GAO: DOJ needs to fix classification problems
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The Justice Department needs a standard classification system and needs to address its staffing shortage, according to a new report.
The Justice Department needs a standard classification system and needs to address its staffing shortage, according to a report issued by the Government Accountability Office.
DOJ and its bureaus, specifically the FBI, were under review to determine if the department implemented the National Archives and Records Administration's Information Security Oversight Office (ISOO) recommendations to correct problems in their document classification systems.
ISOO is responsible for oversight of national security classification programs for Executive Branch agencies. GAO conducted the study because of the important role information protection and sharing plays in preventing terrorist attacks, the report said.
DOJ ranks third in the number of documents classified in the executive branch, behind the Defense Department and the CIA. Within DOJ, the FBI handles 98 percent of that work.
In any DOJ entity, a document can be classified in one of five ways: Limited Office Use Only, For Office Use Only, Law Enforcement Sensitive, Propriety Information or DEA-sensitive (specific to DEA). Each of these designations have "unique definitions and safeguard requirements," but they do not have "specific guidance on the types of information that merit each designation," the report said.
Without specific guidelines, employees do not know if the information warrants a sensitive but classified distinction. The components of DOJ do not train their employees to make these decisions nor do they oversee the process by which employees label the information.
Coordinating the classification process within DOJ will not take place until the end of December. Officials are waiting on results from an interagency work group that is standardizing classification procedures throughout the government. The agency said once these standards are available, they will make additional changes to their component's current practices.
Once the work group's standards are available, auditors recommend the attorney general make DOJ:
- Establish specific guidance for applying the designations they will use;
- Ensure that all employees authorized to make the designations have the necessary training before they can designate documents; and
- Set internal controls for overseeing sensitive but unclassified designations to help ensure that they are properly applied.
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