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4 years of turmoil scar Los Alamos lab

©Associated Press
January 19, 2003

LOS ALAMOS, N.M. -- The laboratory that built the atomic bomb and is entrusted with some of America's most sensitive defense secrets has lost track of millions in equipment and credit card expenses in a scandal that has claimed five top managers, including the director.

The Los Alamos National Laboratory is under investigation by the FBI and at least three congressional committees, which are looking into allegations of theft, fraud and a coverup by management. The allegations surfaced after two internal investigators were fired last year.

Los Alamos' new interim director, Pete Nanos, said last week that he will have to "drain the swamp" at Los Alamos, starting with a wall-to-wall inventory.

"We are not a bunch of crooks -- the problem is, I can't prove it," he said.

The scandal is the latest embarrassment for the elite research lab in the past several years. In 1999, Wen Ho Lee was accused of mishandling nuclear weapons codes, but the government's case fell apart and ended with a plea bargain that freed the Taiwanese-born scientist. The next year, two computer hard drives with top-secret nuclear-related material disappeared, only to turn up behind a copy machine.

Now Los Alamos is under scrutiny from the Energy Department and other agencies looking into allegations it lost $2.7-million in computers and other equipment. In addition, a lab-commissioned audit found nearly $4.9-million in questionable credit card transactions over four years.

Separately, the FBI is investigating two workers suspected of using $50,000 in purchase orders to buy fishing and camping gear and other personal items. Four other employees allegedly used lab purchase cards for such things as cash advances and jewelry. One even tried to charge a customized Ford Mustang.

The scandal cost director John Browne his job last month. He and four managers have either resigned or been reassigned. The University of California, which runs the lab for the Energy Department, has assumed oversight of the lab's audit office and business operations.

"The broader public perception of the lab has been severely damaged by these scandals," said Steve Aftergood of the Federation of American Scientists, which tracks secret research.

The man-on-the-street view of Los Alamos, he said, "is likely to be credit card fraud or theft instead of the frontiers of modern physics."

The lab has always been secretive about its work. Outsiders do not get in without a pass, and the area that handles plutonium is surrounded by razor-wire fences and guards.

Internal investigators Glenn Walp and Steve Doran said they were fired in November because lab officials did not want the problems to become public and endanger the university's $1.6-billion-a-year contract to run Los Alamos, which expires in 2005.

Lab managers said the men were dismissed because they were not a "suitable fit." But Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham has asked the department's inspector general to investigate the firings and the men's allegations.

Abraham also put university officials on notice that they need to fix the problems "to ensure we return Los Alamos to its pre-eminent position in science and national security."

Lab officials said they have accounted for all but about $260,000 of the questionable credit card charges. As for the missing equipment, lab spokeswoman Linn Tytler said Los Alamos is working with university auditors to find it.

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