LOVEINT is the practice ofintelligence service employees making use of their extensive monitoring capabilities to spy on their love interest orspouse. The term was coined in resemblance to intelligence terminology such asSIGINT,COMINT orHUMINT.
The term LOVEINT originated at theNSA, where approximately one such incident is reported per year. In 2013, eight had been reported in the past decade, and they were the majority of unauthorized accesses reported by the NSA.[1] Most incidents are self-reported, for example during apolygraph test. The NSA sanctions them with administrative action up to termination of employment.[2][3][4][5] In five of the cases, the NSA employee resigned, preempting any administrative action. In two other cases, they retired.[1] The worst administrative sanction handed out was "a reduction in pay for two months, a reduction in grade, and access to classified information being revoked." One case was forwarded to theDepartment of Justice, which declined to prosecute.[6]
In September 2007, it was reported that an employee of the GermanFederal Intelligence Service abused his monitoring powers to read the email-traffic of his wife's lover.[7]