Surveillance

Feds Bugged Sharyl Attkisson's Computer

"Worse than anything Nixon ever did."

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The intrusions into former CBS News correspondent Sharyl Attkisson's computers constitute the narrative spine of the reporter's new book "Stonewalled: My Fight for Truth Against the Forces of Obstruction, Intimidation, and Harassment in Obama's Washington." The book starts with not really a word, but a sound: "Reeeeeeeeeee."

That's the noise that Attkisson's Apple computer was making at 3:14 one morning. A Toshiba laptop computer issued by CBS News did the same thing a day earlier, around 4 a.m. All this goes down in October 2012, right in the midst of the Benghazi story. A person who's identified as "Jeff" warns Attkisson: "I've been reading your reports online about Benghazi. It's pretty incredible. Keep at it. But you'd better watch out." "Jeff," like several of the names in "Stonewalled," is a pseudonym. …

Next big moment: Attkisson gets her computer checked out by someone identified as "Number One," who's described as a "confidential source inside the government." A climactic meeting takes place at a McDonald's outlet at which Attkisson and "Number One" "look around" for possibly suspicious things. Finding nothing, they talk. "First just let me say again I'm shocked. Flabbergasted. All of us are. This is outrageous. Worse than anything Nixon ever did. I wouldn't have believed something like this could happen in the United States of America." That's all coming from "Number One."

The breaches on Attkisson's computer, says this source, are coming from a "sophisticated entity that used commercial, nonattributable spyware that's proprietary to a government agency: either the CIA, FBI, the Defense Intelligence Agency, or the National Security Agency (NSA)." Attkisson learns from "Number One" that one intrusion was launched from the WiFi at a Ritz Carlton Hotel and the "intruders discovered my Skype account handle, stole the password, activated the audio, and made heavy use of it, presumably as a listening tool."