

    NBC's Andrea Mitchell discusses the political ramifications of the government's collecting records from telephone calls made in the U.S. and tapping into servers to monitor video, audio and text conversations.

    A second program, codenamed PRISM, was revealed later in the day, and first reported on by the Washington Post and The Guardian. Under the program, U.S. intelligence agencies have been given access to files maintained by some of the country’s top Internet companies, including Microsoft, Google, Facebook, and Apple, according to the reports. Those companies denied providing special government access to their systems when contacted by NBC News.

    With civil libertarians and other privacy-conscious Americans who don’t want their calls to mom recorded in a database up in arms, there still remain many unanswered questions about what records are kept, how they’re obtained, and how specifically the information might have been used to foil attacks on the United States and its citizens. Here’s what we know so far:

    Who is listening to my calls?

    At the moment, according to government officials, no one’s calls are being listened to under the program described in the document published by The Guardian on Thursday. Rather, the program collects “telephony metadata,” an obtuse phrasing that means when you call to order a pizza, the government may record your number, the number of the pizzeria, the location of the two numbers, and the time of the call. But since they don’t record the content of the call, according to government officials, they won’t know you ordered pepperoni.

    “The program does not allow the government to listen in on anyone’s phone calls. The information acquired does not include the content of any communications or the identity of any subscriber,” Director of National Intelligence James Clapper said in a statement released on Thursday night.

    Who’s reading my emails?

    According to the Washington Post, Internet companies including Google and Facebook are denying involvement in National Security Agency programs, named PRISM and BLARNEY, which allow the government to look at archived data and information as it is being transmitted. NBC's Peter Alexander reports.

    Sources confirmed to NBC News the existence of a secret government program called PRISM on Thursday, which they said allows intelligence agencies to peek into the servers of top tech companies and look at emails, video, photos, and other types of documents. According to intelligence officials, the program run by the NSA and Federal Bureau of Investigation engages in “data collection” as opposed to “data mining,” though how that distinction matters to a teen with a bunch of beer pong photos on Facebook remained foggy. Companies allegedly involved in the program denied giving the government “direct access” to their servers.

    “We disclose user data to government in accordance with the law, and we review all such requests carefully,” Google said in a statement echoed in substance by other companies named in connection with PRISM. “From time to time, people allege that we have created a government ‘back door’ into our systems, but Google does not have a ‘back door’ for the government to access private user data.”

    What gives the government the power for these programs?

    The phone and Internet data-collection programs seem to be the first started under the Patriot Act, which was passed in 2001. The act, which was renewed in 2006 and 2011, granted expanded surveillance powers in the aftermath of the terrorist attacks of September 11. The order requesting records from Verizon relied on the “business records” section of the Patriot Act.

    The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act and the U.S. Foreign Intelligence Surveillance court were passed and established in 1978. FISA was passed originally to place limits on electronic intelligence gathering in the U.S. The law was revised by an addition in 2008 that changed some of the rules regarding surveillance in terrorism cases. The changes also granted immunity to telecommunications companies that participated in a wiretapping program carried out under the Bush administration.

    The enormous collection of U.S. telephones calls and their durations have been housed in National Security Agency computers for the past seven years.  NBC's Andrea Mitchell reports.

    Who keeps an eye on the surveillance programs?
    Multiple government officials said that the program is subject to a “robust” set of legal constraints that monitor actions taken under FISA, including the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court. The government submitted to the court 1,789 applications requesting authority to carry out electronic snooping in 2012, according to an April 2013 letter from Assistant Attorney General Peter Kadzik to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid. One of those applications was withdrawn by the government and 40 proposed orders were modified, according to the letter, but otherwise they were all approved in court.

    Members of Congress were informed repeatedly about the phone records program, Congressional leaders and intelligence officials said on Thursday. Clapper said in his statement that members of Congress have been “fully and repeatedly briefed” on the “sensitive intelligence collection operation” of which the program is a part. “The classified program has been authorized by all three branches of the government.”

    In a 2008 statement, the then-campaigning Obama said that the bill revising FISA “makes it clear to any president or telecommunications company that no law supersedes the authority of the FISA court.”

    The court’s responsibility, Obama said at the time, is to “watch the watchers to prevent abuses and to protect the civil liberties of the American people.”

    The FISA court reviews the phone records program every three months, Clapper said.

    What was the government looking for in all those calls?

    The government cast a wide net because they wanted to be able to perform searches to see if a person had been in touch with people overseas thought to be connected to terrorist activities, Clapper said in his statement.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    “The collection is broad in scope because more narrow collection would limit our ability to screen for and identify terrorism-related communications,” Clapper said in the statement in which he also slammed the leak that lead to the Guardian report. “Acquiring this information allows us to make connections related to terrorist activities over time. The FISA court specifically approved this method of collection as lawful, subject to stringent restrictions.”

    “By order of the FISC, the government is prohibited from indiscriminately shifting through the telephony metadata acquired under the program. All information that is acquired under this program is subject to strict, court-imposed restrictions on review and handling,” Clapper said. “The court only allows the data to be queried when there is a reasonable suspicion, based on specific facts, that the particular basis for the query is associated with a foreign terrorist organization. Only specifically cleared counterterrorism personnel specifically trained in the court-approved procedures may even access the records.”

