WASHINGTON — Federal investigators had no trouble smuggling bomb-making materials past ill-trained and poorly supervised guards at federal buildings, senators were told at a hearing Wednesday.
"This is the broadest indictment of a federal agency I have ever heard," Sen. Joseph Lieberman, I-Conn., said at a Homeland Security Committee hearing on the performance of the Federal Protective Service, the office responsible for the safety of some 9,000 federal facilities. "This is really serious stuff."
The committee, chaired by Lieberman, heard how Government Accountability Office investigators on 10 occasions carried the components for an improvised explosive device through checkpoints monitored by FPS guards. In all 10 cases, the bomb-making materials went undetected.
Mark Goldstein, the GAO's director for physical-infrastructure issues, said the investigators proceeded to assemble the material — made up of a liquid explosive and a low-yield detonator — in restrooms and walked freely around the facilities with the IED in a briefcase.
He said that in some cases, the bathrooms were locked, but employees working in the buildings opened them up for the visitors.
The IEDs, which Goldstein said contained actual bomb components but with concentrations below trigger points, were smuggled into 10 level-IV facilities — buildings housing more than 450 employees with a high volume of public contact — in four major cities. They included offices of a U.S. senator and representative and agencies such as the departments of Homeland Security, State and Justice.
"In this post-9/11 world that we are now living in, I cannot fathom how security breaches of this magnitude were allowed to occur," Sen. Susan Collins of Maine, top Republican on the committee, said.
The FPS, Goldstein concluded, "is an agency in crisis." In addition to the smuggling operations, the GAO cited examples of a night guard being found asleep after taking the painkiller prescription drug Percocet, and a guard failing to recognize or properly X-ray a box containing handguns at the loading dock of a facility. One guard supposed to have been at his post was caught using government computers to manage a private for-profit adult Web site.
The report also found that 411 of the 663 guards deployed to a federal facility had at least one expired firearm qualification, background check, domestic violence declaration or CPR-first aid training certificate.
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