Rawstory:
The State Department has lost track of as many as 400 laptop computers, an internal audit ordered by the Inspector General has found.
The State Department has lost track of as many as 400 laptop computers, an internal audit ordered by the Inspector General has found.
"The importance of safeguarding official laptops and office equipment containing sensitive information is not a new concern," said State Department overseer Rep. Nita M. Lowey (D-NY) through a spokesperson to CQ Politics. "I intend to review the facts about this situation."
The computers belong to the Anti-Terrorism Assistance Program, run by the Bureau of Diplomatic Security, which protects diplomats during stateside visits and trains and equips foreign police, intelligence and security forces. Anonymous sources say that officials are "urgently" scouring offices in the Washington, D.C. area to account for the equipment.
The State Department is not keeping good records of its inventory, official John Streufert told a panel at a February 6 meeting on the security of "personal identification information," citing a "significant deficiency." Mark Duda, the Inspector General's representative, also warned of scandal like the one that erupted in May of 2006, after the home of a Veterans Administration employee was burglarized and a laptop he was using for a work project, containing names, Social Security numbers and birthdates of more than 26 million people, was taken.
"It’s the worst flaw you can have in management control," said a "close observer."
1 comment:
Don't look for much to be left behind when the Bush Administration leaves office. Most of these crooks will be selling Government laptops, chair, toilet seats, computers, rugs, pencils, pens, paper, drapes, door knobs and anything they can carry out. Yes look for the sales on EBay of all the stolen goods. Some offices might be completely empty when the new President comes in. I just hope no one leases any weed or cocaine behind.
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