Top-secret government files left in cabinets sold at second-hand shop
Australian officials are investigating how top-secret documents were left in filing cabinets that were sold at a second-hand shop.
Australian officials are investigating how top-secret documents were left in filing cabinets that were sold at a second-hand shop. (Reuters)
Filing cabinets containing thousands of classified documents from the Australian government ended up being sold at a second-hand shop, prompting government officials Wednesday to launch an investigation into how the highly sensitive documents were disposed of.
The cache of documents was obtained by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, which reported the two cabinets were sold by a Canberra furniture shop at a discount price because they were locked and no one could find keys.
The ABC described the incident as an "extraordinary breach of national security," and that nearly all the documents are classified with some documents being marked "top secret," "sensitive," "Australian eyes only," and "cabinet-in-confidence."
The state-owned broadcaster did not say when the documents, known as the Cabinet Files, were found or who the buyer was who removed the locks with a drill -- but in recent weeks the outlet has reported stories on embarrassing moments during the tenures of former Prime Ministers Kevin Rudd and Tony Abbott.
Australia's former Prime Minister Tony Abbott attends Britain's annual Conservative Party Conference in Birmingham, Britain, October 5, 2016. REUTERS/Toby Melville - LR1ECA50QK119
Australia's former Prime Minister Tony Abbott attends Britain's annual Conservative Party Conference in 2016. (Reuters)
The documents contain information detailing Australia's intelligence priorities, counter-terrorism strategies, missile upgrades and profiles of terror suspects that spans more than a decade and four prime ministers, the most recent being Abbott. Abbott was replaced in 2015 by current Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull.
When questioned about the ABC's reporting of Cabinet documents on Tuesday, Turnbull told reporters: "I think they've come across someone's bottom draw in Canberra," Sky News reported.
Some of the files reveal former finance minister Penny Wong left nearly 200 top-secret papers in her old office when her government was voted out in 2013. The documents included Middle East defense plans, national security briefs and updates on the war in Afghanistan.
Australian Finance Minister Penny Wong speaks during an interview after a meeting between Finance Ministers of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) in Moscow August 30, 2012. Asia-Pacific finance officials agreed that any protectionist measures, especially in the agricultural sector, are not helping global economic growth, Russia's Finance Minister Anton Siluanov said on Thursday. REUTERS/Maxim Shemetov (RUSSIA - Tags: POLITICS BUSINESS) - GM1E88U1Q5Q01
Australian Finance Minister Penny Wong speaks after a meeting between Finance Ministers of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation. (Reuters)
EX-NSA CONTRACTOR TO PLEAD GUILTY TO 'BREATHTAKING' HEIST OF TOP-SECRET DATA
The files also revealed that former Prime Minister John Howard's National Security Committee at one point gave serious consideration to removing the right to remain silent to terrorism suspects when being questioned by police.
"I would also like NSC to consider whether amendments should be made to a suspect's right to remain silent to allow a court to draw adverse inferences in a terrorism trial where an accused relies on evidence which he or she failed to mention when questioned by police," Ruddock wrote in his NSC submission obtained by the ABC.
The proposal was then supported by the Australian Federal Police and Australian Security Intelligence Organization, but later rejected by the majority of the committee.
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The secret documents we've revealed this week were among hundreds found in filing cabinets sold cheap at a Canberra second-hand shop. Explore the rest http://ab.co/cabinetfiles
9:59 AM - Jan 31, 2018
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Another document reveals that AFP had lost almost 400 national security files over five years ending 2013. While the content of the missing security files was not revealed, "troop deployments in Afghanistan and Iraq, counterterrorism operations, foreign relations and Australia's border protection were among the top-secret and sensitive issues decided in the five-year period," according to the ABC.
Australian Cabinet documents are usually kept secret for 20 years before they are made public in a heavily redacted form. The sale of the ex-government furniture in the country's capital was not limited to Australians, meaning anyone could make a purchase and could have handed the contents to a foreign agent or government.
The ABC said it chose to publish some of the files because "national security and the inner workings of our government affect the lives of all Australians."
Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull smiles upon his arrival at Japan's Prime Minister's official residence before meeting Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe in Tokyo, Japan, January 18, 2018. REUTERS/Franck Robichon/Pool - RC17DA4D0670
Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said the ABC has "come across someone's bottom draw in Canberra." (Reuters)
The broadcaster said it had not chosen to report on some of the documents on national security grounds, but said the leak shows the "casual attitude of some of those charged with keeping the documents safe."
Rory Medcalf, head of the Australian National University's National Security College, told the Associated Press the incident is "very weird and embarrassing." He added that while the U.S. and other Aussie allies should be concerned, the leak is not as damaging as prior ones.
"This is not catastrophically damaging for national security in the sense that that something like the Snowden revelations must have been," Medcalf told the AP, referring to the former U.S. National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden, who disclosed classified information in 2013.
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