USAID workers have been told to burn documents as the Trump Administration attempts to completely dismantle the agency.
The directive to destroy USAID documents raised questions about how sensitive records are being handled amid the Trump ...
"Shred as many documents first, and reserve the burn bags for when the shredder becomes unavailable or needs a break," the ...
An organization representing foreign service workers said it was "alarmed" by the directive because there could be documents ...
A USAID directive to destroy classified documents had been "seriously misapprehended," Trump administration attorneys wrote ...
USAID employees were instructed to destroy items in the agency’s “classified safes and personnel documents," per an email ...
A union for U.S. Agency for International Development contractors is asking a federal judge to intervene in any destruction ...
An email was fired off to staffers from Erica Carr — the acting executive secretary at USAID — Tuesday calling for an “all day” effort to help destruct agency documents at the ...
The White House said the documents remain available on computer systems, and the order comes as U.S. Customs and Border Protection is poised to move into the USAID building.
A USAID official instructed employees Tuesday on "clearing our classified safes" by shredding documents at the embattled foreign aid agency's Washington headquarters.
If Team Trump had a problem with document destruction in the first term, the issue appears to have metastasized in the second term.