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Tuesday, February 23, 2016

LOS ALAMOS; SUICIDE, SPIES, DEAD-END INVESTIGATIONS


BIG TROUBLES AT NUCLEAR LABS. 



Above: Los Alamos labs, New Mexico.

A SUSPICIOUS 'SUICIDE', FRAUD, CORRUPTION, ABUSE OF POWER, GROSS MISMANAGEMENT, BLOCKING INVESTIGATIONS, EVEN CHARGES OF DOMESTIC VIOLENCE AGAINST THE  LAB'S EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR...THE LIST GROWS OF UNINVESTIGATED, DEEP-ROOTED PROBLEMS AT LANL (Los Alamos Nuclear Lab) THAT SPAN DECADES.

On January 24, 2003, Richard James Burick was found lying part way under his truck, dead from a bullet to the head. A .44 caliber revolver lay a few feet away, which according to some experts, was further than it should have been if Burick himself had pulled the trigger. That afternoon, before an autopsy or full forensic investigation was even started, the Los Alamos Police Department declared Burick’s death a suicide.

Los Alamos is situated about 60 miles north of Albuquerque, New Mexico, and at the heart of America’s nuclear weapons complex. Much of the Manhattan Project’s work on the first atomic bomb took place at Los Alamos, and U.S. nuclear weapons have been designed and tested there ever since. This research is the lifeblood of Los Alamos County, which consistently ranks near the top of the country in terms of income per capita. As a whole, more of New Mexico’s economy comes from the federal government than any other state.

Before his retirement in January 2002, Richard Burick had been the Deputy Director for Operations at LANL. In his 25 years at the Lab, he gained access to some of the nation’s most sensitive nuclear weapons secrets. But, at the time of his retirement, there was mounting concern that the University of California, which operated the Lab, would lose its contract over safety and security issues.

In 1999, the Lab helped feed the FBI’s false accusations that a scientist named Wen Ho Lee was giving weapons designs to China. Then in 2000, hard drives containing nuclear weapons designs temporarily went missing when a nearby wildfire forced the Lab to evacuate. The drives were mysteriously rediscovered behind a copier in a secure room that had already been searched twice. That same year, Los Alamos failed a major security test in which mock terrorists attacked the Lab and succeeded in building a fake improvised nuclear bomb.

In an attempt to demonstrate accountability, in early 2002, the Lab hired a pair of former police officers, Glenn Walp and Steve Doran, to root out corruption.

As Walp and Doran set to work, Burick was, by all accounts, enjoying retirement and pursuing his lifelong dream—ranching. He had acquired a 20,000 acre plot in southern New Mexico, along with horses and cattle. With the help of one of his former employees, Peter Bussolini, he planned to make it into a hunting destination.

Their fortunes soon took a turn for the worse.

In mid-2002, Bussolini and another Lab worker, Scott Alexander, were implicated in a quarter-million dollar embezzlement scheme. An FBI investigation found warehouses at the Lab stuffed with stolen outdoor equipment: ATVs, sleeping bags, radios, hunting knives, and more. According to Montaño, LANL would have had no use for this equipment, which Bussolini and Alexander purchased using classified order forms and using false descriptions. For example, “rotisserie grill,” became a “basket positioner.”

Shortly thereafter, in early October, Burick sold his ranch for “One Dollar and other valuable consideration” [sic]. At the end of October, Bussolini and Alexander were suspended from their jobs.

Things were not going according to plan for Walp and Doran either. In November, a memo detailing $3 million in “lost and misplaced” goods was reported in the Albuquerque Journal. According to Montaño, the memo also revealed that Los Alamos had a rule that Lab purchases worth less than $5,000 weren’t to be tracked. LANL fired them three days later. As Montaño writes, “Since people rarely lost their jobs at LANL, what happened [to Walp and Doran]…would be inconceivable were it not for the fact that they were trying to fix problems institutional leaders didn’t even want to admit existed.”

Firing Walp and Doran turned out to be one of LANL’s bigger mistakes. Instead of preventing scrutiny that could jeopardize a new contract, the firings set off a round of congressional inquiries that resulted in a slew of high-level dismissals including the Director and Principal Deputy Director of the Lab. Public pressure on the University of California led to Walp and Doran getting their jobs back. As Doran told the Santa Fe Reporter in 2012, their first priority was to investigate Burick’s connection to Bussolini “hot and heavy.”
In 2005, Bussolini and Alexander struck a plea bargain with federal prosecutors. The government dropped 26 charges in exchange for guilty pleas to conspiracy and mail fraud, and $39,401 dollars in restitution to the University of California. Bussolini served six months in jail, and Alexander the same amount of time under house arrest. Today, Bussolini splits his time between New Mexico and South Carolina. Alexander’s whereabouts are unknown. 

Burick didn’t just help steer LANL through these years of scandal, he was a main character in many of them.
 He personally fired Wen Ho Lee, led the evacuation during the fire where the weapons designs went missing, and was blamed directly by DOE for the Lab’s performance in security exercises.
The Lab had plenty of reasons to investigate him.

On the morning of January 24, 2003, a week after Walp and Doran were rehired, Burick was summoned to LANL for a meeting. The attendees and substance of that meeting are not known, but according to unnamed sources in Montaño’s book, Burick left upset. A few hours later, he was found dead. The police declared his death a suicide that afternoon.


Feb. 2, 2016
On this date, three nuclear whistleblowers sent a certified letter to New Mexico's district U.S. Attorney General Damon Martinez [3-page letter can be viewed <HERE><HERE> and <HERE>.] asking him to reopen blocked and closed investigations into serious wrong-doings at Los Alamos Nuclear Laboratory.

They specifically asked that the 2002 death of the lab's former deputy director of operations, Richard Burick, whose death was ruled a suicide BEFORE autopsy, be re-examined. 

The trio seem to suggest that the suicide was not a suicide at all. 

All three whistleblowers are respected, well-known men, with one (Glen Walp) being a former Pennsylvania State Police Commissioner, one being a former police chief (Steve Doran), and the third, Chuck
Montaño, being a multi-credentialed auditor and investigator who worked at LANL for 32 years.  
Montaño became a federally protected whistleblower after reporting accounting malpractice and abuses that he had witnessed for years at LANL, and for which Lab management retaliated against him.  

 In the same period of time as Burick's claimed suicide, the criminal investigation of major procurement fraud at LANL was derailed by the Lab's hasty firing of Walp and Doran.
This, in turn, prevented a congressional committee from learning the full scope of potential criminal activity. 

Since then, new information has emerged  that possibly links the corruption to Burick's suicide, which the three whistleblowers assert deserves serious investigation by federal law enforcement.

IN A PDF DOCUMENT PROVIDED BY NUCLEAR WATCH NEW MEXICO WE READ:

"Federally protected whistleblower Chuck Montaño added,

“The Los Alamos Lab is a cash cow for the military-industrial
complex, and because politicians are so beholden to these
corporations, there's zero accountability for the fraud, waste
and abuse that keeps occurring in Los Alamos. 
We are seeking to end that by asking the US Attorney for
New Mexico to intervene and go wherever the facts may take him."


THIS IS BY NO MEANS A FIRST FOR LANL, OR FOR OTHERS WHICH CONGRESS HAS LONG REFUSED TO HOLD ACCOUNTABLE FOR NUMEROUS SAFETY FAILURES AND CORRUPTION CHARGES.

'JUDICIAL WATCH' REPORTED IN 2012 THAT VIOLATIONS AT OAK RIDGE WERE REPORTED 12 YEARS AGO WHEN A PRIVATE SECURITY FIRM TRIED TO INTEREST CONGRESS IN A THOROUGH INVESTIGATION OF THAT FACILITY.
AFTER 16 YEARS, CONGRESS STILL SLEEPS.

"The government refers to the Y-12 National Security Complex as the “Fort Knox of Uranium” and claims it has the “most stringent security in the world”, but the reality is much different. The facility’s security is actually a joke, a very expensive joke.
Security lapses at nuclear weapons facilities have long been an embarrassing problem for the U.S. government.

A few years ago Judicial Watch reported that security was compromised at the nearby Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) in Tennessee.

Under a special government program thousands of foreign nationals from communist and Middle Eastern countries were granted “unaccompanied access” to the facility and weren’t properly vetted through “counterintelligence consultations.” 


The security violations, documented in a federal audit, were committed by nationals from China, Pakistan and Egypt, among other countries.

SPIES AT LOS ALAMOS

Shortly before that breach became public, two employees at a separate federally-owned nuclear lab pleaded guilty to criminal charges for passing classified weapons data to a foreign government that’s hostile to the U.S. 

The scheme took place at Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico, which has a long and sordid history of grave security violations that date back to the late 90s. 

In 1999 a Chinese communist scientist (Wen Ho Lee) stole nuclear secrets from the facility but was not prosecuted by the Clinton Justice Department because then Attorney General Janet Reno claimed the accusations were racist. 

Judicial Watch represented the whistleblower, Notra Trulock, responsible for launching an investigation into Lee’s actions. 

Trulok was the Energy Department’s intelligence operations chief and Clinton administration officials defamed him by accusing him of being a racist in order to cover up Lee’s repeated security violations. 
HOW THE LATEST CALL FOR INVESTIGATION CAME ABOUT...
FEB. 15, 2016 SANTA FE NEW MEXICAN

"One of the highest-ranking officials at the Los Alamos National Lab abruptly announced his resignation from the lab this week, following more than 15 years of employment with the institution.


Richard “Rich” Marquez, executive director of the Los Alamos National Laboratory, informed lab Director Charles McMillan that he would be leaving the lab, effective immediately, according to an internal memo sent by McMillan to lab employees dated Feb. 11 and obtained by the New Mexican.

The reason for his sudden resignation from a job that paid $492,000 a year is unknown. Marquez did not respond to several requests for comment on Thursday and lab officials declined comment. 

The U.S. Department of Energy and the National Nuclear Safety Administration did not return emails seeking comment.

Last August Marquez was charged with four offenses in a domestic violence incident involving his girlfriend.
The charges included battery against a household member, false imprisonment, interference with communication and larceny under $500.

 Marquez denied the charges and they were dismissed a few weeks later when ...the woman told the police she did not want to file a report “because her boyfriend was ‘well connected’ and she did not want to get him into trouble.”

The woman’s and Marquez’s attorneys did not respond to requests for comment Thursday. It’s unknown whether the incident played any role in Marquez’s decision to leave the lab.

Craig Leasure, principal associate director for operations and business, has stepped in as interim executive director.

SAFETY VIOLATIONS, FRAUD, MISSING FUNDS

Marquez’s resignation comes at a turbulent time for the lab. On Dec. 18, the National Nuclear Safety Administration, a subsection of the Department of Energy, announced the lab’s $2.2 billion annual contract would not be renewed when it expires in September 2017 and would instead be put up for bid.

The decision not to renew the contract was based on a slew of safety violations, the most notable related to an improperly packaged drum of nuclear waste, which burst and contaminated areas of the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant with radiation. The safety violation forced the plant to close indefinitely and resulted in a $74 million settlement between the lab, WIPP and the New Mexico Environment Department for violating the state’s permit.

The lab is currently run by a consortium led by the University of California and Bechtel Corporation.

Marquez’s tenure had survived other problems at the lab, including the discovery of hundreds of thousands of dollars in fraudulent purchases under the guise of purchasing lab equipment that occurred while he was in charge of procurement and property management.

Though Marquez was not implicated in the schemes, some lab employees testifying in front of a congressional oversight committee blamed him and other lab officials for failings that allowed the fraud to happen and of trying to obstruct an investigation into it. As a result of that scandal, Director John Browne and Principle Deputy Director Joseph Salgado resigned, and 16 other high ranking employees were dismissed or transferred. 

Two other employees were arrested and served timed in prison.

The workers hired to investigate the fraud, Steven Doran and Glenn Walp, were fired abruptly in 2002, and publicly called their termination an effort to “cover-up” wrongdoings at the lab. An investigation later found they were wrongfully terminated.

On Feb. 1, Doran, Walp and Chuck Montaño  , an author and former auditor for the lab, filed a request to U.S. Attorney for New Mexico Damon Martinez requesting the investigation be reopened. The parties also sought for Martinez to investigate the apparent suicide of Richard Bruick, former deputy director of operations, who was found dead from a self-inflicted gun shot a year following his retirement in 2002, a death they believe to be suspect.

A spokesperson for Martinez said his office would not comment on whether the request was being considered.

Both Montaño and Walp said Thursday that should an investigation be reopened, Marquez would be “at the top of [the] list” for questioning.

“Mr. Marquez knows where all the bodies are buried,” Walp said.

The Project On Government Oversight has launched its updated Federal Contractor Misconduct Database (FCMD), which catalogues penalties, warnings, and other oversight actions between the government and its contractors.

This data offers unprecedented insights into the history of waste, fraud, and abuse by federal contractors, including those that manage and operate the U.S. nuclear weapons complex.


This complex encompasses the military research, testing, and production facilities that sustain America’s nuclear arsenal. It is managed by the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA), a semi-autonomous agency within the Department of Energy (DOE). NNSA’s mission is expansive, expensive, and scientifically demanding.

The largest single penalty against the weapons labs came in 2015 when DOE cut Los Alamos’ award fee by 90 percent—$57 million—for a radiological incident at the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (WIPP).

In February 2014, staff at the Los Alamos lab incorrectly packed nuclear waste for storage, at WIPP, WIPP did not catch the error, and these two safety failures led to an explosion, fire, and radiation leak at WIPP.
The plant has not reopened.
The plant is known to still have leakage problems."

BACK IN 2014, JUDICIAL WATCH TRIED AGAIN TO INTEREST CONGRESS IN ADDRESSING THE FAILURE OF SECURITY AND FAILURE OF NNSA TO SECURE STOCKPILES FROM TERRORIST THREATS AT OUR NUKE FACILITIES...CONGRESS WASN'T INTERESTED.


"The government agency, the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA), responsible for securing the nation’s nuclear weapons—and the facilities where they are housed—has failed miserably.     

This is obviously detrimental to national security and affects everyone who lives in this country.

The scary part is that the negligence is nothing new, but rather it’s been going on for decades, according to the federal audit that exposed the crisis recently.

It was conducted by the Department of Energy (DOE) Inspector General and it tells a frightening tale of how vulnerable we really are as a nation.

The NNSA is responsible for maintaining a safe, secure and effective nuclear deterrent through the application of science, technology, engineering and manufacturing processes. 

But it isn’t properly done and the inspector general confirms this has been going on for years while authorities stood by.       

Problems occurred in the control of nuclear weapons [Configuration Management] because, over the decades of nuclear weapons development, neither NNSA nor its sites treated the maintenance of original nuclear weapons CM information as a priority,” the audit says.   

The operational problems are so severe that the reliability and safety of U.S. nuclear weapons has been negatively impacted, the report further states.     

The crisis is especially bad at the premier nuclear weapons laboratories that are overseen by NNSA because the agency has taken “a management approach that was more reactive than pro-active” in the handling and maintenance of nuclear weapons and their components, according to the DOE watchdog."   

IN JUNE, 2017: "Los Alamos’ persistent shortcomings in plutonium safety have been cited in more than 40 reports by government oversight agencies, teams of nuclear safety experts and the lab’s own employees over the past 11 years. Some of these reports say that safety takes a back seat to meeting specific goals for nuclear warhead maintenance and production by private contractors running the labs. Nuclear workers and experts say the contractors have been chasing lucrative government bonuses tied to those goals.

At a public hearing in Santa Fe on June 7, McConnell said that while Los Alamos is making progress, it is still unable to resolve the safety issue that provoked its shutdown four years ago, namely an acute shortage of engineers who are trained in keeping the plutonium at the facility from becoming “critical” and fissioning uncontrollably. “They’re not where we need them yet,” he said of the lab and its managers.

A February report by the Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board, an independent safety advisory group chartered by Congress, detailed the magnitude of the gap. It said Los Alamos needs 27 fully qualified safety engineers specialized in keeping the plutonium for fissioning out of control. The lab has 10.

Some of the reports obtained by the Center for Public Integrity described flimsy workplace safety policies that left workers ignorant of proper procedures as well as incidents where plutonium was packed hundreds of times into dangerously close quarters or without the shielding needed to block a serious accident.

The safety risks at the Los Alamos plutonium facility, which is known as PF-4, were alarmingly highlighted in August 2011, when a “criticality accident,” as it’s known, was narrowly averted, one of several factors prompting many safety officials there to quit."

AND THAT IS MERELY THE TIP OF THE ICEBERG.

THE DEADLIEST MATERIAL ON EARTH IS APPARENTLY BEING HANDLED BY WHAT MAY BE THE BIGGEST CROOKS IN AMERICA.

WE HAVE ENTRUSTED SUCH AS THESE TO MAINTAIN THE SECURITY OF MASSIVE AMOUNTS OF NUCLEAR MATERIAL.

WE SHOULD CERTAINLY RETHINK WHO OVERSEES OUR NUCLEAR FACILITIES, ALL OF THEM, IN THE U.S.

IF WE DON'T DO SO, IF WE FAIL TO DEMAND THE INTEGRITY OF THOSE IN CHARGE OF SAFEGUARDING US ALL, AND DEMAND OF CONGRESS THE GUARANTEE OF ABSOLUTELY FLAWLESS OVERSIGHT FOR THESE FACILITIES, WHEN A FATAL MISTAKE IS MADE, WHEN, NOT IF, WE WILL HAVE OURSELVES TO BLAME FOR NOT DEMANDING THESE THINGS.

WE STILL HAVE VOICES, WE ARE STILL SUPPOSED TO BE THE ONES WHO WATCH OUR GOVERNMENT AND MAKE THOSE WE ELECT BE RESPONSIBLE TO US FOR OUR SAFETY AND FOR OUR LONG- AND SHORT-TERM HEALTH.

5 comments:

  1. COLD CASE MURDER, LOS ALAMOS.
    The lab's operators knew that if the Department of Energy discovered the magnitude of the situation—and the fact that they had been looking the other way—they could lose their multi-billion dollar contract to run the facility. That morning, Brooks and two other employees were getting the lifts ready to open for skiing over the upcoming weekend. Brooks was near the ski lift up the hill from one of the site's parking lots when the Dodge pickup pulled in. Burick waved at Brooks and another employee, José Pacheco, and circled the parking lot before parking alongside the road, perpendicular to the chair lifts, about 600 yards from where Brooks was working. Within about a minute, Brooks says, he heard a "pow!" and then another, immediate noise. He got on his ATV and drove down from the lift area to the parking lot to see what happened.


    Brooks knew he'd heard a gunshot but had no idea the truck's driver had been hit. As he pulled up, he saw that Burick was partly under the front of the truck, so he thought maybe the stranger was working on his car—looking at its radiator, perhaps.


    "I started to ask him, 'Did you hear anything?' And then something slapped me in the face," Brooks says. "Do you want me to get graphic? He was laying under his truck, and I see the top of his head is laying on the ground and his gun and little pieces of brain all over the ground and all over the truck, so I backed away."
    Brooks called 911.
    https://www.sfreporter.com/news/coverstories/2012/02/14/who-killed-richard-burick/

    ReplyDelete
  2. FAILURE TO PASS SECURITY INSPECTION,IN 2009; Specific failings in information security included mismanagement of passwords on the classified network, meaning that malicious insiders could guess the passwords of others. Additionally, the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA's) recommendation that employees be given least-privilege access has not been followed, the report said.
    "LANL provided users with more access than needed to perform their duties and configure classified systems with more capabilities and services than required", it warned. "As a result, there is an increased risk that users could access classified data they do not need to perform their duties."
    Network monitoring was also inadequate, according to the report, which said that critical information security events were not being captured. And software was not always configured securely. Information security risk assessments for the classified computer network were not comprehensive, there were gaps in policies and procedures, and individuals with significant network security responsibilities were not adequately trained in information security.

    Disaster recovery was also sorely lacking, according to the report, which said that only one of five plans reviewed had addressed all topics outlined by the laboratory's policy, including an up-to-date information security test plan, and recent testing.

    This is not the first time that the laboratory, which is overseen by the NNSA, has come under fire for lax information security. In 2008, the GAO issued a report making 52 recommendations to correct deficiencies, and the NNSA agreed with all of them. In 2007, the Department of Energy also served the laboratory with a compliance order forcing it to implement specific action items by December last year.
    "DOE and NNSA officials told us they were concerned about LANL's ability to sustain security improvements over the long term," the GAO report said.
    https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/los-alamos-fails-to-toe-information-security-line/

    ReplyDelete
  3. Were it not for the connections between Burick, Bussolini, and Alexander, and the peculiar circumstances of Burick’s alleged suicide, there would be no reason to revisit this case. However, in the years since Burick’s death, two things have remained constant: First, the frequency of scandals and abuse at Los Alamos, and second, many of the people in leadership. According to Montaño, some even helped quash the original investigations launched by Walp and Doran.
    Montaño writes, “The commitment to impose accountability in Los Alamos had always been too shallow, too short-lived, too politically tainted to be effective.” If that is ever to change, a new investigation into Richard Burick’s alleged suicide would be a good place to start.
    ONCE UPON A TIME IN LOS ALAMOS
    https://www.pogo.org/analysis/2016/01/once-upon-time-in-los-alamos/

    ReplyDelete
  4. Another Computer Hard Drive is Missing at Los Alamos
    JANUARY 15, 2003
    A computer hard drive that contains classified data has been missing from the Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) since October 2002, but top officials at the Department of Energy (DOE) have failed to investigate the loss, sources have told POGO. Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham was briefed on the incident Tuesday.

    LANL officials discovered the missing hard drive in an annual audit of the Classified Removable Electronic Media (CREM) system last fall, but only reported to DOE headquarters security personnel that "media" was missing to downplay the serious nature of the loss. Sources tell POGO that DOE never investigated the loss of the hard drive and its container. At one point, LANL told DOE officials that the missing hard drive had been destroyed, but there is no evidence to support this. The container was later found, but the hard drive has not been located.
    https://www.pogo.org/press/release/2003/another-computer-hard-drive-is-missing-at-los-alamos/

    ReplyDelete
  5. 263 STOLEN COMPUTERS, 3 HARD DRIVES.
    This was not the first time a hard drive has been lost at LANL. In the summer of 2000, the FBI investigated the disappearance of two hard drives from a vault in the SuperSecret X-division of Los Alamos. Later the hard drives mysteriously reappeared behind a copy machine.

    The 2000 loss led to the development of a supposedly new and improved system that required bar codes on all stored hard drives and sign-out sheets. The latest disappearance, however, highlighted the fact that rather than barcoding the hard drive, lab officials instead only barcoded the holders containing the hard drives.

    While LANL has admitted to DOE this hard drive is unaccounted for, there remain 263 stolen or missing computers, which remain in question. These computers were identified as missing by the two investigators fired by LANL in retaliation for uncovering widespread mismanagement at the lab. No one outside LANL itself has attempted to determine the whereabouts of these computers.
    https://www.pogo.org/press/release/2003/another-computer-hard-drive-is-missing-at-los-alamos/

    ReplyDelete