Erica Carr, the acting executive secretary of USAID, who ordered the mass shredding and burning of paper files at the agency, ...
A new Trump administration directive calls on remaining USAID staff to purge the agency’s classified safes and personnel ...
The White House said the documents remain available on computer systems, and the order comes as U.S. Customs and Border Protection is poised to move into the USAID building.
WASHINGTON (AP) — A federal judge refused Friday to block the destruction of classified documents as part of the building ...
A USAID directive to destroy classified documents had been "seriously misapprehended," Trump administration attorneys wrote in a court filing Wednesday.
the report said citing an email sent by USAID's acting executive director, Erica Carr. "Shred as many documents first, and reserve the burn bags for when the shredder becomes unavailable or needs ...
The document destruction was set to take place Tuesday, according to an email from Erica Carr, the agency’s acting ... administration's plans to shut down USAID filed an emergency motion Tuesday ...
A new memo from acting Executive Secretary Erica Carr, first surfaced by ProPublica ... classified safes and personnel documents” at USAID’s longtime headquarters at the Ronald Reagan Building ...
Erica Carr, the USAID official who sent the memo ordering the destruction of the documents, wrote in a sworn declaration that "34 employees of USAID, all holding Secret-level or higher clearance ...
In a Tuesday email to staffers, USAID acting executive director Erica Carr had called for an “all day” effort to help destroy sensitive agency documents at the all-but-shuttered headquarters ...