07 Aug 2002 09:53
Federal police in the US appear to have a bad habit of losing their laptops. The Justice Department's inspector general said Monday that law enforcement groups including the FBI, the Drug Enforcement Administration and the US Marshals Service suffer from "a lack of accountability," with at least 400 laptop computers missing, lost or stolen.
The Drug Enforcement Administration has such poor accounting practices, Inspector General Glenn Fine concluded in a 43-page report, that it could not provide a total count of missing laptops.
Because the agencies kept shoddy records, the report says, it's difficult to know what information was compromised, but it speculates that "national security or sensitive law enforcement information" is at risk. Approximately 8,000 FBI laptops, or more than half of the 15,077 total, are authorized to store material classified as secret or top secret.
"This raises significant concerns over laptop computer losses and the possible loss of sensitive data," the report concluded. "The (Justice Department) must improve the control of laptop computers and the safeguarding of information stored on these machines."
The inspector general's investigation began in March 2001 with a look at the Immigration and Naturalization Service's property management abilities. The results were so dismaying that Attorney General John Ashcroft requested that Fine investigate the practices of the entire department, reviewing laptops and firearms missing from October 1999 through January 2002.
"I thank the inspector general for his hard work and diligence in producing this report," Ashcroft said in a statement on Monday afternoon. "The Department of Justice is committed to implementing necessary reforms and policies, and these recommendations will be integral to this effort."
A similar November 2001 report by Treasury Department auditors concluded that the Internal Revenue Service also had persistent problems. The IRS has lost or misplaced 2,332 laptop computers, desktop computers and servers over three years, the auditors concluded.
The Justice Department's auditors also reported the following:
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