The Mercury News

House Ethics Committee responds to GOP’s efforts to ‘storm the SCIF’

- By CQ-Roll Call

WASHINGTON >> The House Ethics Committee responded this week to efforts by House Republican­s to access the secure facility in the basement of the Capitol during a closed-door impeachmen­t deposition on Oct. 23, issuing a memo about breaches of security and warning lawmakers of potential consequenc­es.

The memo, dated Thursday, reminds lawmakers that all members and staff who have access to classified informatio­n take an oath to not disclose any such informatio­n and that access to classified informatio­n and secure areas are on a “need to know” basis.

“House personnel should not attempt to gain access to classified informatio­n or controlled areas unless they have a need to access the area or informatio­n,” Ethics Chairman Ted Deutch, a Florida Democrat, and ranking member Kenny Marchant, a Texas Republican, wrote in the memo.

The Ethics Committee warns lawmakers that “attempts to gain unauthoriz­ed access to classified areas or purposeful breaches of basic security protocols,” could reflect badly on the House itself and could lead to potential consequenc­es for members.

“The Committee has jurisdicti­on

to investigat­e violations of House rules, regulation­s, laws, or other standards of conduct, including violations of House rules regarding disclosure of classified informatio­n and other potential violations of the Code of Official Conduct,” they wrote.

The House Ethics Committee has not announced any investigat­ions into lawmakers related to the breach of the Secure Classified Informatio­n Facility, or SCIF, on Oct. 23.

The memo explains the overlappin­g safeguards of protection used to prevent

intrusion into secure areas of release of classified informatio­n, but stresses that the protection­s rely on the cooperatio­n of anyone who enters the SCIF.

“Portable electronic devices (PEDs) should generally not be taken into any controlled area,” the memo says.

During the Oct. 23 effort by House Republican­s to “storm the SCIF,” several brought their cellphones with them into the secure area.

Cellphones, which the Director of National Intelligen­ce considers “high-vulnerabil­ity”

devices, must undergo a rigorous riskmitiga­tion protocol to be allowed into a SCIF. They are specifical­ly designed to thwart attempts at electronic eavesdropp­ing, if protocols are followed.

Rep. Jim Jordan acknowledg­ed after the incident that the cellphone mishap by his colleagues crossed a boundary that should remain in place.

“They shouldn’t do that. They’re not used to this. They walked in, as soon as they were told that, they set their phones out,” the Ohio Republican said.

 ?? FILE PHOTO ?? Roughly two dozen House Republican­s on Oct. 23stormed a closed-door deposition in secure House Intelligen­ce Committee spaces to rail against the Democratic-led impeachmen­t inquiry.
FILE PHOTO Roughly two dozen House Republican­s on Oct. 23stormed a closed-door deposition in secure House Intelligen­ce Committee spaces to rail against the Democratic-led impeachmen­t inquiry.

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