| Friday, March 10, 2006 |
| A Pentagon whoopsie |
In a leaked memo, DoD admits it did spy on peaceful anti-war demonstrators after all
The Department of Defense admitted in a letter obtained by NBC News on Thursday that it had wrongly added peaceful demonstrators to a database of possible domestic terrorist threats. The letter followed an NBC report focusing on the Defense Department’s Threat and Local Observation Notice, or TALON, report.
Acting Deputy Undersecretary of Defense Roger W. Rogalski’s letter came in reply to a memo from Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., who had demanded answers about the process of identifying domestic protesters as suspicious and removing their names when they are wrongly listed.
“The recent review of the TALON Reporting System ... identified a small number of reports that did not meet the TALON reporting criteria. Those reports dealt with domestic anti-military protests or demonstrations potentially impacting DoD facilities or personnel,” Rogalski wrote on Wednesday.
“While the information was of value to military commanders, it should not have been retained in the Cornerstone database.” I'd like to know what value could that information have been? It's almost tempting to ask, not who in the U.S. is being spied on by one federal agency or another, but who isn't...
Tags: politics, News, Bush, national security, Pentagon, government, spying, anti-war |
posted by JReid @ 12:33 AM   |
|
|
|
|