| Justice Department probes its own role in spying program(AP)
 Updated: 2006-02-16 10:41
 
 The Justice Department has begun an internal inquiry into the conduct of its 
lawyers who examined the Bush administration's domestic eavesdropping program, 
the department has disclosed.  The investigation is being conducted by the Office of Professional 
Responsibility, or OPR, which reviews allegations of misconduct within the law 
enforcement agency.  
 
 
 Marshall Jarrett, the office's counsel, acknowledged the investigation in a 
letter to Rep. Maurice Hinchey. Jarrett's letter did not specify which of the 
agency's actions or employees are being examined.
 |  American Bar 
 Association President Michael Greco addresses the midyear conference of 
 the nation's largest lawyers group Friday, Feb. 10, 2006, in Chicago. 
 Greco was to discusses the National Security Agency's controversial 
 domestic surveillance program and releases a report by an ABA task force 
 that examines whether the eavesdropping program was legal. 
 [AP]
 |  "You asked this office to investigate the Department of Justice's role in 
authorizing, approving and auditing certain surveillance activities of the 
National Security Agency, and whether such activities are permissible under 
existing law. For your information, we have initiated an investigation," Jarrett 
wrote.  Hinchey is one of a few dozen Democratic lawmakers who have been highly 
critical of the eavesdropping program first revealed in December.  "We're very happy that the OPR is doing it, because it seems on the surface 
certain illegal actions may have taken place," Hinchey, one of Congress' most 
outspoken critics of President George W. Bush, said Wednesday.  
 
 
 |