Pubdate: Wed, 5 May 1999 Source: Associated Press Copyright: 1999 Associated Press Author: Laurie Asseo STATE AUTHORITIES' WIRETAPPING UP WASHINGTON - The number of wiretaps authorized by state courts rose by 24 percent last year, while the number of federally authorized wiretaps held steady, the government reported Wednesday. State courts authorized 763 wiretaps, compared with 617 the previous year, according to figures released by the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts. Federal courts authorized 566 such surveillance actions, about even with the 569 authorized in 1997. That adds up to 1,329 wiretaps authorized by federal and state courts in 1998, an increase from 1,186 last year. A decade earlier, in 1988, there were 738 total wiretaps authorized, including 293 permitted by federal courts and 445 by state courts. Buggings in New York made up almost half of the state-authorized wiretaps, with 373. New Jersey was next with 84, Pennsylvania followed with 68, California had 52 and Florida had 44. Seventy-two percent of all wiretaps were aimed at catching narcotics offenders, while 12 percent were aimed at racketeering and 7 percent at gambling. New York City's Special Narcotics Bureau got authorization for 186 drug-related buggings. Telephone wiretaps made up 40 percent of all devices installed, while 46 percent were electronic wiretaps of digital display pagers, voice pagers, cellular phones and e-mail. Forty-two states, the District of Columbia, the Virgin Islands and the federal government have laws allowing courts to permit some form of bugging, and last year 25 states reported use of such surveillance. The average length of an initial wiretap was 28 days, and the average length of an authorized extension was 27 days. Courts approved 1,164 extensions of existing wiretaps last year. Officials said 3,450 people were arrested as a result of wiretaps that ended in 1998, and 26 percent of them were convicted. Federal and state judges are required to report to the Administrative Office all applications for wiretap authorizations, and prosecutors must report when a wiretap is ended. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea