Promisgate: World's Longest Spy Scandal Still Glossed Over / Part I
Promisgate: World's Longest Spy Scandal Still Glossed Over / Part I
David Dastych – The so called PROMIS affair would never have happened if the software
invented by an American computer specialist, Mr. William A. Hamilton, had been a technical
failure. But this case management and data mining software, developed in the early 1980s by
a small Washington D.C. company, Inslaw Inc., had proven itself to be a perfect intelligence
tool. Originally made for the Department of Justice to help the country’s prosecutor offices in
their case management, it drew the attention of corrupt officials and of Israeli Intelligence.
Stolen by ruse from its owner, Inslaw Inc., the software was hacked and provided with a "trap
door", a sort of a Trojan Horse hacker’s trick, that enabled the retrieval of information from
the foreign intelligence services and banks it had been sold to on behalf of Israeli and U.S.
intelligence. Without the knowledge of the software’s owner, and in violation of copyright
laws, the PROMIS software was sold to over 40 countries and used in an unprecedented
"sting operation", which yielded huge financial and intelligence benefits to the United States
and Israel.
In February 1985, Inslaw Inc. filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection because the Justice
Department had withheld payments totaling almost $1.8 million U.S. due Inslaw Inc. under a
PROMIS Implementation Contract for U.S. Attorneys Offices. The PROMIS affair, broken by
investigative journalists, two federal courts, and a congressional investigation and published
in thousands of media stories and in several books, has never been resolved.
But "blowback" from the U.S. Government's theft of PROMIS in 1982 soon turned into a
series of painful losses for U.S. national security, into criminal financial benefits for corrupt
officials, and into intelligence "scoops" for the secret services of adversaries. "It’s far worse
than Watergate"--commented former U.S. Attorney General and Inslaw counsel Elliot
Richardson.
An American intelligence officer, whose name cannot be disclosed, made the following
comment on the consequences of the illegal operations performed with the use of PROMIS:
(…) "Yes, we gave PROMIS to the Russians and Chinese to back door their intel. Worked like
a charm. The only problem was ‘blowback’. As we gave it to our enemies in order to back
door them through the trap door Trojan horse asset in PROMIS, we left sixty-four federal
agencies wide open in the U.S. Government who also used PROMIS. The powers-that-be felt
that the information obtained far outweighed the damage done to the security of the 64 federal
agencies. Just think, federal agents exposed, witness relocation programs compromised, etc.
Just a matter of time."
David Dastych - There were also two reported connections between the U.S. intelligence
failure relating to the terrorist attacks on 9-11 and unauthorized derivatives of the PROMIS
software.
First, unnamed government sources familiar with the debriefing of Hanssen in 2001
reportedly told the Washington Times, Fox News, and the washingtonpost.com that year that
someone in Russia had sold copies of PROMIS-derivative software source codes, which
Hanssen had stolen from the FBI and U.S. intelligence agencies for the Russians, to Osama
bin Laden for $2 million and that al Qaeda had used the stolen U.S. intelligence software to
access the U.S. intelligence database systems in order to evade detection and monitoring
before 9-11 and to move funds undetected through the banking system.
Osama bin Laden received PROMIS software, bought for him by wealthy Saudis through
their connections with the Russian mafia. An American intelligence expert told Wprost:
"Salah Idris, along with members of the Saudi Royal family, arranged for the sale of PROMIS
to Bin Laden. Yes, it came from the Russians, but not in as big a part as the spook community
would have you believe. Nor was it entirely the work of Robert Hanssen. He was merely
available to point the finger at." Thanks to PROMIS, computer wizards working for al Qaeda
could move funds and avoid tracking by U.S. and other intelligence, at least until the assaults
on the United States, on September 11, 2001.
Secondly, the 9-11 Commission in the United States reported, in its April 14, 2004 report on
the U.S. intelligence failure, that the FBI had failed to connect the dots between leads in its
computerized case management system from two different field offices during the summer of
2001 about Arab men taking flight training courses, blaming the FBI’s failure on the fact that
its case management software "employs 1980’s technology that is by all accounts user-
unfriendly."
