Yahoo News revealed that the law enforcement arm of the U.S. Postal Service has been secretly tracking and collecting Americans’ social media posts.
“The details of the surveillance effort, known as Internet Covert Operations Program (iCOP), have not previously been made public. The work involves having analysts trawl through social media sites to look for what the document describes as inflammatory postings and then sharing that information across government agencies.”
iCOP monitors social media posts about protests and forwards that information to fusion centers.
“Analysts with the United States Postal Inspection Service (USPIS) Internet Covert Operations Program (iCOP) monitored significant activity regarding planned protests occurring internationally and domestically on March 20, 2021, says the March 16 government bulletin, marked as law enforcement sensitive and distributed through the Department of Homeland Security’s fusion centers.”
DHS has succeeded in turning the Postal Service into a clandestine government agency.
“iCOP analysts are currently monitoring these social media channels for any potential threats stemming from the scheduled protests and will disseminate intelligence updates as needed, the bulletin says.”
All of this really shouldn’t come as a surprise; a 2019 USPIS annual report revealed the existence of iCOP, albeit in less ominous terms.
Page 36 of the report says iCOP is one of seven functional groups that send hundreds of intelligence reports to fusion centers.
“The Internet Covert Operations Program (iCOP) is one of seven functional groups within the Inspection Service Cybercrime program. In Fiscal Year 2019, the iCOP team produced a total of 209 Intelligence Reports to the field in support of investigations involving narcotics, mail theft, revenue fraud, homicide, dangerous mail, and more.”
A 2019 Federal News Network article revealed how iCOP postal inspectors have been going ‘undercover’ on the dark web since at least 2014.
“So when it comes to doing online undercover work, our biggest challenge is — since our program is fairly new, going back to 2014 — trying to establish that long term persistence and that long term identity and in enabling the visibility of the user identity over a long period of time to build that reputation, build the street creds, if you will. Because you don’t have that face-to-face interaction, because the bad guys are going to apply the same principles and tactics do their own assessment,” Michael Ray, inspector in charge of cybercrime and analytics at the U.S. Postal Inspection Service said.
In his interview, Ray revealed that iCOP might have been surveilling people’s social media posts since at least 2014.
“So when you had face-to-face transactions, you didn’t have a public ledger, you didn’t have open-source information. You had to go through [the Treasury Department’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network] and get suspicious activity reports. You had to look at bank records that were subpoenaed”… Ray said.
The term “open source information” is just the government’s way of saying monitoring electronic communications or social media posts. It appears that Ray may have inadvertently admitted that the Postal Service was monitoring people’s social media posts as far back as 2014.
Most American’s will find it hard to believe that one of its most-trusted federal agencies has been turned into a militarized arm of the feds.
The Postal Service Is Also Involved in Biometric Surveillance
In 2019, DHS also began using local post offices to create a national biometric criminal background check program.
“In 2019, the USPS innocuously began installing fingerprint scanners in post offices so they could scan potential employees. The USPS used fingerprint scanners and the National Agency Check with Inquiries (NACI) to conduct in-depth background checks.”
The following year the Postal Service began working with the FBI to provide fingerprinting services to more than 100 post offices across the country. By 2021, the Federal News Network announced the Postal Service’s five-year plan to expand its biometric criminal background check program to more than 4,000 post offices.
A PR Newswire news release described it as a nationwide biometric network.
“This award (DHS grant) will enable the Postal Service to further leverage its nationwide retail network and information infrastructure to better serve federal agencies and the American public through broader access to biometric capture and in-person proofing services.”
From photographing and scanning everyone’s letters for law enforcement to social media spying and creating a national biometric network, DHS has managed to turn the USPS into another spy agency, complete with its own police force.
This article was originally published at MassPrivateI.
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