California Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein took to the Senate floor this week to accuse the CIA of violating the law and the Constitution by spying on Senate staffers investigating the agency’s Bush-era torture program. But the CIA’s alleged search of senate intelligence committee computers wasn’t the only thing that prompted her to speak out. It was accusations by a high-ranking CIA official that it was Senate staff who had broken the law.
“I felt that I needed to come to the floor today, to correct the public record and to give the American people the facts about what the dedicated committee staff have been working so hard for, Feinstein said, over the “last several years as part of the committee’s investigation.”
In 2009, the Senate intelligence committee began an investigation into the agency’s rendition and interrogation program during the Bush administration. The CIA set up a secure workplace for the committee where they would be able to access classified documents provided by the agency, with computers segregated from the main CIA network. According to Feinstein, the CIA and the committee had agreed upon ground rules, which included a commitment by the CIA not to interfere with the committee’s inquiry. Only CIA IT staff were supposed to be given access to the committee’s computers.
Shortly after the news broke that the CIA may have searched those computers, a counter-accusation began surfacing in the press: That it was Senate intelligence committee staff who had acted improperly by gaining access to documents they weren’t supposed to have. All of a sudden, it was the intelligence committee staff who were facing accusations of wrongdoing, for supposedly having “walked out of one of the spy agency’s top-secret facility with classified documents that the CIA contended they weren’t authorized to have.”
According to Feinstein, it was one of the CIA’s top lawyers, Robert Eatinger, who asked the Department of Justice to look into whether Senate staff had broken the law. The CIA Inspector General has also asked the Justice Department to look into the CIA’s conduct.
CIA Director John Brennan, responding to criticism from senators over his agency’s alleged spying on Senate staffers, made a point of stating that “the appropriate authorities reviewing this matter will determine where wrongdoing, if any, occurred in either the executive branch or legislative branch.” Brennan has denied “spying” on the committee, but this may be a matter of semantics, as Brennan may simply believe that the CIA’s alleged search of the committee’s computers was legitimate or justified.
Feinstein called Eatinger’s referral “a potential effort to intimidate this staff.” According to Feinstein, Eatinger is mentioned several times in the committee’s yet to be declassified report.
Eatinger is the same CIA attorney who blessed the destruction of video tapes depicting the torture of suspected terror detainees. Senate staff had every reason to believe history might repeat itself, and that the Agency might seek to destroy materials considered damning.
“Senators and congressmen received their right to access executive branch information from the American people when they were elected,” said Vicki Divoll, an attorney who has worked both for the CIA and the Senate intelligence committee. “We gave them the power to access information at the CIA on our behalf, to keep watch on the agency for us. If Congress can’t do it, no one can.”
While operational details may be kept from the intelligence committee as a matter of policy, according to Divoll, under the law the Senate intelligence committee is entitled to see every document the agency has.
“The Senate intelligence Committee, under current interpretations of its Constitutional powers, is entitled to every document in the CIA’s possession,” said Divoll. “The documents themselves, however acquired, and whatever their classification level, may be reviewed by Senate staff in the performance of their legislative tasks.”
Feinstein alluded to this in her speech.
“Some of the Internal Panetta Review documents—some—contained markings indicating that they were “deliberative” and/or “privileged.” Feinstein said. “Congress does not recognize these claims of privilege when it comes to documents provided to Congress for our oversight duties.”
In other words, the CIA doesn’t get to keep secrets from the intelligence committee unless the committee allows them to.









