Commerce Dept. security unit to be shut down after overstepping legal limits in launching probes
Source: Washington Post
The Commerce Department will eliminate a security unit that it found improperly launched criminal investigations and collected information on hundreds of its employees and average citizens, department officials said Friday. A nearly five-month internal review by top Commerce lawyers concluded that the Investigations and Threat Management Service, the subject of a Washington Post examination in May, did not have "adequate legal authority" to pursue criminal probes, as it had been doing for 15 years. Operating with little oversight, the obscure unit opened cases ranging from counterespionage to background searches on U.S. residents who wrote innocuous letters to the department's top official, the review found.
Nearly every case languished for years without resolution, leaving individuals listed internally as still under scrutiny, the review found. The findings were detailed in a report released Friday morning that recommended shuttering the 13-person unit, discontinuing its criminal and counterintelligence functions and folding its administrative and security duties into other offices within the department. Commerce said in a statement that it had accepted the recommendations and would close ITMS within 90 days and implement other recommendations within 180 days. "We are committed to maintaining our security, but also equally committed to protecting the privacy and civil liberties of our employees and the public," said Commerce Secretary Gina M. Raimondo.
The report followed a string of investigations and media reports on ITMS's activities. A Congressional investigation led by Sen. Roger Wicker (R-Miss.) of the Commerce Committee concluded in July that ITMS had evolved into a "rogue, unaccountable police force" that "opened frivolous investigations on a variety of employees without evidence suggesting wrongdoing." In March, the department's internal watchdog completed an investigation that found "evidence of potential misconduct and mismanagement within ITMS occurring over several years," prompting the Commerce Department to suspend the unit's criminal investigations, according to the report released Friday.
The investigation by the department's inspector general has not been released publicly but some of its findings were revealed in Friday's report. In May, the examination by The Post found that the unit had covertly searched employees' offices at night, run broad key word searches on employee emails looking for signs of possible foreign influence and scoured Americans' social media accounts for critical comments about the Census, which falls under Commerce.
Read more: https://www.washingtonpost.com/investigations/commerce-disband-itms-investigations-unit/2021/09/03/43e1c8ee-0c0b-11ec-aea1-42a8138f132a_story.html
Full headline: Commerce Dept. security unit to be shut down after overstepping legal limits in launching probes, officials say
This was happening under Wilbur Ross. The same guy who tried to destroy NOAA (along with its components including the National Weather Service, which are also under the Commerce Department).
Old Okie
(137 posts)Ongoing for 15 years means several administrations let this happen, we can't blame everything on Trump. If they actually took action against anyone instead of just snooping on people, that should be investigated.
brewens
(13,547 posts)were taken. We may find out now.
bucolic_frolic
(43,066 posts)deliver on promised actions. Wilbur Ross did nothing too.
Sanity Claws
(21,842 posts)Carlos Gutierrez was the Secretary of Commerce at the time.
Ford_Prefect
(7,873 posts)This was one of many such punitive internal attacks on federalism initiated under Cheney/Bush.
mpcamb
(2,869 posts)Ford_Prefect
(7,873 posts)Operating with little oversight, the obscure unit opened cases ranging from counterespionage to background searches on U.S. residents who wrote innocuous letters to the departments top official, the review found.
Nearly every case languished for years without resolution, leaving individuals listed internally as still under scrutiny, the review found.
Lonestarblue
(9,958 posts)Business organizations regularly reorganize for better efficiency and to get rid of fiefdoms that hog budgets, often driven by new managers or CEOs. I suspect that much of the federal government has not had an evaluation of every departments function and whether it is addressing current needs rather than past needs that are not so important anymore. Also, whether its responsibilities overlap what another agency is also doing.
If Im not mistaken, the federal government uses zero-base budgeting, so if you dont use all your budget by the end of the fiscal period you lose it. A couple of years ago, the Pentagon ordered masses of lobster so they would use up their budget! That just encourages wasteful spending because few people want their budgets cuts. As a former corporate manager and an MBA, there are times my fingers just itch to bring some economies to the federal government!
BumRushDaShow
(128,545 posts)Most of it tends to be for use during a fiscal year although some large pots of funding can be multi-year or even "no year". Depends on what it is designated for.
But yeah, for most agency operating budget authority funding, it's always that late summer/coming-up-on-the-end-of-the-fiscal-year scramble as the administrative people start going through their budget reconciliation processes to account for every penny... right up to the last day (and people had their justifications and purchase orders all ready - although eventually the admin folks could order using a government credit card).