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| Subject: | [ISN] CREM goes AWOL in Albuquerque |
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| Date: | Mon, 23 Aug 2004 02:30:19 -0500 (CDT) |
http://www.abqtrib.com/archives/news04/082004_news_crem.shtml By James W. Brosnan Scripps Howard News Service August 20, 2004 WASHINGTON - Now it's the nuclear security watchdogs - in Albuquerque - who have lost track of CREM. The National Nuclear Security Administration, the agency created because of concerns over lack security at the nation's nuclear labs, said late Thursday there is an "accounting discrepancy" involving three electronic copies of the same classified document at NNSA offices in Albuquerque. The classified removable electronic media, or CREM, did contain nuclear weapons data, NNSA spokesman Bryan Wilkes confirmed. He would not provide any more details or say why the document was at the Albuquerque offices of the agency. The agency has asked the FBI to assist the Department of Energy's office of Security and Safety Performance Assessment, an independent office reporting directly to Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham, to investigate the missing CREM. Bill Elwell, a spokesman for the Albuquerque FBI, said Thursday: "A case was referred to us by DOE and we are investigating. That's all I can say." The FBI got the case early this week, he said. About 400 employees work at the NNSA office, Wilkes said. No disciplinary action has been taken against anyone so far, but all classified operations involving CREM have been halted, he said. Wilkes said the discrepancy was discovered last week as part of Abraham's order to all DOE facilities to stop operations involving CREM and conduct a complete inventory of such media. That stemmed from the reported disappearance of a disk at Los Alamos National Laboratory, which some authorities now believe was the result of an accounting error. The Los Alamos incident renewed calls by some lawmakers to terminate the University of California's contract to operate the New Mexico lab. The latest incident involves employees working directly for the federal government. "Secretary Abraham's decision to require an inventory of all CREM in the Department of Energy was a prudent one," said NNSA Administrator Linton Brooks in a statement. "I am disappointed that we have found another case of lax procedures in protecting classified information. I expect NNSA employees, both federal and contractor, to adhere to the highest standards of performance." _________________________________________ Open Source Vulnerability Database (OSVDB) Everything is Vulnerable - http://www.osvdb.org/
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