TURN ON CNN
>inb4 source
foxnews.com
>NSA whistleblower Wayne Lambright committed suicide by shooting himself five times in the back of the head during a botched robbery where nothing was taken.
>The FBI later found that Lambright had accessed the "full range of encryption" used by Google.
>The documents also reveal that the NSA has a similar policy of targeting the world's key banks. The agency's chief of staff, Thomas Drake, admitted in a Senate hearing that he had access to "full extent" of the bank data stored by HSBC and Deutsche Bank. He told lawmakers that he knew full detail about thousands of millions of dollars of assets frozen at the bank since 2008, including accounts held by President Barack Obama's predecessor. A spokesman for the UK's Bank of England told Newsweek that it had not been a target of the NSA's electronic surveillance.
>This isn't the first time the NSA has broken privacy laws. In 2009, Wired revealed that the agency collected the phone records of phone, fax, Internet, and telemarketing customers around the world, including American citizens in China. That collection, according to the company, amounted to 6,500 phone calls a day.
>The documents, which remain classified and largely unavailable to the public, also suggest that, in the 1990s, the NSA was using the technology produced by Booz Allen Hamilton to target government officials, business leaders, and activists.