(c/o JH.  I would add why do we even bother doing cyber stuff on behalf of the 
country if this is the kind of 'senior' person they're hiring?   And no, I 
don't follow the fringe WND regulary. -- rick)

Look who Obama's hired for cybersecurity team

Ex-Clinton staffer 'lost' thousands of White House e-mails, booted by DHS for 
faking credentials

Posted: July 18, 2011
8:13 pm Eastern

© 2011 WND

http://www.wnd.com/?pageId=323373

An elite team of computer technicians assembled by the Obama administration to 
protect Pentagon networks from cyberattack shockingly includes a former Clinton 
official who "lost" thousands of archived emails under subpoena and who more 
recently left the Department of Homeland Security under an ethical cloud 
related to her qualifications, WND has learned.

The administration in May quietly hired Laura Callahan for a sensitive post at 
the U.S. Cyber Command, a newly created agency set up to harden military 
networks as part of an effort to prevent a "cyberspace version of Pearl Harbor."

The move raises doubts about the administration's vetting process for sensitive 
security positions. In 2004, Callahan was forced to resign from Homeland 
Security after a congressional investigation revealed she committed résumé 
fraud and lied about her computer credentials.

Investigators found that Callahan paid a diploma mill thousands of dollars for 
her bachelors, masters and doctorate degrees in computer science. She 
back-dated the degrees, all obtained between 2000 and 2001, to appear as if she 
earned them in 1993, 1995 and 2000, respectively. She landed the job of deputy 
DHS chief information officer in 2003.

Previously, as a White House computer supervisor, Callahan threatened computer 
workers to keep quiet about an embarrassing server glitch that led to the loss 
of thousands of archived emails covered by federal subpoenas pertaining to 
multiple Clinton scandals.

Former co-workers say they're shocked that Callahan passed a security 
background check and landed another sensitive post inside the federal 
government.

"She's a security risk," said a government computer specialist. "I don't know 
how she got clearance."

"We're fuming about it," said another federal employee. "Knowing her, I don't 
see how she could ever be 100-percent honest."             

A CyberCom spokesman said Callahan could not be interviewed and did not want 
her "name in public." Asked for Callahan's title, he claimed such information 
was "personal."

CyberCom, which began operations last year, is part of the U.S. Strategic 
Command located in Fort Meade, Md.

The Defense Department last week revealed it recently suffered a massive 
cyberattack, even as it announced a new strategy to actively combat online 
threats to national security.

In March, hackers working for a foreign government broke into a Pentagon 
contractor's computer system and stole 24,000 files. Previous cyberattacks have 
been blamed on China or Russia.

A new Pentagon study stresses the need to fortify network firewalls against 
enemy hackers. Callahan will be part of that effort at CyberCom, which will 
lead day-to-day defense and protection of all Defense Department networks.

"She's a dubious hire, to put it charitably," said Tom Fitton, president of 
Judicial Watch, a government watchdog in Washington that sued the Clinton White 
House to retrieve missing emails.

As WND first reported, several Northrop Grumman contractors working on the 
White House computer system testified in early 2000 that Callahan (née Laura 
Crabtree) threatened to jail them if they talked about the "Project X" email 
scandal even to their spouses.

One technician, Robert Haas, said she warned him "there will be a jail cell 
with your name on it" if he breathed a word about the glitch to anybody outside 
their office.

Chip Sparks, a White House programmer, recounted a run-in he had with Callahan 
in 1997. After questioning a technical decision she made, he said she wrote him 
a threatening note.

"Please be advised I will not tolerate any further derogatory comments from you 
about my knowledge, qualifications and/or professional competence," Callahan 
blasted Sparks in a March 3, 1997, e-mail, a copy of which was obtained by WND.

Callahan had to do some quick backpedaling after her House testimony. The day 
after she testified, she sent an affidavit to the House Government Reform 
Committee, stating: "I wish to clarify that I did discuss e-mail issues with 
the Department of Justice attorneys in connection with currently pending civil 
litigation," referring to a lawsuit brought by Judicial Watch. She had denied 
such contacts at the hearing.

Callahan left the White House under an ethical cloud, only to land a top 
position elsewhere in the Clinton administration. Labor Secretary Alexis Herman 
made her deputy chief information officer at her agency, and director of its 
information technology center.

While there, she oversaw the development of the Privacy Assessment Model, which 
agencies were to use to better protect sensitive personal data managed by the 
government.

"It's hard for me, having worked with this individual, to believe that she was 
able to come in there, do what she did, leave the things in the condition that 
she left them in and then fly right into an SES (senior executive service) 
position at the Labor Department," Sparks said.

"I mean, there's political favors there," he added. "It's writ large."

House Government Reform Committee investigators at the time said Labor knew 
Callahan got her degree from a diploma mill, yet still employed her. They found 
that the U.S. Office of Personnel Management tipped Labor off to her 
questionable credentials.

"We have requested the Homeland Security IG to look at why flags that had been 
raised about her educational qualifications in her personnel file at the Labor 
Department were not taken further," said House Government Reform Committee 
spokesman Dave Marin at the time.

He told WND that the government certainly cannot risk hiring someone with 
"fraudulent credentials" to head a senior position in an area as "sensitive as 
homeland security" computer operations and communications.

Calls to the U.S. Office of Personnel Management seeking comment about 
Callahan's latest hiring were not returned.
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