| Connected Entity | Relationship Type |
Strength
(mentions)
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Documents | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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person
Congress
|
Official testimony |
5
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1 |
| Date | Event Type | Description | Location | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025-11-17 | N/A | James Clapper testified before Congress stating the NSA did not collect phone data in America. | Washington D.C. (implied) | View |
| 2025-11-17 | N/A | James Clapper testimony before Congress denying data collection. | Washington D.C. (implied) | View |
| 2025-11-17 | N/A | James Clapper testimony to Congress denying data collection | Washington D.C. (implied) | View |
| 2025-11-17 | N/A | James Clapper testimony before Congress stating NSA did not collect phone data. | Congress | View |
| 2014-01-29 | N/A | The Washington Post published a transcript of Clapper's testimony about the NSA. | N/A | View |
| 2014-01-06 | N/A | An FAS article by Stephen Aftergood was published, discussing Clapper's earlier closed-door testi... | N/A | View |
This document is a page of endnotes (p. 318) from a book authored by Edward Jay Epstein, likely 'How America Lost Its Secrets'. The notes provide citations for Chapter 14, 'The Crime Scene Investigation,' detailing sources related to Edward Snowden, the NSA, James Clapper, and comparisons to Lee Harvey Oswald. The page is stamped 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019806', indicating it was part of a document production for the House Oversight Committee.
This document is page 218 from the book 'How America Lost Its Secrets' (likely by Edward Jay Epstein), stamped as evidence by the House Oversight Committee. It details the security risks inherent in the NSA's outsourcing of intelligence work to private contractors like Booz Allen Hamilton and Dell, highlighting a 'revolving door' of high-level executives moving to private firms. The text specifically cites Edward Snowden's ability to move between contractors (Dell to Booz Allen) as a realization of security vulnerabilities warned about in NSA memos dating back to 2005.
This document is page 197 from a book (Chapter 19: 'The Rise of the NSA'), likely 'How America Lost Its Secrets' by Edward Jay Epstein (indicated by ISBN and filename 'Epst'). It discusses the NSA's dominance in communication intercepts and the vulnerability exposed by Edward Snowden in 2013 due to the agency's reliance on civilian technicians. The page bears a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT' Bates stamp, indicating it was produced as evidence for a congressional investigation.
This document discusses the psychological concept of "confirmation theory," illustrating it with the public's reaction to Lee Harvey Oswald and applying it to the polarized views on Edward Snowden. It also addresses the inherent deception within intelligence agencies, referencing Winston Churchill and citing James Clapper's testimony to the Senate Intelligence Committee regarding NSA data collection.
This document is page 84 from the book 'How America Lost Its Secrets' (likely by Edward Jay Epstein), included in a House Oversight production. It details the coordination between Edward Snowden, Glenn Greenwald, and Laura Poitras regarding the release of classified NSA documents, specifically a FISA warrant concerning Verizon records. The text highlights Snowden's micromanagement of the leak process, his intent to expose James Clapper's alleged perjury before Congress, and the logistics of meeting in Hong Kong.
This document appears to be a page from a House Oversight Committee production (ID: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_025932). It contains the text of a forwarded email featuring a satirical, scripted dialogue between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump. The text lists numerous conservative grievances and scandals associated with the Obama/Clinton era, including Benghazi, Solyndra, the Iran Nuclear Deal, and the Uranium One deal. While the user requested 'Epstein-related' analysis, Jeffrey Epstein is not mentioned in the text of this specific page.
An email document sent by Philip Kafka containing a forwarded political joke formatted as a dialogue between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump. The text lists various controversies associated with Clinton (IRS, Uranium One, White House furniture) and ends with commentary criticizing Democratic voters. The document bears a House Oversight Bates stamp.
This document analyzes the NSA's outsourcing practices, highlighting the security vulnerabilities that allowed Edward Snowden to steal classified files in 2013. It details the economic and bureaucratic incentives for outsourcing, the ignore warnings regarding security risks, and the lack of penalties for contractors like Booz Allen despite significant security failures.
This document appears to be page 154 of a manuscript titled 'Chapter Nineteen: The Rise of the NSA.' It discusses the history of US intelligence, specifically focusing on the impact of the Edward Snowden leaks in 2013 and tracing the history of US code-breaking back to World War I and the 'Black Chamber' in New York City under Herbert O. Yardley. The document bears a House Oversight Bates stamp, indicating it was part of a document production for a congressional investigation.
This document page is a narrative account detailing the coordination between Edward Snowden and journalists Glenn Greenwald and Laura Poitras regarding the 2013 NSA leaks. It describes Snowden's specific instructions to divide stories between The Guardian and The Washington Post, his transfer of classified documents (including a FISA warrant regarding Verizon), and his insistence that the journalists travel to Hong Kong to meet him. NOTE: While the user prompt identifies this as 'Epstein-related,' the text is exclusively about the Edward Snowden NSA leaks, though the 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT' stamp suggests it may be part of a larger government document production.
This document is page 231 of a report, identified by the footer 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020383', and consists of a list of citations. The citations reference a range of sources from 1900 to 2015, focusing on intelligence, whistleblowing, and historical events, with multiple references to Edward Snowden, Lee Harvey Oswald, and Director of National Intelligence James Clapper. Notably, it cites two books by Edward Jay Epstein: one comparing Snowden to Lee Harvey Oswald and another on deception involving the KGB and CIA.
Published by Washington Post.
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