    Related:

    • Officials: NSA mistakenly intercepted emails, phone calls of innocent Americans
    • NSA snooping has foiled multiple terror plots: Feinstein
    • Sources: US intelligence agencies tap servers of top Internet companies
    • Obama continues, extends some Bush terrorism policies

    454 comments

    We know Obama is a flaming LIAR. www DOT youtube.com/watch?v=kgXi95f_UoM You see, Obama, we've been recording you too.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: spy, patriot-act, phones, verizon, obama, wiretaps, dianne-feinstein, nsa, fisa, fisc, prism, clapper, foreign-intelligence
  • 7
    Jun
    2013
    4:07am, EDT

    US-Chinese summit aimed at building a 'new type of great power relationship'

    By Ian Williams, correspondent, NBC News

    Marco Ugarte / AP

    Chinese President Xi Jinping and his wife, Peng Liyuan, wave upon their arrival in Mexico City on Tuesday. Xi was in Mexico for a three-day visit before heading to California to meet President Barack Obama.

    BEIJING — When Chinese President Xi Jinping and President Barack Obama meet Friday at Sunnylands, a desert retreat in California, the largely informal and unscripted summit is expected to be groundbreaking in U.S.-China relations. While previous official visits between Chinese and U.S. leaders have frequently been bogged down by stifling issues of protocol, they are meant to be largely absent this time.

    In China, Xi's willingness to forgo the formality of a state visit is being interpreted as a sign of his confidence and a more relaxed style, which he's adopted since becoming head of state in March (he was selected head of the Communist Party, a more powerful job, in November) — a marked contrast to his rather stiff and wooden predecessor, Hu Jintao, whose handlers obsessed over every minutia of summit diplomacy.

    The two leaders are expected to discuss a wide range of issues — from cyberspying to North Korea, with China looking to take credit for an apparent lowering of the rhetoric from Pyongyang — as well as territorial disputes in the South China Sea and the Middle East, human rights and the global economy. With an open agenda, the talks could range anywhere — and may be dominated by cybersecurity issues.

    But the goal of the two-day summit at the glamorous estate built by Walter H. Annenberg in Rancho Mirage is essentially about building what Chinese officials are describing as a "new type of great power relationship."

    Glam first lady
    Xi's more assertive and warm public attitude has been greatly aided by a glamorous and high-profile wife, Peng Liyuan.

    First ladies have never been prominent in China, kept in the shadows if seen at all. But before Xi became the Communist Party leader, his wife, a folk singer, was probably more famous. Some have dubbed her the "Carla Bruni of the East.”

    Her style and dress have become the talk of the media here and have sparked a frenzy online.

    "As a woman to represent Chinese women, people do feel quite pleased," Angelica Cheung, editor-in-chief of Vogue China, told NBC News. "I feel that way, too. Her tastes, particularly her clothes, have really won her a lot of new fans."

    Given the sensitivity around the wealth of China's elites, however, Peng seems to have shunned foreign luxury brands in favor of domestic designers. And China's censors have even been trying to contain discussion of her clothing on social media sites, according to The Wall Street Journal. 

    Reed Saxon / AP

    The Annenberg Retreat at Sunnylands, a conference center and desert garden adjacent to the Annenberg's Sunnylands mansion, that will host President Barack Obama and Chinese President Xi Jinping on June 7 and 8.

    Over the last few days, the media in China have been full of Peng with her husband on a charm offensive through Mexico and the Caribbean — joining a steel band in Port of Spain as it struck up one of her signature folk tunes about happy farmers.

    She's also being seen as the face of China's "soft power."

    She'll be with Xi in California, and there has been much anticipation here about her first encounter with Michelle Obama, although that will have to wait, since America's first lady will be staying in Washington — a decision that's provoked some groaning in China's social media.

    China on cybercrime: 'We're victims, too'
    With cyberspying expected to be at the top of the agenda, China has been rolling out hitherto obscure, unheard of or possibly nonexistent organizations to show that they is not the perpetrator of cybercrime, but rather "we're victims, too."

    On Thursday, it was the turn of one Qin An, described as a director of the China Institute of Cyberspace Strategy, who declared in the state-run Global Times that the two countries face a common threat.

    Earlier, in the China Daily, Huang Chengqing, director of the rather awkwardly named National Emergency Response Technical Team/Coordination Center of China (CNCERT), declared that China has "mountains of data" on cyberattacks coming from the U.S.

    While CNCERT appears to be a bona fide organization, it has operated largely in the shadows, does not have a listed address and did not respond to emailed requests for an interview.

    And a trawl through English and Chinese search engines finds no reference to An's institute whatsoever — apart from  the bylines for four articles he has written in the Global Times since April, one of them alleging a big U.S. conspiracy in cyberspace.  

    Phantoms or not, at least Beijing appears to have awakened to the seriousness with which Washington is taking the cybersecurity issue.

    But while there is no doubting there's a world of budding hackers out there threatening us all, Beijing has largely ducked the central U.S. accusation: that China has an official, organized and concerted cyberspying strategy aimed (and apparently quite successful) at stealing U.S. military and commercial secrets. 

    In an interview with NBC News, Gregory Gilligan, chairman of the American Chamber of Commerce in China, said more than a quarter of his members reported cyber-intrusion or other data theft.

    "It's quite possible it's the tip of the iceberg," he said. And most of the targets are in areas identified by Beijing as strategically important industries.

