U.S.
Secret Service combed files of lawmaker probing agency
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[October 01, 2015]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Dozens of
U.S. Secret Service employees earlier this year combed the files of a
House lawmaker who had been critical of security lapses at the agency
and disclosed some of his personal information that was then published
in the media, a government report said on Wednesday.
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Some 45 Secret Service employees accessed the personal information
of Representative Jason Chaffetz, the Republican chairman of the
House Oversight Committee who was leading a probe of the agency,
said the report by the Department of Homeland Security's Inspector
General.
Soon after Chaffetz held a hearing on the Secret Service in March,
media reports appeared that Chaffetz had been rejected for a Secret
Service job in 2003. The initial publication was on April 2 in the
online publication the Daily Beast.
The Secret Service's assistant director, Edward Lowery, urged in a
March 31 internal email that information about Chaffetz be made
public, the inspector general's report said. It said the agency's
director, Joseph Clancy, was unaware of the behavior of those
digging into Chaffetz' files until shortly before the media
published reports about it.
"On behalf of the men and women of the United States Secret Service,
I again apologize to Representative Chaffetz for this wholly
avoidable and embarrassing misconduct," Clancy said in a statement.
Any employee who has committed misconduct would be held accountable,
he said.
Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson also issued an apology to
Chaffetz - his second since April. "Activities like those described
in the report must not, and will not, be tolerated," he said in a
statement. The Secret Service is part of the department. Privacy
laws prohibit the government from disclosing records about
individuals without their consent.
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Chaffetz said he had felt intimidated by what happened, but that he
would continue his committee's work.
"Certain lines should never be crossed. The unauthorized access and
distribution of my personal information crossed that line. It was a
tactic designed to intimidate and embarrass me and frankly, it is
intimidating," Chaffetz said in a statement.
In recent years the Secret Service has suffered a series of
embarrassing security and personal misconduct incidents. On March
24, Chaffetz held a hearing about allegations that two Secret
Service agents crashed into a White House barricade while driving
after a night of drinking.
(Reporting by Susan Cornwell; Editing by Cynthia Osterman and Eric
Walsh)
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