F.B.I. Told Israel It Wanted Pegasus Hacking Tool for Investigations
The F.B.I. informed the Israeli government in a 2018 letter
that it had purchased Pegasus, the notorious hacking tool, to collect data from
mobile phones to aid ongoing investigations, the clearest documentary evidence
to date that the bureau weighed using the spyware as a tool of law enforcement.
The F.B.I.’s description of its intended use of Pegasus came
in a letter from a top F.B.I. official to Israel’s Ministry of Defense that was
reviewed by The New York Times. Pegasus is produced by an Israeli firm, NSO
Group, which needs to gain approval from the Israeli government before it can
sell the hacking tool to a foreign government.
The 2018 letter, written by an official in the F.B.I.’s
operational technology division, stated that the bureau intended to use Pegasus
“for the collection of data from mobile devices for the prevention and
investigation of crimes and terrorism, in compliance with privacy and national
security laws.”
The Times revealed in January that the F.B.I. had purchased
Pegasus in 2018 and, over the next two years, tested the spyware at a secret
facility in New Jersey.
Since the article’s publication, F.B.I. officials have
acknowledged that they considered deploying Pegasus but have emphasized that
the bureau bought the spying tool mainly to test and evaluate it — partly to
assess how adversaries might use it. They said the bureau never used the
spyware in any operation.
During a congressional hearing in March, the F.B.I.
director, Christopher A. Wray, said the bureau had bought a “limited license”
for testing and evaluation “as part of our routine responsibilities to evaluate
technologies that are out there, not just from a perspective of could they be
used someday legally, but also, more important, what are the security concerns
raised by those products.”
“So, very different from using it to investigate anyone,” he
said.
The Times revealed that the F.B.I. had also received a
demonstration by NSO of a different hacking tool, Phantom, that can do what
Pegasus cannot — target and infiltrate U.S. cellphone numbers. After the
demonstration, government lawyers spent years debating whether to purchase and
deploy Phantom. It was not until last summer that the F.B.I. and the Justice
Department decided not to deploy NSO hacking tools in operations.
The F.B.I. has paid approximately $5 million to NSO since
the bureau first purchased Pegasus.
The Times has sued the F.B.I. under the Freedom of
Information Act for bureau documents related to the purchase, testing and
possible deployment of NSO spyware tools. During a court hearing last month, a
federal judge set a deadline of Aug. 31 for the F.B.I. to produce all relevant
documents or be held in contempt. Government lawyers said the bureau thus far
had identified more than 400 pages of documents that were responsive to the
request.
The F.B.I. letter to NSO, dated Dec. 4, 2018, stated that
“the United States government will not sell, deliver or otherwise transfer to
any other party under any condition without prior approval of the government of
Israel.”
Cathy L. Milhoan, an F.B.I. spokeswoman, said the bureau
“works diligently to stay abreast of emerging technologies and tradecraft.”
“The F.B.I. purchased a license to explore potential future
legal use of the NSO product and potential security concerns the product
poses,” she continued. “As part of this process, the F.B.I. met requirements of
the Israeli Export Control Agency. After testing and evaluation, the F.B.I.
chose not to use the product operationally in any investigation.”
The Times article in January revealed that the C.I.A. in
2018 arranged and paid for the government of Djibouti to acquire Pegasus to
assist its government in counterterrorism operations, despite longstanding
concerns about human rights abuses there.
Pegasus is a so-called zero-click hacking tool — it can
remotely extract everything from a target’s mobile phone, including photos,
contacts, messages and video recordings, without the user having to click on a
phishing link to give Pegasus remote access. It can also turn phones into
tracking and secret recording devices, allowing the phone to spy on its owner.
NSO has sold Pegasus to dozens of countries, which have used
the spyware as part of investigations into terrorist networks, pedophile rings
and drug kingpins.
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