Call to Senator Landrieu to request investigation of alleged Corps of Engineers Internet Scandal

Sandy Rosenthal delivering a letter to Senator Mary Landrieu's New Orleans Office calling for Investigation of alleged Corps Internet Scandal 6-23-09

Sandy Rosenthal delivering a letter to Senator Mary Landrieu's New Orleans Office calling for Investigation of alleged Corps Internet Scandal 6-23-09

Senator Mary Landrieu
328 Hart Senate Building
United States Senate
Washington, DC 20510

June 23, 2009

Dear Senator Landrieu,

On June 17, 2009, WWL-TV in New Orleans exposed an apparent campaign of disinformation by employees of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers regarding the failure of the flood walls and levees during Hurricane Katrina and in response to any subsequent public discussion of the Corps’ failures.

In the news story, WWL-TV obtained a sworn affidavit containing disturbing revelations about this disinformation campaign from Mr. Jon Donley, the Founder and former Editor-in-Chief of the Times Picayune’s online affiliate, Nola.com.

The 3-page document details how a group of about 20 individuals – whose usernames have been confirmed to originate from computers at the Army Corps of Engineers New Orleans District – posted hundreds of politically-motivated and abusive comments using Nola.com’s user enagagement features.

These posts, as stated in the affidavit were made by Federal employees masquerading as ordinary citizens.  They reflect a possibly coordinated effort to abuse a public forum in order to shift responsibility from the agency’s destructive and deadly levee failures away from itself and onto the citizens of metro New Orleans.  This seemingly coordinated effort was done on the taxpayer’s dime while using taxpayer-funded equipment.   Many of these sort of comments were released last week on our website.

Furthermore, the affidavit asserts that there are numerous comments that “appealed to racial division and at times engaged in racial slurs” against African American citizens in the New Orleans region.

These comments also appeared to be by Federal employees, apparently on the taxpayer’s dime using taxpayer funded equipment.  Although this is a potential a violation of Federal Civil Rights law, these sort of comments have not yet been released to the public.

Mr. Donley’s affidavit referenced hundreds of comments, but that covered only a six-week period on a spreadsheet he ran.  In an email to Levees.org, Mr. Donley said he is very comfortable saying he observed “thousands over the entire nearly three-year period.”

In line with our mission of education, Levees.org, on March 16, 2009 requested that Times Picayune/Nola.com provide all such comments and usernames originating from the Corps’ office.  Their lawyer told us that while there is no law specifically preventing them from providing the data, they would elect to withhold it anyway, citing policy.

In light of these appalling revelations, we, the undersigned strongly urge you to have the Department of Justice conduct an investigation into these alleged activities as well as secure a full disclosure of the comments data.

We contend that a Federal agency, tasked with protecting coastal Louisiana, may be improperly and perhaps illegally engaging in coordinated political activity.  Furthermore, Federal employees tasked with protecting an African American-majority city have potentially displayed explicit racial prejudice.

We, the citizens of the region deserve to know the full extent to which multiple individuals with the Army Corps of Engineers may have been abusing the user engagement features at the Times Picayune/Nola.com.

Yours truly,
Mtumishi St. Julien
Chairman of the Board

Sandy Rosenthal
Executive Director

HJ Bosworth Jr, PE
Research Director

Vince Pasquantonio
Legislative Liaison

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Letter to Jim Amoss from St. Bernard Parish Firefighter

Photo in January 2006 of nearly ruined neighborhood in St. Bernard Parish, Louisiana

Photo in January 2006 of nearly ruined neighborhood in St. Bernard Parish, Louisiana

The letter below to Jim Amoss, Editor of the Times Picayune / Nola.com is reprinted here with permission from the author.

Dear Mr. Amoss,

It is almost four years since my community was destroyed by the failure of the Army Corps of Engineers (ACOE) federally funded levees.  During that time, I as a St. Bernard Parish Firefighter, having lost everything I owned, initially assisted in the rescue of hundreds of those who felt protected and stayed not knowing the dangers that awaited them.  I also have suffered immensely, physically, mentally, emotionally, finacially and spiritually as my community and I have grappled with having to rebuild our lives and community in spite of persistent drawbacks.

During this time I have remained a subscriber to the Times Picayune and NOLA.COM using it to keep up with events and see what others in my community are feeling and how they are coping by reading the forums.  Over the course of the last four years I have seen many comments posted by what I believed to be those “spinning” for the ACOE and attacking some of us who have rebuilt our communities.

Now it comes to light that my suspicions were real and it has been ACOE employees using tax payer funded computers.  I think all your readers and I should be given full details and ALL the comments that were sent from the taxpayer paid ACOE computers. From the alleged amount of comments it is doubtful in my mind that this was as alleged by the ACOE the work of “one in 1600 employees”.

Mr. Amoss, do the right thing. Release the records and set the record straight on if the ACOE was “spinning ” their image or not.  As a subscriber and one who has endured I demand this.

Kevin R. Zanca
22 Pamela Place West
Arabi, LA 70032

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Why Jon Donley came forward

How we nailed the Corps of Engineers.  Using "backend" tools available to any nola.com blogger, I could clearly see the IP for username "overwrought"

How we nailed the Corps of Engineers. Using "backend" tools available to any nola.com blogger, I could clearly see the IP for username "overwrought"

On his website Friday, Jon Donley explained why he came forward and spoke out on what he saw while employed as Managing Editor at Nola.com.

For over 2 years, he observed a cadre of about 20 user names posting abusive comments on Nola.com’s community features about any articles or people who criticized the Army Corps of Engineers.  Donley traced the comments via IP address to the Corps’ internet network and describe how he saw nearly 700 comments in just a 6-week period early this year.

The highly credible letter is lengthy and chock full of detail, but the final sentence says it all:

“The idea that those same community features would be used to attack people calling for accountability,  to silence critics and deflect independent review of the Katrina disaster – potentially putting those same New Orleans residents at risk again – is obscene.”  –Jon Donley

Click here for the full text.

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