Tag: FBI

  • Apple rejects order to unlock gunman’s phone

    Apple will contest a court order to help FBI investigators access data on the phone belonging to San Bernardino gunman, Syed Rizwan Farook.

    The company had been ordered to help the FBI circumvent security software on Farook’s iPhone, which the FBI said contained crucial information.

    In a statement, Apple chief executive, Tim Cook said: “The United States government has demanded that Apple take an unprecedented step which threatens the security of our customers.”

    “We oppose this order, which has implications far beyond the legal case at hand.”

    Since September 2014, data on most Apple devices – such as text messages and photographs – have been encrypted by default, the BBC reports.

    It means if a device is locked, only the passcode can be used to access the data. If 10 incorrect attempts at the code are made, the device will automatically erase all of its data.

    Apple said even its own staff cannot access the data – a move the company made following the Edward Snowden revelations into government surveillance.

    The FBI has asked Apple to do two things.

    Firstly, it wants the company to alter Farook’s iPhone so that investigators can make unlimited attempts at the passcode without the risk of erasing the data.

    Secondly, it wants Apple to help implement a way to rapidly try different passcode combinations, to save tapping in each one manually.

  • Clinton to hand over email server to FBI

    Clinton to hand over email server to FBI

    Democratic Party presidential hopeful, Hillary Clinton, has agreed to hand over to the FBI the private email server that she used as secretary of state.

    Her use of private email has generated a barrage of criticism as Mrs. Clinton runs for president.

    Critics said that her set-up was unsecure, contrary to government policy and designed to shield her communications from oversight, the BBC reports.

    The FBI is investigating whether classified information was improperly sent via the server and stored there.

    Mrs. Clinton initially handed over thousands of pages of emails to the state department, but not the server.

    Her lawyers will also hand over to the FBI memory sticks which contain the copies of the emails.

    Her use of private email has been a major issue in the presidential race. Polls show an increasing number of voters view her as “untrustworthy” due in part to the questions surrounding her email use.

    Under United States federal law, officials’ correspondence is considered to be U.S government property.

    Government employees are encouraged to use government email accounts although some top officials have used personal accounts in the past.

    In March, Mrs. Clinton said she and her lawyers made the decision over what would be considered work-related email when the state department asked for records from former secretaries of state.

    The emails deemed work-related were about half of the 60,000 emails she sent in total during her time in office. The emails she deemed personal were deleted, Mrs. Clinton said.

    Since then, the state department has been releasing the emails to the public in batches about once a month.

  • U.S makes FIFA extradition request

    U.S makes FIFA extradition request

    The United States has asked Switzerland to extradite seven FIFA officials arrested on corruption charges in May, Swiss authorities have said.

    Formal extradition requests were submitted on Wednesday, the Swiss Federal Office of Justice (FOJ) said.

    The seven top FIFA executives arrested in Zurich are among 14 officials indicted on charges of “rampant, systemic, and deep-rooted” corruption, the BBC reports.

    The charges follow a major inquiry by the U.S Federal Bureau of Investigation.

    The FOJ said Zurich police, acting on its behalf, would give the seven officials a hearing over the extradition requests.

    The officials and their lawyers would have 14 days to respond to the request, which could be extended “if sufficient grounds exist,” the FOJ statement said.

    After that, the FOJ would give its decision “within a few weeks”, but warned of a lengthy process as any ruling could be challenged in both the federal criminal court and the federal supreme court.

    Jeffrey Webb, FIFA vice-president in charge of North and Central America, was among those arrested by Swiss police in a raid on a luxury hotel in the early hours of May 27

    They are currently being held in prisons around the Zurich region.

    The suspects are among 14 defendants the U.S has charged with racketeering, wire fraud, and money laundering conspiracies.

     

  • Taxi driver on FBI watch list, detained in Somalia

    A former Washington-area taxi driver who was on the FBI’s “Most Wanted Terrorists” list has been detained and is in the custody of the Somali government, a United States’ government source told Reuters on Monday.

    The FBI said in January it added Somali-born U.S citizen, Liban Haji Mohamed, 29, to its watch list because he allegedly provided support to the Somalia-based Islamist militant group al Shabaab.

    The U.S source said Mohamed was arrested several days ago by Somali authorities and was now in custody, but it was not clear if or when he would be sent back to the U.S.

