by Mac Slavo, December 13th, 2016
The Pentagon’s investigation of defense and intelligence employees who downloaded child pornography is being criticized in Congress after the Department of Defense acknowledged that its investigators failed to check thoroughly whether its employees were on a list of suspected porn viewers.In 2006, the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency, which conducts Internet pornography investigations, produced a list of 5,200 Pentagon employees suspected of viewing child pornography and asked the Pentagon to review it. But the Pentagon checked only about two-thirds of the names, unearthing roughly 300 defense and intelligence employees who allegedly had viewed child pornography on their work or home computers. The defense investigators failed to check an additional 1,700 names on the list…Members of Congress and other officials say it raises additional concerns when such materials are accessed by employees with high-level security classifications, because it leaves them vulnerable to blackmail.
Related Fake News Comes From Our Own Govt’ – Ron Paul Fires Back on Propaganda Charges
Related Senate Quietly Passes The “Countering Disinformation And Propaganda Act”
Stillness in the Storm Editor’s note: Did you find a spelling error or grammar mistake? Do you think this article needs a correction or update? Or do you just have some feedback? Send us an email at [email protected]. Thank you for reading.
Source:
Reader Interactions
Trackbacks
-
-
[…] Obama took office as POTUS. In a handful of cases, prosecutions were successfully sought while the rest were swept under the rug. All that remains of the page that housed the Inspector General’s report on Operation Flicker […]
[…] Obama took office as POTUS. In a handful of cases, prosecutions were successfully sought while the rest were swept under the rug. All that remains of the page that housed the Inspector General’s report on Operation Flicker […]