
WASHINGTON — The CIA has put several senior officials on administrative leave over their handling of a high-ranking officer who allegedly had $40 million in gold bars stashed at his home, according to three people familiar with the decisions. Subscribe to read this story ad-free Get unlimited access to ad-free articles and exclusive content. David Rush, a senior CIA officer who worked on one of the most highly sensitive programs in the U.S.
Main Idea: The CIA has put several senior officials on leave after an internal review of how they handled a senior officer later arrested over alleged lies and a large cache of gold bars and cash.
Key Points:
The case can shake trust in the CIA and FBI, which may worry taxpayers about wasted funds and weak oversight.
The investigation and leave decisions may help prevent more misuse of public money and improve accountability.
Rate how each entity in this article affected the American people.
Primary subject of the article; his alleged conduct and arrest drive the story.
Central agency taking concrete action by placing senior officials on leave and referring the matter for investigation.
Central investigative agency that searched Rush’s home and is tied to the referral from the CIA.
Named defense secretary referenced in connection with Rush’s assignment and response, but not accused of wrongdoing.
Named firm tied to Steve Feinberg’s background and relevant to the relationship context.
National jurisdiction framing the CIA, FBI, and Defense Department actions.
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