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Missing Disks Never Existed
Albuquerque, NM (AP) - A report concludes two computer disks that disappeared
- prompting a virtual shutdown at one of the nation’s leading nuclear
weapons laboratories - never existed.
“We got walloped,” a spokesman for the University of California,
which manages Los Alamos National Laboratory.
In a harshly worded review that described severe security weaknesses at the
nuclear weapons lab - first created as a top-secret World War II project to
develop the
atomic bomb - the Energy Department concluded bar codes were recorded for
the disks, but the disks themselves were never created.
A separate FBI investigation supported that finding, according to the report.
“The weaknesses revealed by this incident are severe and must be corrected,” according
to the report.
As punishment for the problems, the Energy Department slashed by two-thirds
the management fee it paid to UC for running Los Alamos. Out of a possible
$8.7 million,
UC will get only $2.9 million; it is the largest fee reduction ever imposed
on a national laboratory.
“Although multiple investigations have confirmed that the ‘missing’ disks
never existed, the major weakness in controlling classified material revealed
by this incident are absolutely unacceptable and the University of California
must be held accountable for them,” National Nuclear Security Agency
Administrator Linton Brooks said in a statement.
The NNSA is a branch of the Energy Department that oversees the nation’s
nuclear labs.
UC officials accepted responsibility for the problems but pointed to the
months of work they and lab officials have done reviewing Los Alamos’ safety
and security procedures since the initial shutdown.
“Unfortunately, we deserve this,” UC spokesman Chris Harrington said. “But
what we have done is correct the problems and put the right system in place so
that we don’t have to take this type of hit again.”
In the wake of the supposed disk disappearance and a laser accident involving
an intern, four Los Alamos workers were fired and one resigned. The problems
also drew criticism from Congress and senior officials at the Energy
Department.
About 12,000 workers were idled during the July shutdown.
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