SMRs and AMRs

Sunday, January 27, 2008

3 US workers face investigation over Obama e-mail

Allegedly spread discredited rumor

By Bryan Bender
Boston Globe

WASHINGTON - Three federal employees are being investigated for unlawful political activities after they allegedly sent an e-mail falsely accusing Barack Obama of being a "radical Muslim," the Globe has learned.

The US Office of Special Counsel - the independent federal agency responsible for enforcing a law banning civil service workers from engaging in political activism while performing their official duties - has launched investigations of two employees at one agency and one employee at another agency. All three are believed to have forwarded the erroneous chain e-mail about Obama from their government e-mail accounts.

Doing so would be a violation of the Hatch Act, a 1939 law designed to help protect career government employees and the government workforce from the influence of partisan politics. The act bans civil servants from taking "any active part" in political campaigns while on the job.

If a special oversight board finds the three employees in violation of the act, punishment could range from suspension from work without pay to termination from their jobs and disqualification from any future government employment.

A spokesman for the special counsel office, which has about 100 employees and a $17 million annual budget, said news of the investigations could deter other government employees from spreading partisan information over the Internet - including many who do not know it is illegal.

"We think that this e-mail could be the tip of the iceberg and that we may have many more similar e-mails circulating in federal agencies," said James Mitchell, the office's communications director. "People need to stop doing this."

Quick access to the Internet from work "makes it easier for people to make the mistake," he said. "Now people can step into trouble very easily just by forwarding a message that someone else sent to them."

(Continued here.)

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