Obama’s Criminal CIO Quietly Reinstated
Mar 19, 2009 5 Comments ›› Pat Dollard
WaPo:
White House computer chief reinstated after raid
By MICHAEL J. SNIFFEN
WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama’s computer chief was reinstated Tuesday from a leave he was put on after an FBI raid at his old job. At the same time, the White House labeled as a “youthful indiscretion” a misdemeanor theft the man committed at age 21.
White House spokesman Nick Shapiro announced the reinstatement of Vivek Kundra as White House chief information officer in charge of federal purchases of computers and other information technology. The 34-year-old computer expert was placed on leave March 12 after the FBI raided the District of Columbia technology office he headed until recently and arrested an employee there and a technology consultant on corruption charges.
“Mr. Kundra has been informed that he is neither a subject nor a target of the investigation and has been reinstated,” Shapiro said.
Subsequently, a check of Maryland court records showed that Kundra pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor theft in 1996.
“Vivek committed a youthful indiscretion,” Shapiro said. “He performed community service, and we are satisfied that he fully resolved the matter.”
Despite taking six hours Tuesday to answer a reporter’s questions about Kundra, Shapiro said he had not learned what Kundra stole.
Asked whether the administration was aware of the guilty plea before Obama named Kundra to the White House job, Shapiro did not answer directly and merely cited Kundra’s reinstatement.
The misdemeanor case was the latest example of damaging information emerging publicly about one of Obama’s choices after he announced their appointment or nomination. A few have withdrawn, including former Sen. Thomas Daschle, nominee for health and human services secretary; Gov. Bill Richardson, commerce secretary nominee, and Nancy Killefer, appointed as the White House’s chief federal performance officer.
Kundra pleaded guilty in Maryland District Court in Rockville to theft of less than $300 on Aug. 27, 1996. Maryland court records show he was sentenced to supervised probation, 80 hours of community service within the following six months and fined $500, of which $400 was suspended. He had to pay $155, including court costs.
Almost a year later, his attorney Gary L. Segal applied for reconsideration and got the disposition changed to “probation before judgment,” which Segal said is technically not a conviction in Maryland.
“Probation before judgment is a disposition available in Maryland for minor offenses like misdemeanors. It means that if he were asked if he had ever been convicted of a crime, he could say `no,’” Segal said in an interview Tuesday.
Judges are often willing to make such a change in disposition once a defendant has complied with probation provisions, according to Segal, who said he had no memory or records of the case but had reviewed the court’s computer records of it.
It could not immediately be learned from court records what Kundra stole. Gary Cranford, supervisor at the Maryland District Court records center in Annapolis, Md., said the paper case file, which would contain such details, was not in the box that was supposed to contain it. Neither Cranford nor court officials in Rockville were able to locate the file Tuesday.
Obama appointed Kundra on March 5. He was put on leave a week later until further details of the FBI case involving his old office could be learned, a White House official said then. The official requested anonymity in discussing personnel matters.
Authorities said Yusuf Acar, the acting chief security officer under Kundra in the city’s technology office, and technology consultant Sushil Bansal of Dunn Loring, Va., and unnamed others defrauded the city. Court documents alleged Acar approved falsified bills for services that were never delivered to the city and split the money with vendors who submitted the phony bills, including Bansal.
Obama spokesman Robert Gibbs would not say whether the White House knew the investigation was under way when it named Kundra.
Before becoming the city’s chief technology officer, Kundra had been an assistant secretary of commerce and technology in Virginia and president of a technology consulting company. He holds a master degree in information technology from the University of Maryland, and may have been a student when arrested in 1996.
However, it’s been learned Kundra’s “youthful indiscretion” involved shoplifting from J C Penney’s:
[ ... ]
Vivek shopflited four shirts, worth $134 combined. From J.C. Penney.
At an average of $33.50 a pop, they weren’t even nice shirts, even in 1996 dollars. (The crime was 1996, the conviction 1997.)
And then, when Vivek got caught, he ran for it. He didn’t get away.
Props to the Associated Press for pulling every thread. Via the AP’s Michael J. Sneffen:
A 1996 Montgomery County, Md., police report obtained by The Associated Press on Wednesday under a public records law shows Vivek Kundra was observed by a security guard putting the men’s shirts into a shopping bag and leaving the store without paying. Sgt. Tom Stanton wrote that Kundra was arrested after a brief foot chase and the property was recovered.
At this point, we wish Vivek and his White House handlers would come forth with a full explanation. Was this a fraternity prank? Is there some backstory about how Vivek was dead broke and needed a dress shirt for a job interview? Because right now, we not only think Vivek is a petty thief, we think he’s a petty thief with bad taste in clothes.










