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PERSONAL DATA OF OVER 35,000 EX-POWs TRIGGERS
DISPUTE -- Officials of American Ex-Prisoners
of War
differ over whether data has been compromised.

For more about compromised veterans' data,
click here...
http://www.vawatchdog.org/va%2
0data%20theft%20news.htm
Story here...
http://stripes.com/article.
asp?section=104&article=560
49&archive=true
Story below:
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POW group argues over whether vets’ data
compromised
By Leo Shane III
Stars and Stripes
WASHINGTON — The vice commander of the American Ex-Prisoners of War
insists that none of his group’s files are missing or in danger, but
other group personnel are still warning that veterans’ addresses and
Social Security numbers may have been compromised.
The personal data of more than 35,000 former POWs and their families is
at the center of an internal dispute in the group.
Last week, officer personnel from the group’s Texas headquarters issued
a press release warning that the groups’ computers and mail had been
stolen in a break-in on Aug. 11. But group vice commander Charlie Hill,
who lives in South Carolina, said the files and hard drives were removed
as part of an internal audit, and are all accounted for.
“There was no break-in and they knew it,” he said. “They had no
authority to make those statements and worry people.”
But Clydie Morgan, national adjutant for the group, said Hill and group
commander Robert Fletcher took the items without following board
procedure, and did not provide enough information about how the files
would be secured.
“Right now, the equipment is out of our control, and if we don’t know
where our database is, we have to warn our members,” she said.
Hill said the individuals performing the audit are professionals
qualified to securely handle the sensitive information, although he
declined to name the company involved.
Hill disputes Morgan’s accusation that the audit breaks organization
rules, and insists that the Texas office personnel ignored specific
instructions from group leaders in an effort to undermine the audit. The
study was launched by Hill and Fletcher after questions arose about the
headquarters staff’s handling of payments.
Local police have declined to further investigate the matter,
classifying it as an internal dispute. Department of Veterans Affairs
officials in Washington say they also will not get involved, although
representatives from the VA inspector general’s office in Dallas are
monitoring the situation because of the information involved.
The American Ex-Prisoners of War organization, founded in 1942, is open
to all former military prisoners of war, all former civilian internees,
and the families of those individuals.
VA officials said they have not provided any database access to the
group, so the personal information they hold comes from information
given by their membership. Group officials said the digital and paper
records include addresses, dates of birth, Social Security numbers and
VA claims data of former POWs and their families.
American Ex-Prisoners of War web site here...
http://www.axpow.org/
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Larry Scott --