DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE | OFFICE OF THE INSPECTOR GENERAL
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE December 17, 2020
DOJ OIG Releases Report on the FBI’s Strategy and Efforts to Disrupt Illegal Dark Web Activities
Department of Justice (DOJ) Inspector General Michael E. Horowitz announced today the release of a report examining the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s (FBI) strategy and efforts to disrupt illegal dark web activities. The term “dark web” refers to a part of the Internet that cannot be accessed through standard web browsers but requires specific software, configurations, or authorization. Although many users access the dark web for legitimate purposes, because of the anonymity it provides it is also used for criminal activity, including the trafficking of drugs, firearms, weapons of mass destruction, child sexual abuse material, and malware, among other illicit goods and services.
The DOJ Office of the Inspector General (OIG) found that the FBI does not maintain a bureau-wide dark web strategy and instead relies on its operational units to execute individual dark web investigative, tool development, and acquisition strategies. We believe this decentralized effort could be enhanced by establishing a coordinated FBI-wide dark web approach that considers the enterprise level needs of FBI units operating on the dark web.
The OIG’s specific findings in the report released today include: