Counterintelligence Officials Resign
By Walter Pincus
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, August 10, 2006; A04
David A. Burtt II, director of the Counterintelligence Field Activity, the
Defense Department's newest intelligence agency whose contracts based on
congressional earmarks are under investigation by the Pentagon and federal
prosecutors, told his staff yesterday that he and his deputy director will
resign at the end of the month.
In an internal message, Burtt said, "I do not make this decision without
trepidation, but the time is right to move on to the next phase of my
career." He said he had been privileged to serve as CIFA director and was
"especially proud of all of you and what you have accomplished for the CI
[counterintelligence] community and for the overall CI mission."
Joseph Hefferon "has also decided to retire, after over 31 years of federal
service," according to Burtt's message. A Pentagon spokesman yesterday
confirmed they were leaving and said it was "a personal decision that they
both made together."
Burtt, who was a deputy assistant secretary of defense for
counterintelligence at the time of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, developed
the concept for CIFA. It was established in September 2002, originally to
coordinate policy and oversee the counterintelligence activities of units
within the armed services and Pentagon agencies.
Over the past three years, it has grown to become an analytic and operation
organization with nine directorates and widening authority focused primarily
on protecting defense facilities and personnel from terrorist attacks.
CIFA's size and budget are classified, but according to congressional
sources the agency has spent more than $1 billion over the past four years,
mostly for outsourced services. One counterintelligence official yesterday
estimated that CIFA had 400 full-time employees and 800 to 900 contractors
working for it.
The agency was criticized in December after it was revealed that a database
managed by CIFA contained unverified, raw threat information on Americans
who were peacefully protesting the war in Iraq at defense facilities,
including recruiting offices.
Last March, as a result of the continuing federal investigations arising out
of charges against former congressman Randy "Duke" Cunningham (R-Calif.),
prosecutors said they were reviewing CIFA contracts that went to MZM Inc., a
company run by Mitchell J. Wade, who had pleaded guilty in February to
conspiring to bribe Cunningham.
Cunningham, now serving an eight-year prison term, in January 2004 sought
about $16.5 million to be added to the defense authorization bill for a CIFA
"collaboration center." A month later, he wrote Burtt a thank-you note about
the center, adding, according to prosecutors' documents: "I wish to endorse
and support MZM, Inc.'s work."
One of the consultants to Burtt, when he was formulating CIFA in 2002, was
retired Lt. Gen. James C. King, then an MZM senior vice president who had
recently retired as director of the Pentagon-based National Imagery and
Mapping Agency.
In late 2002, Cunningham, who received campaign contributions from Wade and
other MZM officials, made contracts for Wade's company one of "his top
priorities," according to prosecutors' documents. One result, according to
prosecutors' documents, was $6 million spent for a data storage system,
supposedly for CIFA, that included almost $5.4 million in profit for MZM and
a subcontractor.
Following disclosures in Cunningham's case, Undersecretary of Defense
Stephen A. Cambone last March ordered an internal study of how funding
earmarked in defense bills led to CIFA contracts for MZM. The Defense
Information Systems Agency, which has been given responsibility for the
inquiry, said in a statement yesterday that "the investigation is still
ongoing."
C 2006 The Washington Post Company
 
 
 
 
Accessed 10 Aug 2006,
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/08/09/AR2006080901
700.html?referrer=email
 
 


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