Caught in the Net: The FBI
The U.S. Congress was outraged when it was recently reported that 25 percent of employees in the FBI’s New York office don’t have bureau-issued e-mail. Across the agency, the percentage is about the same. But does fighting the war on terror require access to e-mail? That depends, says Special Agent Richard Kolko, an FBI spokesman ...
The U.S. Congress was outraged when it was recently reported that 25 percent of employees in the FBI's New York office don’t have bureau-issued e-mail. Across the agency, the percentage is about the same. But does fighting the war on terror require access to e-mail? That depends, says Special Agent Richard Kolko, an FBI spokesman in Washington. For agents in, say, New Mexico, "driving around in my Ford Bronco with my shotgun," not so much. But in Washington, "it's indispensable." Presumably that's true in New York, too. Maybe that's why the FBI says it's working to bridge its digital divide.
The U.S. Congress was outraged when it was recently reported that 25 percent of employees in the FBI’s New York office don’t have bureau-issued e-mail. Across the agency, the percentage is about the same. But does fighting the war on terror require access to e-mail? That depends, says Special Agent Richard Kolko, an FBI spokesman in Washington. For agents in, say, New Mexico, "driving around in my Ford Bronco with my shotgun," not so much. But in Washington, "it’s indispensable." Presumably that’s true in New York, too. Maybe that’s why the FBI says it’s working to bridge its digital divide.
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