Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

Spy agency improperly handled some information about Canadians: Watchdog

The Canadian Press , 20 Aug, 2014 03:11 PM
  • Spy agency improperly handled some information about Canadians: Watchdog
OTTAWA - Canada's electronic spy agency intercepted — and kept — several private communications of Canadians last year in violation of internal policies on personal information.
 
In his annual report, the watchdog that keeps an eye on Communications Security Establishment Canada says while many of the 66 intercepts involving Canadians were handled properly, some were not.
 
The findings prompted several recommendations to strengthen privacy protection.
 
Ottawa-based CSEC monitors foreign communications of intelligence interest to Canada, and exchanges a large amount of information with similar agencies in the United States, Britain, Australia and New Zealand.
 
Leaks from Edward Snowden, a former contractor for the U.S. National Security Agency — CSEC's American counterpart — have raised questions about operations of the so-called Five Eyes intelligence network.
 
CSEC insists it targets only foreign email, telephone and satellite traffic.
 
However, the spy service acknowledges it cannot monitor global communications in the modern era without gathering at least some Canadian information.
 
In certain cases the defence minister authorizes CSEC activities that would otherwise risk breaching the Criminal Code provision against intercepting the private communications of Canadians.
 
In his report made public late Wednesday, CSEC watchdog Jean-Pierre Plouffe said the spy agency deletes "almost all" of the small number of such communications it unintentionally intercepts.
 
It is allowed to use or retain such information only if it is essential to matters of defence, security or international affairs.
 
Plouffe's staff looked at all 66 private interceptions from 2012-13, listening to voice recordings, reading written contents or examining written transcripts of the communications. Of these, 41 were used in spy agency reports — with any Canadian identities suppressed — and the remaining 25 kept for future use.
 
The review revealed instances where CSEC employees did not correctly follow procedures, including:
 
— One case in which an interception was kept even though it was not essential to defence or security;
 
— Several interceptions that went unmarked for retention or deletion for weeks;
 
— Other instances of analysts keeping communications involving Canadians — in some cases for several months — that were no longer essential.
 
Plouffe recommended five improvements, urging spy service analysts to regularly assess, at minimum four times a year, whether ongoing retention of a private communication is strictly necessary.
 
Defence Minister Rob Nicholson, the cabinet member responsible for CSEC, accepted the recommendations. The spy agency is working to address them, the watchdog's report says.
 
"My office and I will monitor developments," Plouffe wrote.
 
CSEC had no immediate comment.

MORE National ARTICLES

5-Year-Old Boy and Parents traumatized in Vancouver Island Home Invasion

5-Year-Old Boy and Parents traumatized in Vancouver Island Home Invasion
ESQUIMALT, B.C. - Police in Victoria say a five-year-old boy and his parents suffered the effects of pepper spray during a terrifying home invasion in the middle of the night.

5-Year-Old Boy and Parents traumatized in Vancouver Island Home Invasion

'Society Should Be Horrified;' 15-Year-Old Found Dead In Winnipeg's Red River

'Society Should Be Horrified;' 15-Year-Old Found Dead In Winnipeg's Red River
WINNIPEG - Officers are investigating the slaying of a 15-year-old aboriginal girl from rural Manitoba whose body was found wrapped in a bag and dumped in the Red River after she ran away from her foster home.

'Society Should Be Horrified;' 15-Year-Old Found Dead In Winnipeg's Red River

Man Turns Himself In After Alleged Break-In, Touching At Alberta Bible College

Man Turns Himself In After Alleged Break-In, Touching At Alberta Bible College
THREE HILLS, Alta. - Mounties say a man has turned himself in after several students were touched and propositioned while sleeping in a dormitory at a central Alberta Bible college.

Man Turns Himself In After Alleged Break-In, Touching At Alberta Bible College

Tory MP Apologizes to Justin Trudeau For Turning Home Break-In into Partisan Jab

Tory MP Apologizes to Justin Trudeau For Turning Home Break-In into Partisan Jab
OTTAWA - A Conservative MP has apologized for using news of a break-in at Justin Trudeau's house as a chance to take a partisan poke at the Liberal leader.

Tory MP Apologizes to Justin Trudeau For Turning Home Break-In into Partisan Jab

Winnipeg: Body Of 15-Year-Old Aboriginal Girl Found In Red River

Winnipeg: Body Of 15-Year-Old Aboriginal Girl Found In Red River
WINNIPEG - Winnipeg police say a body wrapped in a bag and pulled from the Red River on Sunday belonged to a slain 15-year-old aboriginal girl.

Winnipeg: Body Of 15-Year-Old Aboriginal Girl Found In Red River

New Brunswick Air Ambulance Crash Occurred On Second Attempt To Land: TSB

New Brunswick Air Ambulance Crash Occurred On Second Attempt To Land: TSB
GRAND MANAN, N.B. - An air ambulance crash in New Brunswick that killed two people and injured two others occurred during the pilot's second attempt to land, says the Transportation Safety Board.

New Brunswick Air Ambulance Crash Occurred On Second Attempt To Land: TSB