    Accusations of currency manipulation by China, which have dominated previous U.S.-China summits, have suddenly fallen far down on the agenda. The U.S. economy is on the rebound, and it's China that's now slowing.

    Gilligan calls cybersecurity "the new currency," taking over from the currency issue as the biggest point of contention between the two countries. He's worried it might drown out a host of other concerns and issues — and he may well be right.

    Related: 

    • New US law would punish hackers backed by China or other countries
    • At least 119 dead in China poultry slaughterhouse fire
    • China's strength could become its weakness
    • NBC's complete coverage of China in Behind the Wall

    37 comments

    Tom get help.

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  • 7
    Jun
    2013
    4:51am, EDT

    Presidents see pink at desert California retreat

    Annenberg Foundation via EPA

    A photograph made available by the Annenberg Foundation Trust at Sunnylands shows the Grand Hall of the new Center at Sunnylands, Rancho Mirage, Calif.

    By Sophia Rosenbaum, Staff Writer, NBC News

    On Friday and Saturday, as President Barack Obama hunkers down for a visit with Chinese President Xi Jinping to discuss cybercrime, North Korea and more, he'll do so in a place with a decidedly non-White House vibe: the aptly named Sunnylands resort in Rancho Mirage, Calif.

    Sunnylands, a striking piece of modern architecture featuring a 20,000-foot main house and three cottages, has hosted celebrities and politicians — occasionally at the same time. Formerly known as the Annenberg Estate (the late billionaire and philanthropist Walter Annenberg and his wife, Leonore, completed construction on it in 1966), it recently underwent a $60.5 million renovation and, as of March 2012, became open to the public for tours.

    Here are eight things you may not know about Sunnylands:

    • Seven presidents have stayed at the historic estate, including Dwight Eisenhower, Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, Ronald Reagan, George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton and George W. Bush.
    • Celebrity guests were regulars at the Annenberg Estate. Some of the big names include Queen Elizabeth II, Bing Crosby, Fred Astaire, Clark Gable and Sammy Davis Jr. 
    • Frank Sinatra married his fourth — and final — wife, Barbara, there in 1976.
    • The famous pink roof on the Sunnylands main house was Leonore Annenberg’s choice because she wanted to "match the sunset glow on nearby foothills," according to Sunnylands' website. (Pink may have been be the family color: The Annenbergs' remains are now in a pink burial chamber.)
    • Dick Wilson designed a nine-hole golf course as part of the resort in 1964 (parts were open for play even before the resort opened). Eisenhower — an avid golfer — was the first president to tee off there.
    • Sunnylands is sometimes described as an escape from the real world — and Nixon used it as his hideaway after his resignation in 1974.
    • After the Annenbergs died, most of the famous artwork on the walls of the resort — including works by Pablo Picasso and Vincent Van Gogh — were donated to the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. Prints of those pieces now hang on the walls.
    • Adjacent to the estate, Leonore Annenberg commissioned a 17,000-square-foot building to be used for meetings and retreats that was completed in 2011. The interior decorator, Michael Smith, also designed the Obama family's living area in the White House.

    Related:

    • Cybercrime, North Korea, Trade: Obama's likely agenda for meeting
    • US-Chinese summit aimed at building a 'new type of great power relationship'

    17 comments

    Excess at ts finest

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  • 6
    Jun
    2013
    6:13pm, EDT

    Chinese hacked Obama, McCain campaigns, took internal documents, officials say

    Cyberattacks linked to the Chinese government will be at the top of the U.S. agenda when President Obama meets with Chinese president Xi Jinping Friday in California. Chinese officials deny any role in the cyberattacks, but U.S. experts say the 2008 attack was a "wake up call." NBC's Michael Isikoff reports.

    By Michael Isikoff, National investigative correspondent

    The U.S. secretly traced a massive cyberespionage operation against the 2008 presidential campaigns of Barack Obama and John McCain to hacking  units backed by the People’s Republic of China, prompting  high level warnings to Chinese officials to stop such activities,  U.S. intelligence officials tell NBC News.


    Follow @openchannelblog

    The disclosure on the eve of a two-day summit between the U.S. and Chinese presidents highlights what has become a persistent source of tension between the two global powers: Beijing’s aggressive, orchestrated campaign to pierce America’s national security armor at any weak point – in this case the computers and laptops of top campaign aides and advisers who received high-level briefings.

    The goal of the campaign intrusion, according to the officials: to export massive amounts of internal data from both campaigns—including internal position papers and private emails of key advisers in both camps.

    “Based on everything I know, this was a case of political cyberespionage by the Chinese government against the two American political parties,” said Dennis Blair, who served as President Obama’s director of national intelligence in 2009 and 2010. “They were looking for positions on China, surprises that might be rolled out by campaigns against China.”


    The intrusion into the campaigns’ computer networks and subsequent efforts to penetrate them were highly sophisticated and continued for months after they were first detected by the FBI in the summer of 2008, according to the officials and an Obama campaign security consultant hired to thwart them. The intrusions and some details of what was targeted have been previously reported, but not publicly attributed to government-backed Chinese hackers.

    President Obama's 2008 campaign manager, David Plouffe, tells NBC's Michael Isikoff about the cyberattacks that infiltrated Obama's campaign. At the time, Plouffe said, Obama's reaction was one of surprise because there was no precedent for such an attack.

