Senate intelligence committee chairwoman
Dianne Feinstein said she was disappointed with the outcome
A CIA internal
watchdog has cleared agency officers of improperly accessing the
computers of members of the US Senate intelligence committee.
It said CIA officers acted reasonably in searching computers
after concerns they contained classified material.
The finding contradicts allegations from lawmakers and an
admission from the agency's own inspector general.
The allegations came during the intelligence committee's
investigation into claims of torture by the CIA.
'Inappropriate access'
An internal board launched an inquiry after the CIA appealed
against findings by David Buckley, the agency's inspector general,
that employees had "improperly" gained access to computers used by
Senate staff.
It concluded that although there had been some "inappropriate
access" to a secured network being used by Senate workers, there had
been no wrongdoing and no law violated.
Dianne Feinstein, the chair of the Senate intelligence committee,
who has clashed with the CIA over the issue, rejected the board's
findings.
"I'm disappointed that no-one at the CIA will be held
accountable," she said in a statement.
"The decision was made to search committee computers, and someone
should be found responsible for those actions," she added.
The board's conclusion comes a week after Mr Buckley said he was
stepping down from his post, but officials said his resignation was
unrelated to anything he had investigated.
The Senate staff had been using computers at a CIA facility to
examine documents related to the agency's interrogation practices
following the 9/11 attacks on the US.
Those documents formed the basis of
a damning report, released in December 2014, which found the CIA
had carried out "brutal" interrogations of al-Qaeda suspects.
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