TSA Threatens Congressman For Disclosing 25,000 Security Breaches

July 16, 2011 in Featured

http://publicintelligence.net/tsa-threatens-congressman-for-disclosing-25000-security-breaches/
  
A complete video of the July 13, 2011 hearing in which Rep. Chaffetz discussed 
the 25,000 breaches.

Homeland Security to Chaffetz: Stop the leaks of sensitive information 
(Washington Post):

The Department of Homeland Security has complained to Rep. Jason Chaffetz 
(R-Utah) about what it says was an inappropriate disclosure of sensitive 
security information to the press by the House transportation panel that he 
chairs.

In a letter dated Wednesday, a clearly miffed Department of Homeland Security 
Deputy Counsel Joseph B. Maher told Chaffetz that “sensitive security 
information” provided to his subcommittee by the Transportation Security 
Administration was illegally disclosed to the press.

“This document was marked as [Sensitive Security Information],” Maher wrote, 
“and provided clear notice that unauthorized disclosures of the document 
violated federal law.”

The letter was obtained by the Washington Post from an administration official.

USA Today and other news outlets reported this week that “newly released” DHS 
documents revealed 25,000 security breaches at U.S. airports since November 
2001.

Maher called the information on past security breaches “a topic of particular 
interest to our adversaries” and said the law against unauthorized disclosure 
is designed to protect air travelers.

In an angry response directly to DHS Secretary Janet Napolitano late Friday, 
Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Calif.), head of the House Oversight Committee, called 
Maher’s assertions “meritless” retaliation for the committee’s efforts to 
address “TSA deficiencies.”

Issa called Maher’s letter a “threat to the entire legislative branch that this 
administration will seek retribution when non-classified information is shared 
with the public.” Issa denied that the security breach data was classified 
information. His staff said lawmakers and open-government groups have long 
debated whether security classifications are often used to hide embarrassing 
information.
_______________________________________________
Infowarrior mailing list
[email protected]
https://attrition.org/mailman/listinfo/infowarrior

Reply via email to