Las Vegas Review-Journal

EPA assesses threats from internet, seeking to justify travel, security costs

- By Eric Lipton, Lisa Friedman and Kenneth P. Vogel New York Times News Service

WASHINGTON — The Environmen­tal Protection Agency has been examining posts on Twitter and other social media about Scott Pruitt, the agency’s administra­tor, to justify his extraordin­ary and costly security measures, which have included first-class travel and full-time protection even on personal trips to Disneyland, the Rose Bowl and college basketball games, according to interviews and agency and congressio­nal documents.

The social media efforts have come under scrutiny by some Democratic lawmakers, as well as senior officials at the EPA, who said the review had uncovered individual­s sounding off against Pruitt but had found no actionable threats against him. One top EPA official said in an interview that he had objected to the efforts when they were first discussed last year, to no avail.

Suspicious posts are referred to the EPA inspector general’s office, which is charged with investigat­ing threats. Spokesmen for both the inspector general and the EPA declined to comment on the nature of specific threats, citing security concerns. The EPA spokesman, Jahan Wilcox, said in a statement, “Scott Pruitt has faced an unpreceden­ted amount of death threats against him.”

But two Democratic senators said on Tuesday that an agency whistleblo­wer had provided them with an internal EPA memo concluding that a threat assessment prepared by Pruitt’s security detail did not appear to justify the increased protection. The internal memo was prepared in February by the intelligen­ce unit of the agency’s homeland security office, according to the senators, Tom Carper of Delaware and Sheldon Whitehouse of Rhode Island.

The security detail’s assessment “DOES NOT employ sound analysis or articulate relevant ‘threat specific’ informatio­n appropriat­e to draw any resource or level of threat conclusion­s regarding the protection posture for the Administra­tor,” the memo said, according to a letter written by the two senators that called on the Senate to investigat­e the matter.

An individual involved in writing the memo, Mario Caraballo, has been removed from his job as deputy associate administra­tor of the homeland security office, although an EPA official said the dismissal was unrelated to the memo.

The senators also said the social media activity — described in their letter as “open-source review of social media” — had uncovered “no evidence of a direct threat” to Pruitt.

Pruitt is being protected round the clock by a team of about 20 people — three times as many as on his predecesso­r’s security detail — at an estimated cost of $3 million a year, according to EPA officials as first reported by The Associated Press. Pruitt’s calendar, recently made public, shows that the security detail accompanie­s him even on days when he has no scheduled work events. Whitehouse said his office had documents showing that members of Pruitt’s security detail were present during a trip to California when the administra­tor visited Disneyland and the Rose Bowl.

The review of social media postings turned up commentary related to the EPA and its management under Pruitt, including one “social media post in which an individual ‘stated he is not happy with some of the Administra­tor’s policies and wanted to express his displeasur­e,’” according to the letter on Tuesday from the two Democratic senators.

Carper and Whitehouse declined to release copies of the materials quoted in the letter, saying they included sensitive details about security arrangemen­ts.

Sen. John Barrasso, R-wyo., who is chairman of the Senate committee that oversees the EPA, said that the Democrats had inappropri­ately released selected parts of an internal agency security memo.

“Any reasonable reading of these documents supports the Office of the Inspector General’s statements that Administra­tor Pruitt faces a ‘variety of direct death threats,’” Barrasso said in a statement. “This is exactly why members should not publicly disclose informatio­n that relates to the safety of a Cabinet member. It is also why this committee will not hold a hearing on this issue.”

Briefings on threats to Pruitt, which included posts on social media, were delivered by EPA security personnel to top agency officials, including Pruitt’s chief of staff, Ryan Jackson, according to an employee who participat­ed in a briefing. The employee said the briefing highlighte­d mostly criticisms of Pruitt’s policies as having a deleteriou­s effect on the environmen­t, rather than instances of threats to his personal safety.

The employee said that the agency’s social media reviews had been the subject of a recent meeting that included representa­tives from the agency’s inspector general’s office and its homeland security office, which had produced the internal memo critical of the threat assessment­s.

Wilcox, the EPA spokesman, said threat assessment­s were conducted within the agency’s office of compliance, using informatio­n collected from Pruitt’s security detail, the EPA’S homeland security office and its inspector general’s office.

“Americans should all agree that members of the president’s Cabinet should be kept safe from these violent threats,” Wilcox said.

Other government agencies and companies have used social media to monitor protesters or to look for informatio­n on emerging incidents. It is unclear whether the EPA has looked to social media in the past to determine threats to an administra­tor.

The practice, as deployed by police department­s, has brought criticism from the American Civil Liberties Union, and social media companies including Twitter have cut off access to certain software programs that authoritie­s use to track postings.

Faiza Patel of the Brennan Center for Justice, a nonpartisa­n law and policy institute, said that she had seen a rise in social media monitoring within law enforcemen­t agencies and cautioned that what people say in an Instagram post or a tweet can be open to interpreta­tion.

“The fact that 10,000 people say, ‘I hate Scott Pruitt’ on Twitter doesn’t suggest to me there is a threat against Scott Pruitt,” said Patel, who is co-director of the center’s liberty and national security program. “It suggests there are a lot of people who dislike Scott Pruitt.”

 ?? TOM BRENNER / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? EPA Administra­tor Scott Pruitt listens as President Donald Trump delivers remarks to the media during a Cabinet meeting Monday at the White House. The Environmen­tal Protection Agency has been examining posts on Twitter and other social media about...
TOM BRENNER / THE NEW YORK TIMES EPA Administra­tor Scott Pruitt listens as President Donald Trump delivers remarks to the media during a Cabinet meeting Monday at the White House. The Environmen­tal Protection Agency has been examining posts on Twitter and other social media about...

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