    Obama publicly referred to the attacks -- in general terms -- at a May 29, 2009, White House event announcing a new cybersecurity policy. “Hackers gained access to emails and a range of campaign files, from policy position papers to travel plans,” he said then.

    But neither the president nor his top aides publicly spoke about the identity of the hackers, or the depth and gravity of the attack.

    Officials and former campaign officials now acknowledge to NBC News that the security breach was far more serious than has been publicly known, involving the potential compromise of a large number of internal files. And, in one case, it included the apparent theft of private correspondence from McCain to the president of Taiwan.

    Cyberattacks by the Chinese are expected to be at the top of the president’s agenda this weekend. U.S. officials say that such intrusions – many of them traced to a unit of the People’s Republic of China in Shanghai – have gotten even more brazen since the 2008 campaign.

    Shawn Henry, president of CrowdStrike Services, tells NBC's Michael Isikoff there's "little doubt" the Chinese government has an aggressive electronic espionage program targeting the US government and the commercial sector.

    “There’s been successful exfiltration of data from government agencies (by the Chinese) up and down Pennsylvania Avenue,” said Shawn Henry, who headed up the FBI’s probe of the 2008 attacks as the bureau’s chief of cyberinvestigations. He is now president of Crowdstrike, a computer security firm.

    David Plouffe, Obama campaign manager, vividly recalls getting a phone call from Josh Bolton, then President George W. Bush’s chief of staff, in the middle of August 2008 alerting him to the intrusion and that the FBI was investigating the attack. “He said we have reason to believe that your campaign system has been penetrated  by a foreign entity,” Plouffe said in an interview.

    Within days, the campaign dispatched a computer security team from Kroll Advisory Solutions to Chicago to cleanse the campaign’s infected computers — including the laptops of senior staffers.   

    In retrospect, the attack seems simple. It was delivered by a “phishing” email – outlining the “agenda” for an upcoming meeting — that circulated among top staffers and  contained a zip file attachment with “malware,” a hidden malicious virus.

    But it was no ordinary virus, said Alan Brill, the senior managing director of Kroll Solutions. The malware was “as sophisticated as anything we had seen” and was part of what he called “an infection chain” that replicated itself throughout the Obama campaign’s computer system. It also was designed to stay buried in the computers for months, if not years, he said.

    He and his consultants were unable to determine precisely what had been compromised, but Brill says the bombardment of viruses by the attackers continued for months.  “It was like a firefight,” Brill said. “This was starting every day knowing that you didn’t know what they were going to throw at you.” 

    Trevor Potter, who served as general counsel to the McCain campaign, said he got a similar warning about the cyberintrusion during a briefing from U.S. law enforcement officials at campaign headquarters..  “They told us, ‘You've been compromised, your computers are under the control of someone else. You need to get off network’,” said Potter.

    In one incident that caused concern among U.S. intelligence officials, the Chinese hackers appeared to have gotten access to private correspondence between McCain, then the GOP presidential candidate, and Ma Ying-jeou, the newly elected president of Taiwan. On July 25, 2008, McCain had signed a personal letter — drafted on campaign computers — pledging his support for the U.S. –Taiwanese relationship and Ma’s efforts to modernize the country’s military. A copy of the letter has been obtained by NBC News. 

    But before the letter had even been delivered, a top McCain foreign policy adviser got a phone call from a senior Chinese diplomat in Washington complaining about the correspondence. “He was putting me on notice that they knew this was going on,” said Randall Schriver, a former State Department official who was serving as a top McCain adviser on Asian policy. “It certainly struck me as odd that they would be so well-informed.”

    A spokesman for the Chinese Embassy said officials were unavailable for comment because they were busy preparing for this weekend’s summit between President Obama and Chinese President Xi Jinping in California. But in recent weeks, Chinese officials have denied any role in cyberattacks against the U.S. government and private enterprise. “China opposes all forms of cyberattacks,” Zheng Zeguang, assistant Chinese foreign minister, said in a press briefing in Beijing last week.

    When the summit does take place this weekend,  hacking  by the Chinese is expected to be at the top of the president’s agenda.

    U.S. officials say that Chinese  intrusions have escalated in the years since, involving repeated attacks on U.S. government agencies, political campaigns, corporations, law firms, and defense contractors — including the theft of national security secrets and hundreds of billions of dollars in intellectual property.

    A recent report from a U.S. commission chaired by former Intelligence Director Blair and former U.S. Ambassador to China Jon Huntsman Jr., estimated that the theft of intellectual property – mostly from China – was costing the U.S. $300 billion a year.

    “It’s stealing of information and there should be outrage,” said Henry, the former FBI executive assistant director.  

    Previous warnings to the  Chinese about cyberattacks have been brushed off. The 2008 attacks, for example, prompted U.S. intelligence officials to sternly warn the Chinese that they had “crossed the line,” says one former senior U.S. official who was directly involved in the investigation.

    “We told them we knew what they were up to – and that this had gone too far,” said the former official.  Chinese officials listened politely and denied they had anything to do with the attacks on the campaign, the former official said.

    More from Open Channel:

    • Former drone operator says he's haunted by his part in more than 1,600 deaths
    • CIA didn't always know who its drones were killing, documents show
    • How Predator went from eye in the sky to war on terror's weapon of choice

    Follow Open Channel from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook 

     

     

    449 comments

    We should definitely keep feeding China all of our money.

