The Maui News

Probe: CDC official says she was ordered to delete email

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WASHINGTON (AP) — A senior manager with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention told congressio­nal investigat­ors she was ordered to delete an email suggesting attempted political interferen­ce by the Trump administra­tion in coronaviru­s reports to the public, according to a transcript released Thursday.

Rep. James Clyburn, DS.C., who released the partial transcript, said the testimony of Dr. Charlotte Kent raises “serious concern about what may be deliberate efforts by the Trump administra­tion to conceal and destroy evidence that senior political appointees interfered with career officials’ response to the coronaviru­s crisis.” Kent testified that she believed CDC Director Robert Redfield ordered the deletion of the email.

In a letter to Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar, Clyburn accused the administra­tion of trying to obstruct his investigat­ion and threatened to issue subpoenas to compel the release of documents. Clyburn chairs a special House panel empowered to broadly examine the coronaviru­s crisis and the government’s response.

HHS said in a statement that Clyburn’s committee is “not operating in good faith” and called its portrayal of the CDC official’s testimony “irresponsi­ble.”

HHS also released a brief statement from Redfield in which he said he had instructed agency staffers to ignore the email but did not mention ordering its deletion.

The ranking Republican on the investigat­ive panel, Rep. Steve Scalise of Louisiana, said Democrats have found “zero evidence of actual interferen­ce in CDC scientific reports.”

As required by law, federal officials are supposed to be scrupulous about retaining records.

At issue is what happened last summer to an email sent to the CDC from a now-departed HHS adviser, Dr. Paul Alexander. Working with then-HHS top spokespers­on Michael Caputo, Alexander was brought into the department at a time of high tension between White House officials and Azar. Caputo and Alexander represente­d the White House at HHS, a bureaucrac­y that President Donald Trump was deeply suspicious of.

Kent occupies a high perch in that bureaucrac­y as CDC’s chief of scientific publicatio­ns and editor-in-chief of Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, or MMWR, a publicatio­n that tracks disease trends of interest to the medical community.

MMWR has become a flashpoint for controvers­y under Trump. According to documents released by Clyburn’s committee, Alexander fired off an Aug. 8 email demanding that CDC go back into a scientific report it had already published about coronaviru­s risks to children and splice in new language, or “pull it down and stop all reports immediatel­y.”

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