WASHINGTON — Leslie James Pickering noticed something odd in
his mail last September: a handwritten card, apparently delivered by mistake,
with instructions for postal workers to pay special attention to the letters
and packages sent to his home.
“Show all mail to supv” — supervisor — “for copying prior to
going out on the street,” read the card. It included Mr. Pickering’s name,
address and the type of mail that needed to be monitored. The word
“confidential” was highlighted in green.
“It was a bit of a shock to see it,” said Mr. Pickering, who
with his wife owns a small bookstore in Buffalo. More than a decade ago, he was
a spokesman for the Earth Liberation Front, a radical environmental group
labeled eco-terrorists by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Postal officials
subsequently confirmed they were indeed tracking Mr. Pickering’s mail but told
him nothing else.
As the world focuses on the high-tech spying of the National
Security Agency, the misplaced card offers a rare glimpse inside the seemingly low-tech
but prevalent snooping of the United States Postal Service.
Mr. Pickering was targeted by a longtime surveillance system
called mail covers, a forerunner of a vastly more expansive effort, the Mail
Isolation Control and Tracking program, in which Postal Service computers
photograph the exterior of every piece of paper mail that is processed in the
United States — about 160 billion pieces last year. It is not known how long
the government saves the images.
Together, the two programs show that postal mail is subject
to the same kind of scrutiny that the National Security Agency has given to
telephone calls and e-mail.
The mail covers program, used to monitor Mr. Pickering, is
more than a century old but is still considered a powerful tool. At the request
of law enforcement officials, postal workers record information from the
outside of letters and parcels before they are delivered. (Opening the mail
would require a warrant.) The information is sent to the law enforcement agency
that asked for it. Tens of thousands of pieces of mail each year undergo this
scrutiny.
The Mail Isolation Control and Tracking program was created
after the anthrax attacks in late 2001 that killed five people, including two
postal workers. Highly secret, it seeped into public view last month when the
F.B.I. cited it in its investigation of ricin-laced letters sent to President
Obama and Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg. It enables the Postal Service to retrace
the path of mail at the request of law enforcement. No one disputes that it is
sweeping.
“In the past, mail covers were used when you had a reason to
suspect someone of a crime,” said Mark D. Rasch, who started a computer crimes
unit in the fraud section of the criminal division of the Justice Department
and worked on several fraud cases using mail covers. “Now it seems to be,
‘Let’s record everyone’s mail so in the future we might go back and see who you
were communicating with.’ Essentially you’ve added mail covers on millions of
Americans.”
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