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The House select committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitolis asking for more records from the Secret Service, saying the security agency may have violated the Federal Records Act by failing to properly preserve text messages.Staff for the House panel said they only received one text resulting from a July 15 subpoena to the ag
stanley cup ency requesting Secret Service text messages from Jan. 5 and Jan. 6, 2021. The Secret Service said the messages were eraseddue to an agency-wide migration, despite preservation requests from in
stanley cups vestigators and Congress.Democratic Rep. Stephanie Murphy, a member of the committee,said the agency allowedindividual Secret Service agents to decide which records to keep and delete during a 2021 agency phone migration process. We have concerns about a system migration that we have been told resulted in the erasure of Secret Service cell phone data, the committee tweeted Wednesday. The U.S. Secret Service system migration process went forward on Jan. 27, 2021, just three weeks after the attack on the Capitol in which the vice president of the United States while under the protection of the Secret Service, was steps from a violent mob hunting for him. U.S. Secret Service officer takes a position in the street as President Donald Trump s motorcade arrives at the White House after golfing at his Trump National Golf Club in Sterling, Va., in Washington, Nov. 8, 2020, a day af
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An advocacy group for gays in the military is warning them not to answer a Pentagon survey seeking opinions on repeal of the policy that bans homosexuals from serving openly.The Servicemembers Legal Defense Network said Thursday that troops could be accidentally exposed by answering the survey and that the Defense Department has not agreed to grant immunity should that happen.The survey was e-mailed to 400,000 service members as part of a wider review by a special working group that is studying how repeal of the policy might be implemented and how it could aff
stanley spain ect the military. The Pentagon says the survey is confidential and is being done by an outside contractor who will strip out all identifying data. They cannot be outed, said Cynthia Smith, a Pentagon spokeswoman.The legal defense group said it s not so sure. At this time SLDN cannot recommend that lesbian, gay, or bisexual service members participate in any survey being administered by the Department of Defense, the Pentagon Working Group, or any third-party contractors, Aubrey Sarvis, the defense group s director, said in a statement.Smith noted that the survey doesn t ask whether a respondent is gay. It asks questions about their overall experience in the military, their experience in serving with people they believed were gay and their attitudes about how a change in the
stanley quencher law might affect recruiting, privacy, unit cohesion and so on.Officials stressed that the surve
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