Nuclear Data Found Missing From New Mexico
NewsMax Wires
Friday, Aug. 20, 2004
WASHINGTON -- An inventory has found another case of missing
data involving nuclear weapons, this time at the Energy
Department's regional office in Albuquerque, N.M., the department
disclosed Thursday.
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The Energy Department said that an "accounting discrepancy"
involving three copies of a "controlled removable electronic
media" -- or CREM -- was found at the regional office as part of the
nationwide inventory of such devices.
The inventory was ordered a month ago after two CREM data
devices were reported missing at the Los Alamos National
Laboratory, also in New Mexico. The Albuquerque facility, part of
the DOE's National Nuclear Security Administration, coordinates
activities with the Los Alamos weapons lab.
Bryan Wilkes, an NNSA spokesman, said that the inventory
discovered three copies of a single CREM unaccounted for. He
declined to elaborate further except to say the device contained
information involving nuclear weapons.
NNSA Administrator Linton Brooks said that all classified work
involving the computer data storage devices has been halted at the
Albuquerque office, pending completion of the investigation.
"I am disappointed that we have found another case of lax
procedures in protecting classified information," said Brooks in a
statement.
Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham on July 23 ordered that work
involving CREM _ disks or other removable computer storage devices
_ be halted at all the government's nuclear weapons facilities
until inventories of the devices are conducted and new security
procedures put in place.
The missing device at the Albuquerque office was discovered as
part of that inventory, said Wilkes.
Meanwhile, investigators, despite extensive searches, have yet
to find the two CREM devices that were reported missing at the Los
Alamos laboratory in the New Mexico mountains 100 miles north of
Albuquerque. The investigation into that incident was continuing.
No one was suggesting that the classified information -- either
at Los Alamos or in the DOE regional office -- had been stolen or
that the disappearances involved espionage. However, DOE officials
have been concerned about lax procedures and security involving the
handing of such devices.
"I expect NNSA employees, both federal and contractor, to
adhere to the highest standards of performance" when using such
data in removable computer devices, said Brooks.
Aside from this latest case, the nationwide CREM inventory
review so far has produced no incidents or discrepancies, said
Wilkes.
Many of the sites including the Savannah River nuclear facility
in South Carolina, the Y-12 facility at Oak Ridge, Tenn., and the
Pantex facility in Texas have resumed normal operations, according
to the department.
Concerns over security and safety at the nuclear weapons lab
came to a head in July, after two computer disks containing
classified information were reported missing at the Los Alamos lab.
Almost all work at the lab was shut down and 23 employees were
suspended as a result of the investigation into the security
lapses.
© 2004 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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