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Paper Shredders and Burn Bags: The Vandalism of USAID Is Nearly Complete

National Security Archive: “Official email Monday night ordered classified and personnel files into burn bags Shredding party at the Reagan Building tries to erase history and accountability. Washington, D.C., March 12, 2025 – The acting executive secretary of the U.S. Agency for International Development Monday night [March 10, 2025] ordered the destruction of classified records and personnel files, according to the March 10 email reported by The Guardian, The New York Times, and other outlets. The email from Erica Y. Carr apparently convened remaining AID staff at the Ronald Reagan Building Tuesday morning at 9:30 a.m. to use shredding machines to get rid of classified records and personnel files, directly violating the Federal Records Act and the existing records retention schedules that protect such records. “Shred as many documents first, and reserve the burn bags for when the shredder becomes unavailable or needs a break,” reads the March 10 email from Carr. On Tuesday afternoon, federal workers unions suing the Trump administration for unlawfully terminating AID employees and programs asked the court to halt the “imminent and ongoing destruction of evidence” relevant to their litigation. Later that evening, parties to that case filed a joint status report in which the government said it would “not destroy additional documents stored in the USAID offices in the Ronald Reagan Building without affording notice to Plaintiffs” and that it would submit “a sworn declaration that will explain which documents were and were not destroyed.” “The shredding party at the Reagan Building in Washington, putting classified foreign aid files and personnel records into burn bags, breaks the law and attempts to erase history,” said Tom Blanton, director of the National Security Archive. “We have 15 pending Freedom of Information requests at AID that will be thwarted – along with an unknown number of other requests from members of the public – by this illegal document destruction. This shredding undermines the rights of agency employees, removes essential evidence from current litigation and investigation over foreign aid, and prevents citizens from holding their government to account.”

See also RollingStone [no paywall]: “It started with a “wood chipper.” Now it has reached the paper-shredder stage. When the shredder is tired, it will reach the burn-bag phase. The Elon Musk-led destruction of the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) that began in early February, with a freeze of federal grants and an order for personnel to cut-and-run from their posts administering life-saving international aid, has apparently accelerated to vandalism of the agency’s sensitive records. A new memo from acting Executive Secretary Erica Carr, first surfaced by ProPublica and the tech reporter Eoin Higgins, designates Tuesday as a “clearing” event, with the agency’s skeleton staff of essential personnel instructed to join in an act of mass document destruction. Carr’s memo calls for purging of “our classified safes and personnel documents” at USAID’s longtime headquarters at the Ronald Reagan Building in Washington, D.C…”

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