    The Washington Post first reported on Monday that Mohamed had been detained in Somalia.

    Mohamed lived in the northern Virginia suburbs near Washington and drove a taxi. He left the U.S in 2012.

  • Russia 2018: FBI to Probe FIFA officials

    Russia 2018: FBI to Probe FIFA officials

     

    Few hours after FIFA, the world football governing body, gave itself a clean bill of health, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) has said it is stepping up the pace of a corruption investigation into senior leaders of FIFA, U.S. law enforcement officials have said.

    The FIFA ethics committee Thursday announced that it was closing its investigation into alleged corruption in the 2018 and 2022 bidding process that awarded the World Cup to Russia and Qater, respectively.

    According to reports from CNN.com, FIFA said its investigation found no corruption and has no reason to reopen the bidding process, but the FBI, which is leading the U.S. probe, is not ready to do the same.

    Investigators are moving ahead with their probe, which could result in charges against senior FIFA officials, the U.S. law enforcement officials said.

    FBI agents based in New York are moving ahead with their 3-year-old investigation, which will likely benefit from the findings of a former U.S. prosecutor, Michael Garcia, who was hired by FIFA to do an internal probe.

    The FBI plans to seek access to Garcia’s report, which FIFA has not yet released. So far, the FBI has declined to offer an official comment on the development.

    Garcia on Thursday distanced himself from the FIFA ethics announcement, saying: “Today’s decision by the Chairman of the Adjudicatory Chamber contains numerous materially incomplete and erroneous representations of the facts and conclusions detailed in the Investigatory Chamber’s report. I intend to appeal this decision to the FIFA Appeal Committee.”

    The FBI investigation includes the cooperation of a former top FIFA official who has provided documents and recordings of meetings with colleagues, law enforcement officials said.

    The New York Daily news, which reported on the cooperation of former FIFA official Chuck Blazer, quoted Blazer as saying: “I just can’t talk about that.”

    FIFA has long been dogged by allegations of corruption. In 2011, the FIFA banned for life Mohamed bin Hammam, a Qatari member of its top governing body, for ethics violations.

    Consequenly, the organization says it is planning unspecific improvements in the way it conducts World Cup bids.

  • Al Qaeda: FG sets to extradite Nigerian suspect

    The Federal Government has initiated extraction proceedings against a Nigerian, Lawal Olaniyi Babafemi, suspected to be member of the terrorist organisation, al-Qaeda.

    It has applied to a Federal High Court in Abuja for the extradition of Babafemi (32 years) also described as “Abdullah” and “Ayatollah Mustapher” to the United States, where he is being wanted for his alleged involvement in terrorism related activities.

    The FG, in an application for extradition filed before the court, exhibited a four-count charge marked:13CR-109-JG, filed against him before the U.S District Court of the Eastern District of New York and a bench warrant issued for his arrest by a U.S magistrate.

    He is charged with “conspiracy to provide support to a foreign terrorist organisation, provision and attempted provision of material support to a foreign terrorist organisation, unlawful use of firearms and conspiracy to unlawfully use firearms.”

    The offences, on conviction, attract a minimum sentence of 10 years and maximum of life imprisonment.

    Babafemi, who until now, was based in the U.S, fled to the country upon realising that he was to be arrested by operatives of the U.S Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).

    He had since been arrested and is being held by the Department of State Services (DSS).

    Documents filed by the FG before the Abuja court revealed that the U.S authorities are of the view that Babafemi belongs to the “al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP)” an affiliate of al-Qaeda.

     

     

     

  • CIA ‘tracked Boston bomb suspect’

    One of the Boston bomb suspects was added to a terrorism database 18 months ago at the request of the CIA, officials have told United States media.

    The FBI has already said it investigated Tamerlan Tsarnaev, 26, but had found no evidence of a threat.

    Tsarnaev was killed during a police chase last week. His brother Dzhokhar, 19, is in custody over the bombs, BBC reports.

    Three people were killed and more than 260 wounded when two devices exploded at the Boston Marathon on April 15.

    A U.S politician earlier confirmed the bombs were set off by remote control.

    But the devices were not sophisticated and apparently had to be triggered from a few streets away.