    Show more
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  • 30
    May
    2013
    5:03am, EDT

    Prosecutor tapped to head FBI known for role in Bush-era surveillance standoff

    Alex Wong / Getty Images file

    Former U.S. Deputy Attorney General James Comey testifies during a hearing before the House Commercial and Administrative Law Subcommittee of the Judiciary Committee May 3, 2007 on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC.

    By Andrew Rafferty, Staff Writer, NBC News

    The man poised to be the next head of the FBI is a former prosecutor respected by both sides of the aisle who may be best known for his role in a Hollywood-esque Washington showdown that thwarted the reauthorization of a controversial surveillance program.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    President Barack Obama intends to nominate former Deputy Attorney General James Comey, 52, to succeed Robert Mueller as FBI director, sources confirmed to NBC News on Wednesday. Though Comey served under President George W. Bush, he has won praise from Democrats for his time at the Department of Justice, especially after details emerged of his dramatic effort to stop the reauthorization of a warrantless eavesdropping program in March 2004.

    That night, Comey raced to George Washington University Hospital after getting word that White House Counsel Alberto Gonzales and Bush Chief of Staff Andrew Card Jr. were heading to the bedside of ill Attorney General John Ashcroft. Comey ran up the stairs into Ashcroft's hospital room out of fear that his ailing boss could be coerced into approving the program's continuation, he recalled in a 2007 congressional hearing.

    But when Card and Gonzales arrived, Comey told Congress, Ashcroft explained his opposition to the program and said any reauthorization would require Comey's signature since he was the acting attorney general at the time. The men left, and soon after Bush agreed to change the program.  

    “I was angry. I had just witnessed an effort to take advantage of a very sick man, who did not have the powers of the attorney general because they had been transferred to me," Comey said in his testimony.

    Rachel Maddow describes the hospital bedside drama in which James Comey, reported to be President Barack Obama's pick to head the FBI, thwarted the Bush administration's domestic spying plans.

    Comey first caught the attention of the White House in 2001 when he successfully prosecuted 14 men after being asked to take over the case of a 1996 terrorist bombing in Saudi Arabia that killed 19 U.S. troops. Following that case he was appointed to one of the Justice Department's most high-profile jobs -- United States attorney for the Southern District of New York.

    While in New York he oversaw cases against terrorism suspects, WorldCom executives and Martha Stewart. 

    He rose quickly in the department and served as deputy attorney general from 2003 to 2005. Since then, Comey has served as general counsel of defense contractor Lockheed Martin and later at investment firm Bridgewater Associates. This year he joined Columbia University's law school as a senior research fellow and joined the board of international banking giant HSBC.

    A 2001 New York Times profile of the Yonkers, N.Y.-born attorney describes Comey as a workhorse who rose by taking on any case colleagues did not want. The paper reported that he and a fellow lawyer went by the motto: "We'll take any dog."

    Along with his work ethic, Comey's height, 6-foot-8, also makes him particularly memorable to those he has come across in his many years as a litigator.

    After making a name for himself trying criminal cases as an assistant United States attorney in Manhattan the late '80s and early '90s, Comey briefly went into private practice and went on to head the United States attorney’s office in Richmond, Va. 

    It was in Virginia where he developed Project Exile, an initiative that began in 1997 and is credited with dramatically decreasing the amount of gun violence in Richmond. The idea was to stiffen sentences for firearms prosecutions and run advertisements letting residents know of the harsher penalties. The program's success has led other cities to adopt similar measures.

    If confirmed by the Senate, Comey will take over the agency from Mueller, who has headed the FBI for 12 years. Mueller's departure has been marked by questions over how thoroughly the FBI investigated Boston bombing suspects Tamerlan and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev after being alerted by foreign agencies of possible ties to Islamic militants.

    Mueller is expected to leave his post by September.

    Related stories:

    • Obama to nominate former Bush official to head FBI
    • Mueller outlines FBI reforms, rejects separate terrorism agency

     

    187 comments

    Mr. Comey, a Republican, put the US Constitution before politics and forced a Republican president to back down on warrant-less wiretaps and surveillance by not allowing an end-around play of the US Dept. of Justice.

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  • 26
    May
    2013
    8:53pm, EDT

    'We will rise': Memorial service honors Oklahoma tornado victims

    NBC News

    A public memorial service was held in Moore, Okla., to honor the victims of Monday's tornado.

    By Becky Bratu, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Six days after a destructive tornado touched down in Moore, Okla., killing 24 people, injuring more than 370 and destroying as many as 13,000 houses, scores gathered inside a local church to honor victims and rescuers through prayer, song and quiet contemplation.

    "Being a native Oklahoman ... I know that the source of our strength is the good faith of our people and our great God,” Pastor Kevin Clarkson told those gathered at First Baptist Church, adding that the community's motto was "Oklahoma strong."

    NBC News

    A family attends a public memorial service held in Moore, Okla., to honor the victims of Monday's tornado.

    Oklahoma Gov. Mary Fallin, multi-faith religious leaders and musicians including Dennis Jernigan were among those who participated in the memorial service, a touching tribute to a community ripped apart by a twister that rated the most powerful on the five-step scale used to measure a tornado’s might.

