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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Energy official visits weapons laboratory

Richard Benke Associated Press

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — With nearly all weapons research put on hold, a top U.S. Energy Department official visited the Los Alamos National Laboratory on Monday to supervise a top-to-bottom review prompted by a string of security breaches.

Deputy Energy Secretary Kyle McSlarrow’s visit came as the lab responded to yet another report of security lapses — an unconfirmed anonymous tip that classified information has been sent over the lab’s unclassified e-mail system 17 times in recent months.

The tip was relayed by the Project on Government Oversight, a private watchdog group.

“The most recent incident,” the watchdog group said, “occurred on July 15 when a Los Alamos lawyer sent a classified e-mail from his home computer to multiple people at Los Alamos.”

The lab said Sunday the incident has been reported to the government and steps have been taken to “prevent significant risk to national security.”

McSlarrow left Los Alamos on Monday without making any public statement.

Last week, lab director Pete Nanos called for a stand-down on all but the most essential national security activities while officials investigate security lapses and conduct a wall-to-wall inventory of classified information at Los Alamos. The move was prompted in part by the disappearance of two electronic data storage devices reported missing at the lab earlier this month.

Los Alamos has been under intense scrutiny since November 2002, when allegations surfaced about purchasing fraud, equipment theft and mismanagement. The ensuing scandal prompted an overhaul of lab business policies and a culling of top managers.

The University of California has managed the lab for the federal government since it was created 61 years ago to build the atomic bomb. Because of the lapses, the Energy Department has decided to put the management contract up for bid when it expires next year.