FBI Agents Raid Work, Home Of Special Counsel's Bloch
By JOHN R. WILKE
May 6, 2008 1:59 p.m.

WASHINGTON -- Federal Bureau of Investigation agents raided the Office
of Special Counsel here, seizing computers and documents belonging to
the agency chief Scott Bloch and staff.

More than a dozen FBI agents served grand jury subpoenas shortly after
10 a.m., shutting down the agency's computer network and searching its
offices, as well as Mr. Bloch's home. Employees said the searches
appeared focused on alleged obstruction of justice by Mr. Bloch during
the course of an 2006 inquiry into his conduct in office.
[Scott Bloch]

The independent agency, created by Congress in the wake of the
Watergate scandal, is charged with protecting federal employees and
deciding whether their complaints merit full-scale investigation -- a
first line of defense against fraud and mismanagement in government.
It also enforces a ban on U.S. employees engaging in partisan
political activity.

The Wall Street Journal reported last year that Mr. Bloch had used
"Geeks on Call," an outside computer-service firm, to erase his
computer and those of two former staff members in December 2006. (See
related article.1)

Mr. Bloch's agency is typically involved in sensitive investigations
of alleged government wrongdoing. Before the departure of White House
political director Karl Rove, Mr. Bloch's staff was looking into
whether he or other White House officials improperly used federal
agencies to help re-elect Republicans in 2006.

At the same time, Mr. Bloch has been under investigation himself since
2005. At the direction of the White House, the federal Office of
Personnel Management's inspector general is looking into claims that
Mr. Bloch abused his investigative authority, improperly retaliated
against employees or dismissed whistleblower cases without adequate
examination.

The computer erasures became part of that investigation and are one of
the reasons behind today's raid, employees said. Investigators were
trying to determine whether the deletions were improper or part of a
cover-up, the Journal article reported.

Bypassing his agency's computer technicians, Mr. Bloch phoned
1-800-905-GEEKS, the mobile PC-help service. It dispatched a
technician in one of its signature PT Cruiser wagons. In the Journal
story, Mr. Bloch confirmed that he contacted Geeks on Call but said he
was trying to eradicate a virus that had seized control of his
computer. He said the erasures didn't delete any files related to the
inquiry.

Mr. Bloch was in the office this morning during the raid but couldn't
be reached for comment. The search was still under way early this
afternoon, witnesses said.

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