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Winehole23
10-02-2015, 01:54 AM
A day after US President Barack Obama praised the people who protect him, a new report did just the opposite, reigniting controversy at the US Secret Service.

An investigation (https://www.oig.dhs.gov/assets/Mga/OIG_mga-092515.pdf) by the US Department of Homeland Security's Inspector General (IG) found that members of the Secret Service accessed the agency's database at least 60 times seeking information on Republican Congressman Jason Chaffetz in what appears to have been an attempt to smear him.

"We have concluded that a vast majority of those who had accessed the information did so in violation of the Privacy Act," stated the report.
On at least one occasion, the investigation found an individual disclosed confidential personal data, including the Congressman's social security number, to an outside source.

Chaffetz had been critical of the agency following a series of gaffes and security breaches around the White House.
In September, 2014, an American war veteran scaled the north fence and managed to make it through the front door of the White House before being tackled by agents. That prompted Secret Service director Julia Pierson to step down. In another incident, two inebriated Secret Service officers reportedly crashed a car into a security barrier.

During a Congressional committee hearing in March, Chaffetz attacked the agency's responses to the security mishaps chiding Pierson's successor, Joe Clancy, saying, "I want to let you know that 'I don't know' is not going to fly in today's hearing."

Following that, Ed Lowery, an assistant director at the US Secret Service, said in an email to a colleague, "Some information that he [Chaffetz] might find embarrassing needs to get out. Just to be fair." Two days later, the Daily Beast published an article reporting that Congressman Chaffetz's employment application had been rejected by the Secret Service in 2003.
Chaffetz's office immediately demanded an investigation into the leak. The IG report does not identify the individual responsible.

In a statement following the report's release, Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson urged Clancy to take "appropriate action" against the individuals involved.

Meanwhile, Chaffetz issued a statement saying the data breach, "was a tactic designed to intimidate and embarrass me and frankly, it is intimidating."

http://www.aljazeera.com/blogs/americas/2015/10/secret-service-leaked-congressman-private-data-151001040238074.html

Winehole23
10-02-2015, 01:55 AM
Dozens of Secret Service personnel inappropriately accessed private information on a member of Congress who was conducting oversight of the agency, in a pattern the Department of Homeland Security's watchdog called "deeply disturbing."

The DHS Inspector General on Wednesday released the results of an investigation (https://www.oig.dhs.gov/assets/Mga/OIG_mga-092515.pdf) into who leaked information (http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/04/02/congressman-who-oversees-secret-service-was-rejected-by-secret-service.html) about how Rep. Jason Chaffetz (R-Utah), who conducts oversight of the Secret Service, had been rejected for a position in the agency years ago.

The report found that 45 different Secret Service employees in a variety of different locations accessed the record, but only four of them may have had a legitimate reason to do so.

The episode "reflects extremely poor judgment and a lack of care" by a number of employees, said Inspector General John Roth.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/secret-service-chaffetz_560c5287e4b0768127009e98

Winehole23
10-02-2015, 01:56 AM
Rep. Elijah Cummings (D-Md.), the ranking member of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, said the Secret Service owed Chaffetz "an immediate apology and must implement the strictest of disciplinary measures as soon as possible."

boutons_deux
10-02-2015, 05:05 AM
"strictest of disciplinary measures"

:lol :lol the MIC, the militarized police, the FBI/NSA/CIA security apparatus are totally beyond govt control. THEY control govt.

boutons_deux
08-09-2016, 05:27 PM
Watchdog: Dallas woman discovers new Secret Service sex scandals through public information requests

"A lot of people think I'm nuts to pursue this."

The speaker is a self-described Dallas stay-at-home mom who spent $100,000 in legal fees to expose a culture of corruption in the U.S. Secret Service.

She filed 89 Freedom of Information Acts (89!) and discovered enough Secret Service scandals and cover-ups that even Bob Woodward would be impressed.

For this, she got very little public attention. Until now.

Meet Malia Litman. A retired lawyer and wife of noted Internet entrepreneur David Litman, founder of hotels.com and now CEO of getaroom.com.

She sits at her table in her North Dallas mansion during The Watchdog team visit.

Hors d'oeuvres were set out before we arrive — something my colleague Marina Trahan Martinez and I are not used to — cucumber slices, cookies, carrots, celery, hummus and pita bread. Her story is so riveting, we don't touch the food.

When the first Secret Service sex scandals broke a few years ago, she grew curious. A former senior partner at Thompson & Knight law firm in Dallas, she knew that federal law allows us to see government documents.

She began filing requests with the U.S. Department Homeland Security to learn of any incidents of agent misbehavior in the Secret Service, any investigations and disciplinary action.

I'll skip ahead to the end of her multi-year legal battle that ensued. She won. In the end, she received 3,914 pages, some of them so hot they almost burn the fingers.


Here, though, are lowlights of behind-the-scenes mishaps of our vaunted Secret Service.



A culture of "wheels up; rings off" meant even married agents could party on foreign trips.
Secret Service K-9 units brought their dogs into their hotel room, which the dogs trashed. The agents made payoffs so the incident wouldn't be reported.
A agent who missed his flight later showed up drunk with two prostitutes. He was not disciplined.
Agents "engaged" with prostitutes in Amsterdam's red-light district during an advance team trip.
A supervisor choked a female subordinate because she rejected his sexual advances.
A supervisor offered a subordinate a larger office in return for sex.
A supervisor took a subordinate to a sex show while on duty.
A male agent's gun was stolen by a male prostitute he solicited online. The gun was never recovered.
A manager in the National Threat Assessment Center forced employees to drink alcohol in his office "so that he could trust them." The same manager was accused of multiple incidents of sexual harassment.




http://www.dallasnews.com/investigations/watchdog/20160805-watchdog-dallas-woman-discovers-new-secret-service-sex-scandals-through-public-information-requests.ece