Now this is just messed up. Wonder how this is going to turn out?
IMO none of those cases should've been dropped from the investigation... for whatever reason. After all this time how much damage has been done?DCIS came up with 264 active-duty and reserve military members, civilian employees and contractors on the list, including more than 70 with security clearances and 22 with Top Secret clearances. Among them were a contractor for the super-secretive [COLOR=#366388 ! important][COLOR=#366388 ! important]National [COLOR=#366388 ! important]Security [/COLOR][COLOR=#366388 ! important]Agency[/COLOR][/COLOR][/COLOR], a staffer in Defense Secretary Robert Gates' office, and a program manager for the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency. But DCIS only opened investigations into 52 of the names, according to investigative documents obtained by The Upshot under the Freedom of Information Act, and only 10 were ever charged. According to the documents, the project was closed in 2008 "due to the need to focus more resources on other DCIS investigative priorities." DCIS is primarily concerned with contractor fraud, and generally doesn't pursue [COLOR=#366388 ! important][COLOR=#366388 ! important]child [COLOR=#366388 ! important]pornography [/COLOR][COLOR=#366388 ! important]cases[/COLOR][/COLOR][/COLOR].
http://news.yahoo.com/s/yblog_upsho...suspected-child-pornography-fans-in-its-ranks