Today's Article
The White House
failed to properly
archive its email
messages for
almost 500
separate days
between 2003-2005.
The American Spark
Bush Study Revealed Email Back-Ups Lacking From 2003 To 2005

By Cliff Montgomery - Jan. 20th, 2008

The Bush Administration failed to archive its email messages for such important White House offices as the
Executive Office of the President and the Office of the Vice President for almost 500 separate days between
2003-2005, according to an internal White House audit summary revealed Thursday by a House panel
chairman.

The 2005 White House study--which was viciously attacked in public last week by, of all entities, the White
House itself--discovered that on 473 separate days, at least one White House office had failed to store any
electronic messages, House Oversight and Government Reform Committee Chairman Henry Waxman (D-CA)
recently told
The Washington Post.

Waxman added that he chose to release the audit summary after Bush Administration spin doctor Tony Fratto
claimed on Thursday that there is "no evidence" that even a single White House email from 2003 to 2005 is
missing.

"From everything that we can tell, our analysis of our back-up systems, we just--we have no reason to believe
that any email, at all, are missing," asserted Fratto.

Fratto's contention "seems to be an unsubstantiated statement that has no relation to the facts they have
shared with us," Waxman told the
Post.

It is a far cry from what the Bush Administration itself has been saying--both in public and to government
investigators--for a few years now.

Fellow administration spin doctor Dana Perino flatly told the press on April 13th, 2007, that possibly millions of
White House emails from March 2003 to October 2005 had been lost.

"I wouldn't rule out that there were
a potential 5 million emails lost," Perino told reporters at the 2007 press
gaggle. [Italics added]

"And, again, I think that one of the things that's difficult is the things that we don't know. We don't know them,
but we're trying to find them out. And there are ways that you can retrieve any emails that are potentially lost,”
she added.

Meredith Fuchs, general counsel for
The National Security Archive (NSA)--a private government watchdog
group and one of the principal parties now suing the Bush Administration to discover what happened to those
emails--thinks it "odd that...four-and-a-half years later [White House officials] still have not yet figured out
whether or what emails were deleted,” she stated in a Jan. 16th NSA press release.

“It also is troubling that the problem may have started before October 2003, and they acknowledge that back-
ups prior to that period were recycled and are gone,” stated Fuchs.

"Two years after a special prosecutor concluded that key emails were missing from the White House system
administered by the Office of Administration, the White House...[still] doesn't know if any emails are missing,"
added NSA Director Tom Blanton in the press release.

The loss of Bush Administration emails first was disclosed on January 23rd, 2006. That's when prosecutors in
the Lewis "Scooter" Libby trial admitted to Libby’s defense counsel that it would be impossible to supply copies
of White House email records, “because not all email records from the Office of the Vice President and the
Executive Office of President for certain time periods in 2003 was preserved through the normal archiving
process on the White House computer system.”  

The full extent of the matter only became obvious to most on April 2007, when
Citizens for Responsibility and
Ethics in Washington
(CREW) released a damning report declaring that more than 5 million White House
emails had been lost. As noted above, Bush spokeswoman Dana Perino at that time acknowledged that "
a
potential 5 million emails
" may have been lost.

On January 8th, 2008, Magistrate Judge John Facciola of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia
ordered Bush officials to finally reveal if copies of perhaps millions of lost emails are archived on computer
backup tapes. The White House essentially has responded that it does not yet know what happened to the
emails.

The Court has pointed out that the issue of this potentially missing data is “time-sensitive”, since any back-ups
of the lost emails “are increasingly likely to be deleted or overridden with the passage of time.”

“To date, the White House has evaded answering questions about whether it permanently destroyed over 5
million emails about issues such as Hurricane Katrina, the firing of United States Attorneys, and the exposure
of Valerie Plame’s identity as a CIA agent,” commented  NSA general counsel Fuchs in a January 8th
statement.

Judge Henry Kennedy, Jr. previously issued a court order commanding the Bush Administration to preserve all
email back-up tapes retained by the Executive Office of the President (EOP). Judge Kennedy also
consolidated the Archive's case with another suit over the emails filed by CREW.



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