Acting Inspector General for Interior Department Questioned on Role in Producing Report that Recommended Gulf Drilling MoratoriumDocuments reveal involvement in report that IG’s office then investigated
WASHINGTON, D.C.,
May 23, 2012
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Jill Strait, Spencer Pederson or Crystal Feldman
(202-225-2761)
House Natural Resources Committee Chairman Doc Hastings (WA-04) yesterday sent a letter to the Department of the Interior’s Acting Inspector General (IG) Mary Kendall to question her about discrepancies between her testimony before the Subcommittee on Energy and Mineral Resources and documents recently provided to the Committee that suggest she was involved in the process of producing the report that recommended a six-month drilling moratorium in the Gulf of Mexico when she told the Subcommittee she was not.
On June 17, 2010 Kendall appeared before the Subcommittee. She told then Ranking Subcommittee Chairman Doug Lamborn that the IG’s office was not currently investigating edits made to the Drilling Moratorium Report and that she had no involvement in the process of producing the report.
Click here to watch video clip However, documents recently provided to the Committee from the IG's office suggest that Kendall apparently did play a role in the process of developing the report:
Click here to view a PDF of the documents. “I am troubled that these documents suggest the Acting IG played a role in developing the Drilling Moratorium Report, including participating in meetings with senior Department officials prior to the report’s issuance,” said Chairman Hastings. “This apparent involvement also raises new questions about the Acting IG’s independence and impartiality in conducting the investigation of the Drilling Moratorium Report, whether it was appropriate for her to oversee this investigation in the first place, and whether she should have disclosed her involvement and recused herself from all matters concerning the investigation.” The Committee has been conducting over a year-long investigation into whether an Obama Administration report that recommended a six-month drilling moratorium was intentionally edited to incorrectly state the views of peer reviewers. Subpoenas have been issued to both the Interior Department and the IG’s office, with which they have both failed to fully comply. Although the Obama Administration and others have claimed that this matter has already been investigated by the IG's office, emails from the IG’s lead investigators detail how they were not able to obtain all DOI documents that may have been relevant to their investigation or interview White House staff involved in the editing of the report. “The more information that becomes public, the more it becomes clear that a proper investigation into the Drilling Moratorium Report has never taken place,” continued Hastings. “Officials at the Interior Department and the White House have never had to answer key questions about how the decision to impose a moratorium was made and why the report was edited to impose a drilling moratorium that cost thousands of American jobs and blocked American energy production. This is why the Committee is conducting its investigation and why it’s unacceptable for the Interior Department to continue to withhold valuable information from Congressional oversight and public review.” In the letter, Chairman Hastings requested complete and unredacted copies of the following documents by June 4, 2012:
For more information, on the Committee’s oversight investigation, visit /oversight/moratorium ### |
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