Drug raid yields Los Alamos documents By LARA JAKES JORDAN, Associated Press 
Writer 
18 minutes ago
 


WASHINGTON - A drug bust at a trailer park in New Mexico turned up what 
appeared to be classified documents taken from the Los Alamos nuclear weapons 
laboratory, authorities said Tuesday. 

ADVERTISEMENT
 
Local police found the documents while arresting a man suspected of domestic 
violence and dealing methamphetamine from his mobile home, said Sgt. Chuck Ney 
of the Los Alamos, N.M., Municipal Police Department. The documents were 
discovered during a search of the man's records for evidence of his drug 
business, Ney said.

Police alerted the        FBI to the secret documents, which agents traced back 
to a woman linked to the drug dealer, officials said. The woman is a contract 
employee at Los Alamos National Laboratory, according to an FBI official who 
spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitive nature of the case.

The official would not describe the documents except to say that they appeared 
to contain classified material and were stored on a computer file.

FBI special agent Bill Elwell in Albuquerque, N.M., confirmed that a search 
warrant was executed on Friday night, but he refused to discuss details.

"We do have an investigation with regard to the matter, but our standard is we 
do not discuss pending investigations," Elwell said.

A spokesman for the Los Alamos National Laboratory, in Los Alamos, N.M., 
declined to comment.

Los Alamos has a history of high-profile security problems in the past decade, 
with the most notable the case of nuclear scientist        Wen Ho Lee. After 
years of accusations, Lee pleaded guilty in a plea bargain to one count of 
mishandling nuclear secrets at the lab.

In 2004, the lab was essentially shut down after an inventory showed that two 
computer disks containing nuclear secrets were missing. A year later the lab 
concluded that it was just a mistake and the disks never existed.

But the incident highlighted sloppy inventory control and security failures at 
the nuclear weapons lab. And the Energy Department began moving toward a 
five-year program to create a so-called diskless environment at Los Alamos to 
prevent any classified material being carried outside the lab.

Even though Los Alamos is now under new management, Danielle Brian, executive 
director of the watchdog group Project on Government Oversight, said the lab 
has not done much to clean up its act.

"Los Alamos has always seemed to be rewarded for its screw-ups," Brian said. 
"We're waiting with bated breath to see if anything has changed."

The idea that police found classified documents at a home where a drug sting 
was being conducted is disturbing, she said.

"The problem is when you actually have those materials that are supposed to be 
protected inside the lab and you find them outside the lab in the hands of 
criminals — that should worry everybody," Brian said.

The FBI and the U.S. attorney's office in Albuquerque were "evaluating the 
information obtained as a result of the search warrant," Elwell said.

The federal charge of unauthorized removal and retention of classified material 
is a misdemeanor that carries a maximum sentence of a year in prison and up to 
a $100,000 fine.

___




http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20061025/ap_on_go_ot/los_alamos_documents

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~|
Introducing the Fusion Authority Quarterly Update. 80 pages of hard-hitting,
up-to-date ColdFusion information by your peers, delivered to your door four 
times a year.
http://www.fusionauthority.com/quarterly

Archive: 
http://www.houseoffusion.com/groups/CF-Community/message.cfm/messageid:218319
Subscription: http://www.houseoffusion.com/groups/CF-Community/subscribe.cfm
Unsubscribe: http://www.houseoffusion.com/cf_lists/unsubscribe.cfm?user=89.70.5

Reply via email to