[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 169 (Monday, November 7, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Page S7159]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
EXECUTIVE CALENDAR
Mr. MERKLEY. I ask unanimous consent that the Senate proceed to
executive session to consider Calendar No. 465, that the nomination be
confirmed with no intervening action or debate; that no further motions
be in order to the nomination; that any statements related to the
nomination be printed in the Record; that the President be immediately
notified of the Senate's action and the Senate then resume legislative
session.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mrs. FEINSTEIN. Mr. President, I support the confirmation of the
President's nominee to be the first inspector general of the
intelligence community, Irvin Charles McCullough III.
The position of Inspector General of the Intelligence Community--or
ICIG--was created in the fiscal year 2010 Intelligence Authorization
Act, after several years of effort to have the position enacted. The
reason to have a Community-wide inspector general is similar to the
reason to have a Director of National Intelligence.
The ICIG is intended to review, and conduct oversight on,
intelligence activities across the 16 agencies that make up the
intelligence community, as well as the Office of the DNI, instead of
having every agency--and its IG--operate within its own stovepipe.
In recent years, the intelligence agencies have worked more closely
together. This has improved performance and reduced duplication, but it
has also made the oversight work of individual agency inspectors
general more difficult.
The Intelligence Committee saw there was a need to create an
inspector general with authority and oversight of the entire
intelligence community, and one who could look at issues that cut
across individual agencies.
That view was reinforced by the relative weakness of the inspector
general position in the Office of the DNI that was authorized as part
of the Intelligence Reform Act of 2004.
Thus, the committee pushed to have created the inspector general of
the intelligence community, to be confirmed by the Senate and given the
statutory authorities and independence of other Senate-confirmed
inspectors general.
Mr. McCullough is well-qualified to be this first ICIG. He has long
experience conducting investigations both as an inspector general and a
FBI agent. He is an attorney and is well-familiar with the intelligence
community.
Mr. McCullough currently serves as the deputy inspector general of
the DNI's Office of the Inspector General. From 2003 to 2010, he was an
assistant inspector general for the National Security Agency. He served
from 2001-2003 as senior counsel for law enforcement and intelligence
in the Office of the General Counsel, U.S. Department of the Treasury
and was for 10 years in the Federal Bureau of Investigation as
attorney, special agent and supervisory special agent.
The Intelligence Committee received Mr. McCullough's nomination in
August. After Mr. McCullough answered the committee's questionnaire and
prehearing questions, we held a public hearing with him on September
22. On October 4, the Intelligence Committee voted out Mr. McCullough's
nomination on a rollcall vote of 15 to 0. His nomination was also
considered in the Homeland Security and Government Affairs Committee
and has moved forward by unanimous consent.
This important post will now be filled, and Mr. McCullough is
qualified and prepared to take on the responsibilities and authorities
of the position.
I support his confirmation.
The nomination considered and confirmed is as follows:
office of the director of national intelligence
Irvin Charles McCullough III, of Maryland, to be Inspector
General of the Intelligence Community, Office of the Director
of National Intelligence.
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