President
Trump ousted
“Mr. Fine is no longer on the Pandemic Response Accountability Committee,” Dwrena Allen, a spokeswoman for the Defense Department inspector general’s office, said in a statement Tuesday.
Trump has increasingly taken action against inspectors general he considers insufficiently loyal. He tweeted criticism of another inspector general on Tuesday. Last week, he fired
At a White House briefing on Tuesday, Trump said, “I don’t know Fine. I don’t think I ever met Fine.”
Representative
‘Truth to Power’
Senate Democratic Leader
On Tuesday, Trump tweeted his denunciation of the inspector general’s office at the Department of Health and Human Services for issuing a report that found “severe shortages of testing supplies and extended waits for test results” at hospitals as well as “widespread shortages of personal protective equipment” and “anticipated shortages of ventilators.”
Trump called the report “Another Fake Dossier” and questioned the inspector general’s honesty.
“Why didn’t the I.G., who spent 8 years with the Obama Administration (Did she Report on the failed H1N1 Swine Flu debacle where 17,000 people died?), want to talk to the Admirals, Generals, V.P. & others in charge, before doing her report,” Trump said in a tweet. “Another Fake Dossier!”
Earlier, Horowitz, who serves as the Justice Department’s inspector general, said oversight would persist despite the president’s actions.
“The inspector general community will continue to conduct aggressive, independent oversight,” Horowitz said in an April 4 statement posted online after the dismissal of Atkinson, the intelligence community watchdog. Horowitz specified that includes the accountability panel that Fine was going to lead.
The body would work to “ensure that over $2 trillion dollars in emergency federal spending is being used consistently with the law’s mandate,” Horowitz said in the statement.
Allen, the spokeswoman for the Pentagon inspector general’s office, said Trump has named Sean O’Donnell, who remains inspector general for the Environmental Protection Agency, to also take over for Fine as acting inspector general at the Pentagon. For the longer term, the president has chosen Jason Abend for the inspector general’s position, a position that would require Senate confirmation.
Fine is reverting to his previous position as principal deputy inspector general and remains at the Defense Department, Allen said.
Before his work at the Pentagon, Fine had spent 11 years in the inspector general’s role at the Justice Department. His work there included reports on President George W. Bush’s firing of four U.S. Attorneys and on politically driven hirings in the department’s civil rights division. His audits also included one in 2010 alleging FBI misuses of national security letters to obtain telephone records.
(Updates with Trump comment, in fifth paragraph)
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Larry Liebert
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