    Earlier on Sunday, President Barack Obama toured Moore and surveyed the damage, vowing to the people of Oklahoma "we’ve got your back."

    Monday’s storm ripped a gash through the city, flattening entire blocks of homes, two schools and a hospital. Less than an hour after sirens warned residents of the twister’s approach, 24 people were dead and 377 were hurt.

    Fallin, who led Obama on his visit, recounted touring the husk of Plaza Towers Elementary school -- the little that was left behind after the tornado shredded everything in its 17-mile path. Seven children died in the school.

    "We saw many Oklahomans doing their very best in a very difficult circumstance," Fallin said. "Teachers and school officials have truly been heroes."

    A Briarwood Elementary teacher spoke of her harrowing experience, as she and her students hunkered down inside a classroom, singing "Jesus Loves Me" louder and louder to drown out the roar of the incoming tornado. Briarwood was also destroyed, but no lives were lost.

    Waynel Mays, a first grade teacher at Briarwood Elementary, talks about the moment Monday's tornado hit the school in Moore, Oklahoma.

    Fallin praised the first responders, the teachers and the community as a whole, who she said displayed resilience, strength, courage and compassion at a challenging time.

    "We will rise," she said, adding: "In the midst of human tragedy we’ve seen the best of Oklahoma come forth."

    Obama vowed Sunday the nation would be there to help Oklahoma recover.

    "This is a strong community with strong character,” the president said. “There’s no doubt they’re going to bounce back. But, they need help, as anyone would need help,” calling on “every American to step up” and provide support.

    "Stay strong during these challenging times," Fallin urged the community in closing. "God will give us the ability to heal our broken hearts."

    Related:

    Obama tours destruction in Oklahoma, vows nation 'has your back'

    148 comments

    People...people.....PLEASE, let the humbled, hurt and discouraged people of Moore, OK do, whatever they need to do, to help themselves find a way to move on thru and past the horrendous day of terror and destruction they just experienced. Wish them well, and strength to move on.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: church, moore, obama, featured, fallin, oklahoma-tornado
  • Updated
    26
    May
    2013
    2:51pm, EDT

    Obama tours destruction in Oklahoma, vows nation 'has your back'

    Mandel Ngan / AFP - Getty Images

    President Obama is greeted as he tours a tornado-stricken area of Moore, Okla., on Sunday.

    By Patrick Garrity, NBC News

    President Obama resumed his role as the nation’s comforter Sunday, vowing to the people of Oklahoma "we’ve got your back" six days after a ferocious tornado tore a deadly path there.

    The president’s tour of the city of Moore included visits with victims and first responders and a firsthand look at the destruction wrought by a twister that rated the most powerful on the five-step scale used to measure a tornado’s might.

    Surveying piles of rubble that a week ago was a tidy suburban neighborhood, Obama walked along Eagle Drive to what was Plaza Towers Elementary School. Seven children died in the school. 

    “Obviously a picture is worth a thousand words; we see what the people of Moore have been dealing with,” Obama said in brief remarks, the mangled wreckage of the school building serving as his backdrop.

    Monday’s storm ripped a 17-mile gash through the city, flattening entire blocks of homes, two schools and a hospital. Less than an hour after sirens warned residents of the twister’s approach, 24 people were dead and 377 hurt. 

    Slideshow: Tornadoes ravage Plains

    Scott Olson / Getty Images

    A monster tornado hit Moore, Okla., Monday afternoon, leaving at least 24 dead.

    Launch slideshow

    “This area has known more than its share of heartbreak, but the people pride themselves on the ‘Oklahoma standard,' Obama said. "Oklahomans have inspired us with their love and their courage and their fellowship."

    The president noted that a day before the Moore tornado struck, a smaller, deadly twister struck about 40 miles away. Afterward, he said, a bible was found in the rubble opened to the book of Isaiah.

    “'And a man shall be as a hiding place from the wind and a covert from the tempest,'” the president quoted the passage, adding, “God has a plan, but we are an instrument of his will.”

    The Moore tornado was the most powerful in a flurry of 76 tornadoes that touched down in 10 states over a three-day span. The outbreak caused an estimated $2 billion to $5 billion in insured losses, according to disaster modeling company Eqecat. 

    At least 1,200 homes in central Oklahoma were destroyed by Monday's tornado and at least another 12,000 were damaged. 

    Obama, in rolled up shirtsleeves and khakis, was led on the tour by Oklahoma Gov. Mary Fallin, FEMA Administrator Craig Fugate and local officials. The scene has become familiar; the president arriving at the scene of tragedy to offer solace and support. 

    Obama took similar walks to Sunday's through the remains of Joplin, Mo., and Tuscaloosa, Ala., each ravaged by tornadoes in 2011. He paid a call to the New Jersey shore last fall when Superstorm Sandy devastated the region. He delivered consoling remarks after a gunman’s deadly spree in Newtown, Conn., in December and when a fertilizer plant exploded in West, Texas, last month. 

    He found more heartbreak Sunday but also a community – hardened by experience -- that has already started to get back to its feet. Hundreds of volunteers have joined affected homeowners in literally pushing the rubble to the curb. Jeff Gorman, who hid in a cellar under his garage as the twister flattened his house, told The Oklahoman, “Everybody's just doing what they gotta do.”

