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Navy civilian worker, contractor indicted in alleged bribery scheme
Former Naval Information Warfare Center civilian employee James Soriano and defense contractor Russell Thurston allegedly conspired to commit fraud.
By Sarah Sicard
IRS crime-fighting arm takes on new tasks during Ukraine war
Twenty investigations of sanctioned people have been opened since it joined the Justice Department-led task force Kleptocapture in March.
By Fatima Hussein
IRS employees charged with COVID-19 relief fund fraud
Money was used to buy a Mercedes-Benz car, Gucci clothing and trips to Las Vegas.
Federal government using artificial intelligence to fight cybercrime
Around 95 percent of cybersecurity issues can be traced to human error. A lack of cybersecurity experts in government is compounding the problem.
By Mark Tice
Air Force civilian stole $1.1 million via travel charge card, bought piano, Harley, vacations
Eddie Ray Johnson, Jr., age 60, was sentenced to three years imprisonment and to pay $1,157,540.69 in restitution.
$50,000 reward offered after postal worker is fatally shot
The woman was shot about 4 p.m. on April 28 while she delivered mail.
Former Army civilian employee pleads guilty to stealing troops’ info in scheme to collect millions in military benefits
Frederick Brown admitted he took photos of personal identifying information including social security numbers and DOD ID numbers from thousands of U.S. servicemembers and veterans when he was logged into the Armed Forces Health Longitudinal Technology Application
By Diana Stancy
Mueller: Special counsel probe did not exonerate Trump
The special counsel’s remarks, made May 29 in his first in public since being tasked two years ago with investigating Russian interference to help Trump win the 2016 presidential election, stood as a strong rebuttal to Trump’s repeated claims that he was exonerated and that the inquiry was a “witch hunt” that found no crime.
Senators oppose OPM expansion of criminal hiring check
Applicants for federal jobs may soon be required to detail conviction alternative programs they have done, in addition to any actual incarcerations.
By Jessie Bur