Pubdate: Fri, 09 Nov 2001 Source: Wall Street Journal (US) Copyright: 2001 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Contact: http://www.wsj.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/487 Author: Jess Bravin, Chris Adams ASHCROFT UNVEILS RESTRUCTURING OF FBI, IMMIGRATION AGENCIES Politics & Policy WASHINGTON -- With the war on terrorism stretching its resources, Attorney General John Ashcroft said the Justice Department will pull back from routine activities to focus on preventing terrorist attacks. "We cannot do everything we once did because our lives now depend on us doing a few things very well," Mr. Ashcroft told department officials gathered in the ceremonial hall at the agency's headquarters. "The department will not be all things to all people." Outlining what he called a "wartime reorganization and mobilization" plan, Mr. Ashcroft said he intended to cut 10% of the agency's headquarters staff and reallocate the positions as additional agents, prosecutors and analysts in the field. He said he wanted to reallocate 10% of the department's budget, about $2.5 billion, from normal functions to the counterterrorism campaign. Mr. Ashcroft focused on the Immigration and Naturalization Service, which he said would be restructured to "lead the campaign to detain, prosecute and deport terrorist aliens." Revamping the INS was under way well before the attack Sept. 11, and in fact has been in the works, in one form or another, for years. INS Under Fire The INS has been under fire for its inability to prevent terrorists from getting in and staying in the country, but the agency's problems are far more systemic, according to numerous reviews. The General Accounting Office, Congress's investigative arm, said recently that despite some efforts to improve "uncoordinated, overlapping" functions, the agency's "organizational structure is still in a state of flux." House Judiciary Committee Chairman F. James Sensenbrenner Jr. (R., Wis.) was less oblique, calling the INS "the most dysfunctional federal agency around." Mr. Ashcroft already has submitted an INS reorganization plan to the White House's Office of Management and Budget. He said the plan, which he expects to release publicly soon, would separate the agency's immigration-services function from its role in protecting the border. Other efforts under way on Capitol Hill are more radical, including splitting the agency into two. FBI Reorganization The Federal Bureau of Investigation, whose major bungles in recent years have brought criticism from both the left and right, also will be reorganized, Mr. Ashcroft said. Several reviews, including one headed by William Webster, a former FBI and Central Intelligence Agency director, began before Sept. 11, and Mr. Ashcroft said a plan would be issued by the end of the year. The attorney general gave few details of how the reorganization would affect routine operations, but an FBI official said it plans to shift about half of its 805 agents assigned to local-crime task forces to counterterrorism work. An additional 250 federal agents and 1,090 local officers are on the task forces, which target violent crimes, fugitives and street gangs. Senate Judiciary Chairman Patrick Leahy (D., Vt.) applauded the effort, but asked what happened to "the tremendous investment in FBI counterterrorism resources that the Congress made during the past decade. Just as the lessons of Pearl Harbor led to the creation of the CIA, a review of what happened before Sept. 11" could lead to changes, Mr. Leahy said in a letter to Mr. Ashcroft. Effect on DEA The head of the Drug Enforcement Administration, Asa Hutchinson, said "the dust is still settling" on the plan, but he expected that FBI agents who work with the DEA on narcotics cases would be moved to counterterrorism, leaving his agency "to pick up the slack." Deputy Attorney General Larry Thompson, the department's No. 2 official, said the department had implemented some of the new powers it received from antiterrorism legislation approved last month, and said that prosecutors would put thwarting terrorism above convicting criminals. "Our overriding priority," he said, is "to prevent further attacks, and to disrupt terrorist cells before they can do more harm, even if it means potentially compromising a criminal prosecution." A department official said that could mean "moving a case early, rather than waiting for a bigger case to develop." Mr. Thompson said that sharing of information between law-enforcement and intelligence agencies -- a focus of the antiterrorism bill -- had begun. Each day, the FBI provides a summary of information derived from grand-jury investigations and criminal wiretaps to the CIA and other agencies, he said. - -- Gary Fields contributed to this article. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens