US State Department loses a lot of laptops
6 May 2008 | 21:10 BST
Including 400 anti-terrorism kits
IT'S SURFACED that the US State Department can't account for up to about 1,000 laptops -- or maybe it's really 10,000 laptops -- perhaps as many as 400 of which belonged to the department's Anti-Terrorism Assistance Program.
The State Department's Inspector General has been conducting an equipment audit for three months. Only the first stage, an inventory, has been completed.
Internal auditors found that the department lost track of $30 million worth of computer equipment, "the vast majority of which... perhaps as much as 99 per cent," were laptops, according to one official. Another official calculated that the average State Department laptop costs $3,000 and figured that meant as many as 1,000 laptops might be astray. Not 10,000 laptops but 1,000 laptops.
Obviously, they don't get State Department jobs because they're good at math.
The official in charge of computer equipment said the department didn't have good inventory records. John Streufort warned other department officials that a "significant deficiency" relating to laptops existed. Christopher Flaggs, the department's deputy CFO, said the issue of the missing laptops could develop into a "material weakness," an auditor term-of-art meaning "really bad news."
John Naland, the retired diplomat who is president of the American Foreign Service Association, said "If the missing ones might have contained classified data, this could be serious."
No sh*t, Sherlock. µ
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