DHS inspector general's office nearly dormant under Trump as reports and audits plummet
Source: Washington Post
DHS inspector generals office nearly dormant under Trump as reports and audits plummet
By Nick Miroff
March 17, 2020 at 7:15 p.m. EDT
The Department of Homeland Securitys internal watchdog division has been so weakened under the Trump administration that it is failing to provide basic oversight of the governments third-largest federal agency, according to whistleblowers and lawmakers from both parties.
DHSs Office of the Inspector General is on pace to publish fewer than 40 audits and reports this fiscal year, the smallest number since 2003 and one-quarter of the agencys output in 2016, when it published 143, records show. The audits and reports cover everything from contracts and spending to allegations of waste and misconduct.
At a time w hen DHS has morphed into an instrument for some of President Trumps most ambitious domestic policies, the inspector generals role calls for the office to exert rigorous oversight of the departments $70 billion budget and 240,000 employees, Democratic and Republican lawmakers say.
But the agencys authority and productivity have withered, and in the weeks before the coronavirus outbreak, Inspector General Joseph Cuffari ducked requests to appear on Capitol Hill for routine testimony, a decision congressional staffers describe as unprecedented.
Adding to the turmoil, the offices second-in-command and former acting director, Jennifer Costello, was placed on administrative leave last month for alleged ethical violations, three current DHS officials said. An attorney for Costello said her client was not given a reason for her removal, but Costello believes she has been retaliated against for trying to denounce Cuffaris mismanagement and wrongdoing.
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https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/homeland-security-inspector-general-weakened/2020/03/17/c3269ea6-6309-11ea-912d-d98032ec8e25_story.html