BEIJING, July 4 (Xinhuanet) -- State Department
employees may have been sneaking peeks at the passport records of celebrities
much more often than previously disclosed, according to an internal
investigative report that urges new action to secure the files.
A report from the department's inspector general
released Thursday said a survey of the records of 150 notable politicians,
athletes and entertainers found that 127 of them, or 85 percent, had been
accessed 4,148 times between September 2002 and March 2008.
Of the 150 files, nine had been viewed more than 101
times, according to the report. Thirty-three others had been viewed more than 26
times, and 85 files had been looked at at least once, it said.
The report did not say if the files had been viewed
for legitimate reasons, but it noted that the number "appears to be excessive."
It added that it could not yet determine if the 85 percent "hit rate" was
"inordinately high."
However, officials said the number of times that some
files were viewed was highly suspicious and probably a sign of inappropriate
peeking at the records, which contain names, Social Security numbers and
passport numbers.
They said that an investigation is under way to
determine if any wrongdoing occurred and that any employees found to have
violated privacy policies would be disciplined.
"We are reviewing the circumstances under which
people looked at these records and we will take action," said Michael Kirby, a
senior official with the State Department's Bureau of Consular Affairs, which
handles passports. "If it's inappropriate access, we will take appropriate
measures."
(Agenceis)