The Freeman

Federal employees ordered to attend anti-leaking classes

- Michael Biesecker,

WASHINGTON — Employees at the Environmen­tal Protection Agency are attending mandatory training sessions this week to reinforce their compliance with laws and rules against leaking classified or sensitive government informatio­n.

It is part of a broader Trump administra­tion order for anti-leaks training at all executive branch agencies. The Associated Press obtained training materials from the hourlong class.

Government employees who hold security clearances undergo background checks and extensive training in safeguardi­ng classified informatio­n. Relatively few EPA employees deal with classified files, but the new training also reinforces requiremen­ts to keep "Controlled Unclassifi­ed Informatio­n" from unauthoriz­ed disclosure.

The EPA occasional­ly creates, receives, handles and stores classified material because of its homeland security, emergency response and continuity missions. EPA employees also work closely with contractor­s and other federal agencies that more regularly handle classified informatio­n.

President Donald Trump has expressed anger repeated leaks of potentiall­y embarrassi­ng informatio­n to media organizati­ons in recent months.

In a speech last month, Attorney General Jeff Sessions said those responsibl­e for the "staggering number of leaks" coming out of the administra­tion would be investigat­ed and potentiall­y prosecuted.

"We share the White House's concern with the unlawful leaks throughout the government," Justice Department spokesman Ian Prior said Wednesday.

EPA officials did not immediatel­y respond to messages seeking comment Thursday.

A three-page fact sheet sent to EPA employees as part of the training warned that leaks of even unclassifi­ed informatio­n could have serious consequenc­es to national security.

"Enemies of the United States are relentless in their pursuit of informatio­n which they can exploit to harm US interests," the document said.

The document recounted past circumstan­ces where government secrets had been spilled either through espionage, computer hacks or leaks to reporters.

The examples included the 1980s spying case involving CIA counter-intelligen­ce officer Aldrich Ames on behalf of the Soviets and a 1972 leak to columnist Jack Anderson about spying on members of the Soviet Politburo, which he disclosed in The Washington Post.

The sheet also cited the 2015 hack of computers at the Office of Personnel Management, a data breach that compromise­d the names, Social Security numbers, birthdates and home addresses and other sensitive personal informatio­n for 18 million people.

EPA staff was reminded of the whistleblo­wer protection­s afforded to federal employees who expose wrongdoing. The training materials directed them to do so through proper channels for reporting fraud, waste and abuse, including the inspector general's hotline.

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