Erica Carr, the acting executive secretary of USAID, who ordered the mass shredding and burning of paper files at the agency, ...
A federal judge is refusing to block the destruction of classified documents as part of the building cleanout at the U.S.
Live updates and the latest news as the Senate votes to avoid a government shutdown and Mehmet Oz faces his Senate ...
Erica Carr. "Shred as many documents first, and reserve the burn bags for when the shredder becomes unavailable or needs a break," Carr wrote. Carr has even asked employees to label the burn bags ...
When the shredder is tired, it will reach the burn-bag phase. A new memo from acting Executive Secretary Erica Carr, first surfaced by ProPublica and the tech reporter Eoin Higgins, designates ...
Erica Carr, and obtained by POLITICO. “Shred as many documents first, and reserve the burn bags for when the shredder becomes unavailable or needs a break,” the email said. Carr instructed ...
In a motion filed in Washington, D.C., federal court, the unions cited an email from USAID's acting executive secretary Erica Carr instructing employees to come to the agency's office on Tuesday ...
An email Tuesday from the agency’s Acting Executive Secretary Erica Carr told employees to destroy the records, and thanked them for their “assistance in clearing our classified safes and ...
sent by Erica Carr, the acting executive secretary. "The only labeling required on the burn bags are the words 'SECRET' and 'USAID/(B/IO)' in dark sharpie, if possible," the email said.
The email was sent under the name of Erica Carr — the acting executive secretary at USAID — and bears a USAID logo. “Thank you for your assistance in clearing our classified safes and ...
The materials earmarked for destruction include contents of the agency’s “classified safes and personnel documents” at the Ronald Reagan Building, said an email sent by USAID’s acting executive ...