The FBI is requesting $21m and 80 new employees in a bid to investigate emerging tech that could help the agency combat cybercrime.
In a budget request for fiscal year 2018, sent on 21st June, Andrew McCabe, acting director of the FBI, testified to the White House that the agency is facing what it believes are significant challenges in gaining access to digital information â even when it has the legal authority to do so. This notably includes cases that involve âdrug traffickers using virtual currencies to obscure their transactionsâ.
It is also the same narrative that the FBIâs former Director James Comey put forth last month before the Senate Judiciary Committee.
The challenge, the agency has said, is that the FBI now requires more financial resources to investigate technologies and decipher information transmitted on the darknet. Elsewhere, it is also engaging in dialogues with companies that provide such technology to educate them on the âcorrosive effectsâ that information inaccessibility has on âpublic safety and the rule of lawâ.
Earlier this year, the privacy-encrypted digital currency Monero (XMR), for example, drew attention from FBI for similar reasons.
A special agent working at the FBIâs Cyber Division in New York City said at an event that the agency has concerns such technology will set roadblocks for criminal investigations.
âDeveloping alternative technical methods is typically a time-consuming, expensive and uncertain process,â the agency said.
FBI image via Shutterstock