    Obama vowed the nation would be there to help. 

    “This is a strong community with strong character,” the president said. “There’s no doubt they’re gonna bounce back. But, they need help, as anyone would need help,” calling on “every American to step up” and provide support. 

    “When we say, we’ve got your back,” the president said. “I promise you, you have our word.”
     

    Reuters contributed to this report.

    Related stories:

    • Panoramic photo illustrates the devastation around the Garlands' home
    • Tornado birth: Mom endures labor as twister destroys hospital
    • Post-tornado peril: Victims could face deadly fungal infections
    • Tornado victims identified
    • Full coverage of the Oklahoma tornado tragedy on NBCNews.com

     


    This story was originally published on Sun May 26, 2013 9:33 AM EDT

    1638 comments

    Will he blame the tornado on Bush or Global Warming?

    Show more
    Explore related topics: tour, moore, obama, updated, oklahoma-tornadoes
  • Updated
    21
    May
    2013
    11:30am, EDT

    'Deeply saddened': Pope, UK queen lead worldwide condolences after Oklahoma tornado

    Evening Standard

    London's Evening Standard newspaper reports on the tornado in Oklahoma.

    By Alastair Jamieson, Claudio Lavanga and Amna Nawaz, NBC News

    Pope Francis and Britain’s queen sent messages of condolence to those affected by the deadly Oklahoma tornado Tuesday, as news of the devastation spread around the world.

    "I am close to the families of all who died in the Oklahoma tornado, especially those who lost young children,” the pontiff posted on his Twitter feed. “Join me in praying for them."

    I am close to the families of all who died in the Oklahoma tornado, especially those who lost young children. Join me in praying for them.

    — Pope Francis (@Pontifex) May 21, 2013

    The U.S. Embassy in London thanked British well-wishers for their expressions of support.

    In a statement issued by Buckingham Palace officials, Queen Elizabeth said: "I was deeply saddened to hear of the loss of life and devastation caused by yesterday’s tornado in Oklahoma."

    HM: 'Our deepest sympathies go out to all those whose lives have been affected, as well as the American people' #Oklahoma #tornado

    — TheBritishMonarchy (@BritishMonarchy) May 21, 2013

    "Prince Philip joins me in offering our heartfelt condolences to the victims and their families at this difficult time. Our deepest sympathies go out to all those whose lives have been affected, as well as the American people," she added.

    Canada's foreign minister John Baird said he was "shocked and saddened" at the devastation.

    "Canada stands with those affected, ready to assist," he added.

    Pakistan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a statement that the government and people of the country were “deeply saddened and shocked at the humanitarian tragedy unleashed on the Oklahoma State by a devastating tornado.”

    “Our sympathies and prayers go out to the families of victims of this horrific incident that led to precious loss of life and property,” the statement said. “We are particularly grieved over the loss of innocent children and their teachers who were buried under the rubble.”

    “May God Almighty give courage and strength to the bereaved families to bear this irreparable loss. The people of Pakistan stand hand in hand with the people of Oklahoma at this difficult time,” it added.

    Full coverage of the Oklahoma tornadoes from NBC News

    This story was originally published on Tue May 21, 2013 9:01 AM EDT

    31 comments

    Amazingly we are getting statements of condolence, sympathy and support from other governments while Oklahoma's own senators are worried about money. It is legitimate to worry about the budget but it might be a little more classy to wait until all the bodies are recovered first.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: oklahoma, world, moore, queen, storms, obama, reaction, featured, updated, twister, oklahoma-tornadoes, pope-franciis
  • Updated
    16
    May
    2013
    1:35pm, EDT

    Benghazi, IRS, AP: A guide to the 3 storms confronting the White House

    By Erin McClam, Staff Writer, NBC News

    The Obama administration, four short months into its second term, finds itself beset by three political storms.

    Republicans in Congress, some Democrats and the press are pelting the White House with questions about the raid on an American post in Libya, the conduct of the Internal Revenue Service and the seizure of phone records from The Associated Press.

    Taken together, the three have consumed the week in Washington. Here’s a quick guide.

    BENGHAZI

    The basics: Four Americans, including the ambassador to Libya, were killed in a raid on a diplomatic post in the city of Benghazi on Sept. 11, 2012. The State Department ultimately determined that the raid was a series of terrorist attacks.

    Republicans have made an array of accusations, including that the administration failed to send the military to help, waited too long to consistently describe the raid as a terror attack, and extensively edited talking points for media appearances.

    The White House response: President Barack Obama, exasperated, dismissed the Republican furor over the talking points earlier this week as a politically motivated “sideshow.”

    The administration has also said that sending the military was logistically impossible and would have left other American interests undefended. Obama said within hours of the raid that “acts of terror” would not be tolerated. On Thursday, he pledged increased security for diplomatic posts.

    Accused of changing its public stance on the raid because of political reasons — the presidential election was less than two weeks away — the administration released 100 pages of emails and other documents Wednesday shedding light on how the talking points were changed.

    The stakes: The political stakes are increasingly focused on Hillary Clinton’s potential run for the presidency in 2016. Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky. and himself a possible candidate, accused Clinton of “dereliction of duty” at a speech in Iowa over the weekend.

    American Crossroads, Karl Rove’s political action committee, released an ad draping Clinton in dark shadows and grainy black-and-white photos and accusing her of a cover-up. The ad ends with an invitation to donate to American Crossroads.

