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AP
FoxNews.com
Retrieved May20, 2009
Go to Original Article
The FBI is conducting a criminal investigation of the matter, according to
Rep. Edolphus Towns, D-N.Y., chairman of the House Oversight and Government
Reform Committee, and senior committee Republican Darrell Issa of California.
The National Archives lost a computer hard drive containing massive amounts
of sensitive data from the Clinton administration, including Social Security
numbers, addresses, and Secret Service and White House operating procedures,
congressional officials said Tuesday.
One of former Vice President Al Gore's three daughters is among those whose
Social Security numbers were on the drive. Other information includes logs of
events, social gatherings and political records.
The FBI is conducting a criminal investigation of the matter, according to
Rep. Edolphus Towns, D-N.Y., chairman of the House Oversight and Government
Reform Committee, and senior committee Republican Darrell Issa of
California.
The lawmakers said they learned of the loss from the inspector general of the
National Archives and Records Administration. The drive is missing from the
Archives facility in College Park, Md., a Washington suburb. The drive was lost
between October 2008 and March 2009 and contained 1 terabyte of data -- enough
material to fill millions of books.
Towns said he would have the FBI and inspector general brief committee
members so they can "begin to understand the magnitude of the security breach
and all of the steps being taken to recover the lost information.
"The committee will do everything possible to prevent compromising the
integrity of the FBI's criminal investigation while we fulfill our
constitutional duty to investigate the compromised security protocols," he
said.
Issa called for the Archives acting director, Adrienne Thomas, to appear
before a committee panel Thursday to "explain how such an outrageous breach of
security happened."
"This egregious breach raises significant questions regarding the
effectiveness of the security protocols that are in place at the National
Archives and Records Administration," he said.
Issa said the hard drive was moved from a "secure" storage area to a
workspace while it was in use. The inspector general explained that at least 100
badge-holders had access to the area where the hard drive was left
unsecured.
Besides those with official access to sensitive material, the inspector
general said janitors, visitors, interns and others passed through the area,
according to Issa. Further, the workspace is in an area that Archives workers
pass through on their way to the bathroom and the door often is left open for
ventilation.
"The IG is investigating the situation as a crime with the assistance of the
Department of Justice and the Secret Service but they have not yet determined if
the loss was the result of theft or accidental loss," Issa said.
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