    Officials said Tsarnaev had been added to the Terrorist Identities Datamart Environment (TIDE) on the request of the CIA.

    The database contains as many as 745,000 entries, and individuals on that list are not necessarily on the so-called terrorist watch list.

    The Russian authorities had alerted U.S counterparts to the activities of Tsarnaev, whose family has its origins in the war-torn Russian republic of Chechnya.

    About six months before the CIA requested his name be added to TIDE, the FBI asked the Russians for more information about Tsarnaev but received none, and closed its investigation.

     

  • FBI arrests Mississippi man in ricin letter case

    FBI arrests Mississippi man in ricin letter case

    The FBI arrested a Mississippi man in connection with letters sent to President Barack Obama and two other officials believed to contain the deadly poison ricin, the U.S. Justice Department said.

    Paul Kevin Curtis was arrested at his home in Corinth, Mississippi.

    He is “believed to be responsible for the mailings of the three letters sent through the U.S. Postal Inspection Service which contained a granular substance that preliminarily tested positive for ricin,’’ the Justice Department said in a statement.

    The letters were addressed to a U.S. senator, the White House and a Mississippi justice official, the statement said.

    The ricin poison scare hit Washington after bombings at the Boston Marathon killed three people and injured 176 on Monday, but the FBI said there was no indication the incidents were connected.

    The FBI said the envelope sent to Obama was received at a mail-screening facility outside the White House and was immediately quarantined.

    Preliminary tests showed it contained the deadly poison ricin, the FBI said

    Washington was put on edge on Tuesday when news emerged that authorities had intercepted a letter sent to Republican Senator Roger Wicker of Mississippi that had initially tested positive for ricin.

    Following the arrest, Wicker issued a statement thanking the FBI and Capitol Police “for their professionalism and decisive action in keeping our family and members of staff safe from harm.’’

    Earlier on Wednesday, a flurry of reports of suspicious letters and packages rattled the U.S. capital and caused the temporary evacuation of parts of two Senate buildings.

    Most of the reports quickly proved to be false alarms, and business was only temporarily disrupted on Capitol Hill.

    The letters to Obama and Wicker which had identical language, included the phrase, “To see a wrong and not expose

    it, is to become a silent partner to its continuance.’’

    They were signed, “I am KC and I approve this message,’’ according to an FBI operations bulletin.

    Two law enforcement sources said investigators believed the man arrested was the same person as Kevin Curtis, who they say has posted `rants on the Internet and performed as an entertainer and Elvis Presley impersonator’.

    In an online comment on an Elvis blog post in 2007, a Kevin Curtis complained that several Elvis contests in several

    states “were rigged with hosts and judges getting kick-backs.’’

    The signature was: “This is Kevin Curtis and I approve this message’’.

    Northern District Mississippi Public Service Commissioner Brandon Presley, who said he was related to Elvis Presley, said that Curtis contacted him via Facebook late on Sunday asking him if he was a relative of the late rock singer.

    Presley said he did not know Curtis. “I don’t know if he’s fixated on Elvis or Elvis’ family or what,’’ he said.

    “We’ve been told by the authorities to be very cautious with our mail for the next few days.’’

    The envelopes believed to contain ricin both bore postmarks from Memphis, Tennessee, and were dated April 8.

    Memphis Mayor A.C. Wharton noted in a statement, however, that it did not mean the letters originated in that city.

    An aide to Wharton said many areas near Memphis were included in its postmark – including some in neighbouring northern Mississippi, Wicker’s state.

    For Washingtonians, the situation was an unsettling reminder of events of nearly 12 years ago when letters containing anthrax spores were mailed to the Washington offices of two senators and to media outlets in New York and Florida,

    not long after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks in New York and Washington.

    The FBI said White House operations were not affected by the latest scare.

    “It noted that filters at a second government mail-screening facility had preliminarily tested positive for ricin this morning’’ and other mails from that facility were also being tested.

    The tests were being conducted at Fort Detrick, in Frederick, Maryland, a government source said.

    White House spokesman Jay Carney said Obama had been briefed on the situation.

    Ricin is a lethal poison found naturally in castor beans, but it takes a deliberate act to convert it into a biological weapon.

    Ricin can cause death within 36 to 72 hours from exposure to an amount as small as a pinhead. No known antidote exists.(Reuters/NAN)