Quote:
Originally posted by Tyrone_Slothrop
Just so we're all clear, the book explains that after he left office O'Neill asked for all the documents he'd seen, and Treasury sent them to him. O'Neill has done nothing wrong, but some people at Treasury may now be regretting that they turned over so much stuff.
|
Certainly it appears that someone in Treasury fucked up.
I'd imagine that O'Neill is fine, unless there's some sort of argument that the documents (or some subset of them ) were confidential and so marked, or that there was some other reasonable expectation that O'Neill was to keep portions of it private.