What was the main reason for the FBI’s failure? The inventor of PROMIS and President of its
producer, Inslaw Inc. company in Washington D.C., Mr. William L. Hamilton, told Wprost
that:
"The 9-11 Commission called attention to the fact that the FBI did not install the current
version of its case management software, called the ACS (Automated Case Support) system,
until October 1995 and [to the fact that ACS was obsolete from the time the FBI developed it
in the mid-1990s because it was based on ‘1980s technology’. Although the 9-11 Commission
offered no explanation for why the FBI used obsolete technology to develop its ACS case
management software in 1995, the apparent explanation is that the FBI simply re-named its
1980s technology case management software, which was called FOIMS and was based on
PROMIS, and translated it in October 1995 into a different computer programming language
in order to obstruct a court hearing that the U.S. Senate had ordered earlier that year. The
Senate had ordered the court in May 1995 to determine whether the United States owes
Inslaw compensation for the government’s use of PROMIS, and the court ,in turn, ordered
outside software experts to compare the FBI’s software with PROMIS, but the FBI modified
its software and told the court that it no longer retained the unmodified first 11 years (1985
through 1995) of its own case management software].
" A June 2001 front-page story in the Washington Times quoted unnamed federal law
enforcement sources familiar with the Hanssen case as stating that al Qaeda had been able to
use a copy of the FBI’s FOIMS software, [purchased on the Russian black market], for
espionage against the United States as late as 2001, six years after FOIMS had supposedly
been replaced by ACS. This may be an additional indication of what the FBI actually did in
1995. Instead of using its ACS software project in 1995 to take advantage of early 1990s
improvements in computer technology in order to make FOIMS easier for FBI agents to use,
the primary purpose of the FBI’s ACS project in 1995 was obstruction of justice."
To put this into simpler words, the FBI (and possibly a number of other agencies of the U.S.
Government) still use unauthorized derivatives of the PROMIS software. This means that
foreign intelligence agencies, which have bought or otherwise acquired PROMIS, can easily
"break in" into such FBI and U.S. intelligence data bases, posing a serious threat to the
national security of the United States.
Promisgate: World's longest spy scandal still glossed over /Part III
The FBI complaint against Aragoncillo stated that he emailed to associates in the Phillipines
more than 100 sensitive intelligence documents that he had downloaded from the FBI’s
computer-based ACS case management system. There have, moreover, been U.S. press
reports, including a report by ABC, that Aragoncillo spied for the Phillipines by downloading
classified information from the computer systems of other agencies. Prior to joining the FBI,
Aragoncillo was a U.S. Marine assigned to the Office of the Vice President, and reportedly
used computers in that office to download classified documents from computer systems at the
Pentagon and at the CIA.
The case of Aragoncillo can be compared to the earlier case of Robert Hanssen. The FBI
complaint filed against Hanssen in February 2001 stated that Hanssen had made "extensive
use" of the FBI’s computer-based case management system to steal U.S. intelligence secrets
for the Russians, and that he had also given the Russians a copy of a technical manual on the
COINS II (Community On-Line Information System, 2d version), a software system used by
various U.S. intelligence agencies to track the intelligence information they produce. A report
by the washingtonpost.com in 2001 stated that Hanssen had also stolen U.S. intelligence
secrets from the computer systems of other agencies such as the CIA, NSA, the Pentagon, and
the White House.
In both cases, the spies planted in the FBI had evidently been able to gather information by
using the PROMIS-derivative software system underpinning all of these U.S. intelligence
community database systems.
Reporting on the recent Phillipino spy case, John Diamond of USA Today wrote: "After the
Hanssen case, the FBI began a $170 million upgrade of its computer network. Severe
technical problems led that upgrade to be scrapped, and only now is the FBI seeking bids for a
new system, called Sentinel." The FBI has serious problems.
The new legislative proposal and lobbying of the Chinese Government expose the Bush
Administration and its Justice Department to charges of hypocrisy. The United States is
attempting to convince China to do a better job of enforcing software copyright rights, and,
where necessary, to see to it that "victim companies" receive full restitution. But the U.S.
Government has set a poor example by refusing for two decades to make any restitution to
Inslaw. Moreover, the Justice Department, which is the U.S. Government’s main agency for
enforcing copyright rights, has instead obstructed attempts to get to the bottom of the Inslaw
affair, according to the fully-litigated findings of two federal courts and the investigative
findings of two congressional committees.
"Inslaw deserves to be compensated. More importantly, the American people deserve to
know the truth: Did government greed and bureaucratic hubris lead to a wholesale sellout of
our national security? The Bush White House's credibility is on the line," wrote nationally
syndicated columnist, Michelle Malkin, in The Washington Times. There is no better way to
state it.