Trump Administration Expands Intelligence Access to Domestic Law Enforcement Data
The Trump administration is moving to loosen long-standing restrictions on sharing domestic law enforcement information with the CIA and other intelligence agencies, potentially opening access to databases containing hundreds of millions of records, including FBI case files, banking records, and investigative material involving law-abiding Americans. Officials said the changes are being justified as part of efforts to target drug cartels and other transnational criminal groups that the administration has designated as terrorists, but the process has reportedly unfolded with little transparency, limited legal debate, and minimal notice to Congress, raising significant civil-liberties concerns.
The broader policy debate over U.S. surveillance powers is reflected in parallel criticism of Section 702 reauthorization efforts, with privacy advocates arguing that existing authorities already enable excessive collection and weak safeguards for Americans' data. Proposed reforms in the SAFE Act are being presented as an attempt to impose stronger limits on surveillance and intelligence access, underscoring concern that the government is expanding intelligence collection and information-sharing authorities faster than oversight and privacy protections are being strengthened.
Timeline
Apr 1, 2026
Section 702 approaches scheduled expiration
Section 702 of FISA was described as nearing its April 2026 expiration, creating urgency around reform proposals such as the SAFE Act. The looming deadline framed the debate over warrant requirements, data broker access, and other surveillance limits.
Mar 17, 2026
Intelligence and defense entities begin technical connection to Compass
According to the report, intelligence and defense organizations had already taken technical steps to connect to the Compass database. The FBI and DEA resisted broader sharing, raising legal and operational concerns about the proposed access.
Mar 17, 2026
Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force is replaced
As part of a broader reorganization, the Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force was shut down and replaced by Homeland Security Task Forces. The change intensified a struggle over control of the Compass database and increased White House and DHS influence over transnational crime investigations.
Mar 17, 2026
Trump administration expands intelligence access to law enforcement data
The Trump administration moved to broaden intelligence agencies’ access to U.S. law enforcement records, potentially including the federal organized-crime database Compass, with limited public disclosure and little congressional notice. The effort was reportedly justified in part by designating certain cartels, gangs, and other groups as terrorist organizations.
Mar 17, 2026
Senators introduce the SAFE Act to reform Section 702
Senators Mike Lee and Dick Durbin introduced the SAFE Act as a proposal to reform Section 702 of FISA ahead of its April 2026 expiration. The bill would add limits such as requiring a warrant before the FBI reads content from Section 702 collections and restricting some related surveillance practices.
See the full picture in Mallory
Mallory subscribers get deeper analysis on every story, including:
Who’s affected and how
Deep-dive technical analysis
Actionable next steps for your team
IPs, domains, hashes, and more
Ask questions and take action on every story
Filter by topic, classification, timeframe
Get matching stories delivered automatically
Related Entities
Sources
Related Stories

Trump Administration Pushes Policies Favoring Cross-Border Data Flows and Expanded Surveillance Authorities
Reporting described a Trump administration directive ordering U.S. diplomats to **lobby against foreign “data sovereignty” and data-localization laws** that would constrain how U.S. technology companies handle non-U.S. citizens’ data. The cable argues such regulations would hinder **AI and cloud services**, disrupt global data flows, raise costs, and potentially increase cybersecurity risk, while also warning that localization could expand state control in ways that undermine civil liberties and enable censorship; diplomats were also instructed to track sovereignty proposals and promote mechanisms such as the **Global Cross-Border Privacy Rules Forum** to support “trusted” international data transfers. Separately, the administration was reported to be seeking a **clean reauthorization of FISA Section 702**, preserving the ability to compel providers to furnish communications of foreign targets abroad without a warrant and without adding a warrant requirement for queries involving U.S.-person data held in 702 databases. The debate is occurring amid documented compliance and civil-liberties concerns, including acknowledged **improper FBI queries** (e.g., related to January 6 and 2020 protest activity). Commentary on AI and democracy provided broader context on how AI-driven “arms races” and industry lobbying can reshape governance and citizen-state relationships, but it did not add incident-level cybersecurity details tied to the diplomatic cable or Section 702 reauthorization effort.
1 months ago
Debate Over Renewing FISA Section 702 Surveillance Powers
U.S. intelligence officials are pressing Congress to renew **Section 702 of FISA** without major changes, arguing that the surveillance authority remains essential for collecting foreign intelligence and producing actionable national security reporting. At a House Intelligence Committee hearing, senior officials including **CIA Director John Ratcliffe** and **FBI Director Kash Patel** publicly backed a clean extension, with some calling for a multi-year renewal rather than the White House’s reported 18-month proposal. The authority is facing a near-term expiration, while lawmakers remain divided over whether renewal should include stronger privacy protections such as a warrant requirement for searches involving Americans’ data. The debate is also tied to criticism of the **2024 FISA renewal**, which expanded the range of service providers that can be compelled to assist surveillance operations. **Sen. Ron Wyden** argued that the broader language could reach entities with access to communications infrastructure such as servers, routers, and similar equipment, and questioned whether the expansion produced meaningful intelligence value. Testimony cited in public session indicated the provision was used to collect foreign intelligence on personnel outside the United States, but officials declined to provide specifics in open hearing, leaving privacy advocates and some lawmakers unconvinced that the broadened authority justified the added surveillance reach.
5 days ago
U.S. Federal Agencies Expand Warrantless Commercial Surveillance and Location Data Purchases
The **Department of Homeland Security** and the **FBI** are expanding use of commercially available surveillance and data-tracking capabilities, prompting renewed scrutiny over privacy, civil liberties, and oversight. DHS is reportedly preparing to spend hundreds of millions of dollars on surveillance technology in 2026, including a **$1 billion** blanket purchase agreement with *Palantir* and additional investments in AI-enabled monitoring, mobile tracking, and tools from vendors such as *Cellebrite* and *Paragon Solutions*. Advocacy groups and lawmakers have warned that these programs broaden the government’s ability to scan faces, track cell phone activity, and monitor both immigrants and U.S. citizens while governance mechanisms fail to keep pace. The **FBI** separately confirmed it has resumed buying Americans’ location and other commercially available data from brokers, reviving a practice the bureau had previously said it was not actively pursuing. Director **Kash Patel** told lawmakers the agency uses purchased data in ways it says are consistent with the Constitution and the **Electronic Communications Privacy Act**, while Sen. **Ron Wyden** characterized the practice as a warrantless workaround to Fourth Amendment protections. Reporting on DHS also indicates declining transparency, with Privacy Impact Assessment filings falling sharply and the department’s inspector general accusing the agency of obstructing audits tied to biometric data management and immigration enforcement, reinforcing concerns that federal surveillance capabilities are growing faster than meaningful oversight.
1 months ago