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Inspector General Report Lists Crimes Committed by DHS Employees

06/11/2010 -Drug and illegal alien smuggling. Bribes. Kickbacks. Possession of child pornography. Attempted child sex abuse. These are just some of the crimes Department of Homeland Security (DHS) employees and contractors were convicted of in fiscal year 2009,according to a report (.pdf) released today from the department's Office of the Inspector General (OIG).

In between October 2008 and September 2009, the OIG's Office of Investigations worked on approximately 16,800 complaints it received. Of the 1,056 investigations initiated, OIG made 283 arrests that led to 241 convictions. The DHS internal watchdog has statutory authority to investigate complaints across DHS's component agencies, specifically the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), the Transportation Security Administration (TSA), the Coast Guard (USCG), Customs and Border Protection (CBP), Citizenship and Immigration Services (CIS), and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

DHS has roughly 188,000 employees and 200,000 contractors, according to the agency.

The OIG describes the 24-page report's release as a reminder to DHS employees not to betray the public trust. "We trust this special report will serve as a deterrent to fraud, waste, and abuse, and serve to promote more effective, efficient, and economical operations within the department," writes the Inspector General Richard L. Skinner in the report's preface.

The 24-page report, however, recounts only a chosen few crimes listed by the DHS agency in which they occurred. Many of the anecdotal summaries of convictions described general corruption, particularly at the U.S. border and other ports of entry

♦ A TSA supervisor and two CBP officers conspired to smuggle narcotics through a checkpoint at a U.S. international airport. The TSA supervisor and the organizer are currently serving multi-year sentences while the CBP officers await sentencing.

♦ Three contractors working for CBP released illegal aliens in Los Angeles that they were transporting to the border for deportation. The three transportation officers collected $2,500 from each illegal alien they released. All three contractors received time in prison for their corruption.

♦ A guard at an ICE Federal Service Processing Center accepted cash from an OIG undercover agent to smuggle marijuana, an MP3 player, cell phones, and U.S. currency into the facility for immigration detainees. Cell phones are a particularlyhot commodity inside U.S. prisons, allowing detainees and prisoners to make contact with the outside world and, in some instances, continue criminal activity. The guard was fired and sentenced to 24 months of supervised release.

In congressional testimony in March, OIG's Thomas Frost, assistant inspector general for investigations, told lawmakers that the U.S.-Mexico border breeds corruption among DHS employees (.pdf) as drug trafficking organizations seek to get their product into the United States.

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