Print

Print


Confidential Files in Room 6527
The FBI has been hiding sensitive records of American eavesdropping
operations from parliamentary scrutiny for decades. FBI director J. Edgar
Hoover (right) gave orders in 1948 for tricky political papers to be stored
away in Room 6527 - known as the Confidential File Room - at its Washington
headquarters. The records did not show up in any index so that the FBI
would be able to deny any knowledge of the relevant documents should a
parliamentary control commission ever start to ask questions.
Along with records of US eavesdropping on friendly states, Hoover also
stashed away documents about Eastern Block spies or reports about the
unusual sexual practices of senior Communist officials and politicians.
There were so many documents that they began to threaten the vast official
building's structural mechanics. An internal FBI memo from September 1961
notes that secret papers had to be immediately transferred to other rooms
due to the weight of Room 6527's 26 filing cabinets. Thanks to a Freedom of
Information Act request, the *SonntagsZeitung* and *Le Matin Dimanche* have
gained access to these historic and previously unpublished intercept
records.

 http://bit.ly/1kccFsq

Source: http://room6527.com/enindex.html
See if people are clicking on this link: http://bit.ly/1kccFsq+
Try the bitly.com sidebar to see who is talking about a page on the web:
http://bitly.com/pages/sidebar



-- 
Peter Kurilecz CRM CA IGP
[log in to unmask]
Dallas, Texas
Save our in-boxes! http://emailcharter.org
http://twitter.com/RAINbyte
http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/RAINbyte/
http://paper.li/RAINbyte/rainbyte
http://pinterest.com/pakurilecz/archives/
http://pinterest.com/pakurilecz/records-management/
http://www.linkedin.com/in/peterakurilecz
Information not relevant for my reply has been deleted to reduce the
electronic footprint and to save the sanity of digest subscribers

Contact the list owner for assistance at [log in to unmask]

For information about joining, leaving and suspending mail (eg during a holiday) see the list website at
https://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/cgi-bin/webadmin?A0=archives-nra