butters
High on a Hill
- Joined
- Jul 2, 2009
- Posts
- 84,451
concerns about how he still retained access to confidential material after taking notes in SCIF and putting them in his pocket, then further broaches of security on his part has to be looked into.
A 2016 directive from the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) – part of an effort to beef up security after multiple high-profile intelligence leaks – requires security clearance holders to report concerning activity from colleagues, including misuse of government computers and an unwillingness to follow security protocols.
All of Teixeira’s behavior as described by prosecutors was reportable under that ODNI directive, according to Carrie Wibben, who helped write the policy when she was an ODNI official.
A second former senior Defense Department official told CNN that it was bizarre Teixeira’s leadership spoke to him twice about his actions but did not appear to restrict his access to intelligence.
Kikta, the former Marine Corps officer, echoed a similar sentiment.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/poli...p&cvid=a205c382269d4e12a43399aa892d6672&ei=23“By the third [incident], we’re in negligence land,” said Kikta, who is now an executive at security firm Automox. “At that point, Teixeira’s not the problem. You are.”