Republican leaders in the House and Senate Judiciary Committees are calling for the Justice Department’s Inspector General Michael Horowitz to testify on his new Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) audit report, which found that the FBI had failed to follow proper procedures needed to obtain FISA warrants.
Senate Judiciary Chairman Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) and Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) have separately called for Horowitz’s testimony following the release of the preliminary findings in his audit on Tuesday.
Horowitz reviewed a sample of 29 FISA applications spanning a five year period from eight FBI field offices. Of those, the FBI could not locate the Woods files—a record of that contains documentation that substantiates facts asserted in a FISA application—for four of the applications selected for review. Meanwhile, the office “identified apparent errors or inadequately supported facts” in the Wood files of the other 25 applications.
“[W]e believe that a deficiency in the FBI’s efforts to support the factual statements in FISA applications through its Woods Procedures undermines the FBI’s ability to achieve its ’scrupulously accurate' standard for FISA applications,” Tuesday’s memo stated.
In a statement on Tuesday, Graham said that he intends to ask Horowitz to appear before the senate committee to explain his findings on the problems identified in the inspector general’s audit.
Meanwhile, Jordan, the ranking member of the Democrat-led House Judiciary Committee, sent a letter to the committee’s chairman Jerrold Nadler (D-N.Y.) on March 31 to urge him to invite Horowitz to testify on FBI’s FISA process. Jordan had previously asked Nadler to invite the inspector general to testify after the December FISA report, but Nadler has so far resisted pressure to do so.
Jordan also said that the preliminary findings “validate” a Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court judge’s concern about the “reliability of information contained in applications.”
“The Committee must not allow the FBI’s extraordinary power to electronically surveil Americans to be so haphazardly rubber-stamped with incorrect, unsubstantiated, or erroneous supporting information,” Jordan said.