    What’s next: More questions from Republicans, despite the administration’s insistence that there is little if anything left to explain.

    Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., who has accused the administration of lying and believing itself to be above the law, wants to interview former Ambassador Thomas Pickering, one of the leaders of the review board.

     

     

     

    ***

     

     

     

    THE IRS

    The basics: Employees of the Internal Revenue Service singled out Tea Party groups and other conservative organizations for special scrutiny in reviewing applications for tax exemption.

    Republicans want to know whether anyone in the administration knew about it — to date there is no evidence that they did — and have suggested the government was punishing political enemies.

    The White House stance: Obama on Wednesday ousted the acting head of the IRS, Steven Miller, and said: “Americans have a right to be angry about it, and I’m angry about it.”

    The president acted after a Treasury Department investigation faulted the IRS for using “inappropriate criteria” in picking which organizations to scrutinize. The report also said that “ineffective management” allowed the criteria to stay in place.

    Asked Thursday whether he supported the appointment of a special prosecutor, Obama said he believed working with Congress to investigate would be sufficient.

    The stakes: Republicans and Democrats alike have expressed. Republicans appear to be coalescing around an insistence that it shows a pattern of intimidation by the administration.

    “The unifying themes of this town are an arrogance and view of the machinery of government to be a tool of partisanship,” Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas and a Tea Party favorite, said Thursday.

    Besides demanding hearings, they are likely to use that argument in the 2014 midterm elections. In addition, Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., said that the IRS ordeal could hurt the push for immigration reform in Congress.

    “We’ve already faced tremendous suspicion about the federal government’s ability or willingness to enforce the law,” Rubio said.

    What’s next: Attorney General Eric Holder has pledged a nationwide investigation. Federal prosecutors are looking at potential violations of law, including civil rights statutes and a federal law that restricts political activities by federal employees.

    There are at least three congressional hearings scheduled, beginning with the House Ways and Means Committee on Friday.

     

     

     

    ***

     

     

     

    AP PHONE RECORDS

    The basics: The Justice Department secretly seized two months of records from more than 20 telephone lines used by reporters and editors for The Associated Press last year.

    The seizure was apparently connected to a federal investigation into who leaked classified information about a foiled terror plot in Yemen that the AP reported on in May 2012. The AP has angrily objected and demanded further explanation.

    The White House stance: The deputy attorney general who is overseeing the investigation insisted in a letter to the AP that the seizure was limited in scope and that the content of calls was not monitored.

    Holder, who has recused himself from the investigation, said Tuesday that the leak “put the American people at risk” and was among the most serious he has seen in 37 years as a prosecutor.

    The stakes: Media organizations have said that the seizure will intimidate whistle-blowers. As in the IRS furor, Republicans are seeking to portray an administration bent on overreaching. Democrats have joined the criticism, too.

    Sen. Jon Tester of Montana said Wednesday that the Justice Department’s steps were “a blatant violation of privacy, and directly interfere with the constitutionally protected rights of the press to do its job free from government intrusion or direction.”

    What’s next: Under fire, the Obama administration is pushing to revive legislation that would enhance protections for journalists when they refuse to name confidential sources.

    A White House official called Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., to ask him to reintroduce the legislation, known as a media shield law. Schumer said that the bill at least would have ensured a fairer process in the AP leak.

    But Obama stressed Thursday that he makes no apology for being concerned about leaks that jeopardize American missions.

    This story was originally published on Thu May 16, 2013 1:35 PM EDT

    2527 comments

    Sickening thats what this administration is! Corrupt to the bone 2016 can't come soon enough Anybody but this Fraud

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  • 16
    May
    2013
    11:54am, EDT

    Obama to fill IRS post quickly

    By Peter Alexander and Michael O'Brien, NBC News

    President Obama won't leave the top job at the Internal Revenue Service vacant for long.

    NBC News has confirmed from a senior administration official that the president plans to appoint a new acting IRS commissioner this week.  

    Obama said Wednesday that he was "angry" at IRS officials who inappropriately targeted conservative groups for scrutiny when he announced that his administration had sought and accepted Steven Miller's resignation as interim commissioner of the IRS.

    "I've reviewed the Treasury Department watchdog's report, and the misconduct that it uncovered was inexcusable," Obama said in a statement at the White House.

    "It's inexcusable, and Americans are right to be angry about it, and I'm angry about it."

    The president said that he expected the IRS to act with even higher levels of integrity than other government agencies and that, to that end, Treasury Secretary Jack Lew had sought and accepted Miller's resignation — something many Republicans had demanded.

    Obama's remarks came amid news that two IRS employees who had engaged in activities targeting conservative groups had faced disciplinary action for their conduct.

    The inspector general's release Monday found that incompetence and ineffective management at the tax-collecting agency led to employees' applying extra scrutiny to conservative and Tea Party advocacy groups. The report also found there was no evidence of outside pressure on officials to target conservative groups.

    Related:

    IRS challenges public's confidence in government

    Trying to stop the bleeding

    Tea Party lawmakers use IRS fiasco to ding health care reform

     

    58 comments

    No surprises with this administration. A lot of the liberal press is getting a clue and asking questions, but that will pass soon enough. barry o's legacy: Never make a community organizer a President.

    Show more
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