Thursday, October 3, 2024

Inspector general finds litany of failures within Homeland Security under Biden-Harris

Multiple Office of Inspector General audits found a range of failures at DHS and Multiple Office of Inspector General audits identified a range of failures at DHS and its subagencies, from vetting, to screening to releasing foreign nationals the OIG has said increases national security threats.

(The Center Square) – Under the Biden-Harris administration, a litany of failures have been identified at the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.

Congress established DHS through the Homeland Security Act of 2002 to consolidate federal agency resources to better protect Americans from terrorist threats and disasters after the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

The Homeland Security Act “requires DHS to provide situational awareness and a common operating picture for the entire federal government,” and for state, local, and tribal governments, related to terrorist acts, natural disasters, or man-made disasters.

“Recent incidents and disasters highlighted the need for situational awareness throughout the Homeland Security Enterprise,” the OIG says, which is why it audited DHS to determine if it was sharing “actionable information on emerging threats with its external partners.” The OIG found that it wasn’t and DHS partners “did not always use DHS technology to obtain emerging threat information.” This is after members of Congress called on DHS to issue a National Terrorism Advisory System Bulletin, which it hasn’t done since May 2023.

Its secretary, Alejandro Mayorkas, was impeached in February by House Republicans for dereliction of duty, including the failures the OIG identified.

As a result, “DHS cannot always effectively share emerging threat information with partners, which may limit … response to emerging threats against the homeland,” the report found. 

https://www.thecentersquare.com/national/article_ffcd39a6-80f9-11ef-ada1-539190c706c0.html

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