A criminal probe has been launched after several employees at the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs reportedly accessed the medical records of Senator J.D. Vance (R-OH) without authorization. The employees also accessed records belonging to Governor Tim Walz (D-MN). Both men are military veterans.
At least six employees are said to have accessed the records, allegedly violating federal health privacy laws. After the incident was uncovered, VA investigators notified the Republican and Democratic presidential campaigns.
VA Press Secretary Terrence Hayes stated, “We take the privacy of the Veterans we serve very seriously and have strict policies in place to protect their records. Any attempt by VA personnel to improperly access Veteran records is unacceptable and will not be tolerated.”
It is currently unknown what motivated the unauthorized access and whether or not the documents may have been leaked to people outside of the VA. An internal memo released at the end of August reportedly warned VA employees not to view veterans’ records even if they were curious, noting that records should only be viewed in relation to official authorities and assigned duties.
WIDER ISSUES.
The case echoes a similar leak at the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) that saw a former IRS contractor named Charles Littlejohn release President Donald J. Trump’s confidential tax records. Littlejohn later bragged about how easy it was to access the records, as despite not being a direct IRS employee, he still had access to confidential American tax information.
While both vice presidential candidates are veterans, Walz is accused of misrepresenting his military service. Some accuse him of dodging the Iraq War by taking early retirement while his fellow soldiers were deployed overseas. He has publicly claimed to have carried weapons “in war” but never deployed to a combat zone, prompting allegations of stolen valor.
Veterans who served in Walz’s National Guard unit accuse him of embellishing his rank, among other transgressions.