The inspectors general of a dozen federal agencies say that their investigations have suffered due to interference from the departments they are charged with monitoring, the Center for Public Integrity reports.
In a series of letters to the U.S. Senate, the watchdogs of cabinet agencies such as the State, Treasury and Education Departments and the Department of Homeland Security, charged that agencies repeatedly failed to meet their requests for information in a timely way.
Among examples cited in the letters: The State Department’s watchdog was unable to get needed data on an Iraq police training program, while the inspector general for Treasury said that investigations into possible bank fraud were delayed by the agency’s refusals to produce documents.
“I am writing to report that the OIG [Office of Inspector General] is being denied unrestricted and unfettered access to information from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency for use in investigations of possible fraud … by failed financial institutions,” wrote Eric Thorson, the Treasury Department’s inspector general.
The letters were in response to a request from Republican Sens. Tom Coburn of Oklahoma and Charles Grassley of Iowa to inspectors general to identify instances in which they have been hindered from carrying out investigations.
The Obama administration responded with a statement that all agencies are to cooperate with inspector general probes.
“The Administration believes that Inspectors General are important to having an accountable government, and we are confident that each of the agency heads who received these letters will take them seriously and follow up on them expeditiously,” said Kenneth Baer, a spokesman for the White House Office of Management Budget.



Iraq is a major issue, but I’m not sure who and to what extent people and the government want to know/investigate the truth..