Fwd: [Spooks] Missing PC Held Trove of Secrets

/ dave / arouet at winternet.com
Sat Apr 22 03:26:21 PDT 2000


Yet another high-security laptop computer gone missing from a major world power (this makes at least four?). If the thieves had any sense, they'd use them as bargaining chips (pun intended) for third-world debt relief.

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/ dave /

-------- Original Message --------

Subject: [Spooks] Missing PC Held Trove of Secrets Date: Sat, 22 Apr 2000 00:13:41 -0500 (CDT) To: spooks at qth.net

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A59527-2000Apr21.html

By Steven Mufson Washington Post Staff Writer Saturday, April 22, 2000 ; A01

The laptop computer missing from the State Department contained thousands of classified documents about arms proliferation issues, including highly sensitive information about the sources and methods of U.S. intelligence collection, State Department officials said yesterday.

The State Department still has not found the computer, which vanished in January from a conference room, according to a senior State Department official. Its disappearance was reported to the department's Bureau of Diplomatic Security in early February, according to another official.

If the laptop was stolen for the information it contained about the spread of sophisticated weapons technology, the theft would represent one of the most serious single losses of classified information ever by the United States, said a source familiar with the case.

Several sources in the department said that Secretary of State Madeleine K. Albright is "furious" about the security lapse and is once again considering the transfer of responsibility for top-secret information from the Bureau of Intelligence and Research (INR) to the Bureau of Diplomatic Security.

Within the State Department, INR handles all government intelligence reports classified as "sensitive compartmented information," while diplomatic security handles less sensitive documents with lower levels of classification. The laptop contained "code word" information, a classification higher than top secret.

Many State Department security officers, members of Congress and other government intelligence officials have been asking why sensitive information about the spread of missile technology and nuclear, chemical and biological weapons was stored in a portable laptop instead of a fixed desktop computer.

After The Washington Post first reported that the laptop was missing, the chairman of the House International Relations Committee, Rep. Benjamin A. Gilman (R-N.Y.), said he would hold hearings on allegations of lax security at the State Department.

A senior State Department official said yesterday the laptop was never supposed to leave the INR conference room in which it was kept. The senior official said a laptop was used instead of a desktop computer so that different people with clearance could use the computer and access its information without having to switch chairs.

State Department officials said they still hope to recover the laptop if it was stolen simply for the value of the computer hardware rather than the information it stored. The FBI has joined the search and the examination of suspects, including contractors who have been renovating the area, the official said.

A person familiar with the laptop incident said an official had propped open the door of the secure conference room, that contractors lacking security clearances were working in the sensitive area, that the contractors were not properly escorted, and that the laptop had not been properly secured.

The laptop incident is the latest of a string of embarrassing security breaches at the State Department. Last year, counterintelligence officials from the FBI discovered a Russian spy lurking outside the department and, later, an eavesdropping device carefully planted in the wall molding of a conference room inside.

In 1998, a man dressed in a tweed coat strolled into an executive secretary's office, six doors down from the office of Secretary of State Albright, helped himself to a sheaf of classified briefing materials in plain view of two secretaries, and walked out. The man was never identified and the materials never recovered.

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