
Ashcroft Flying
High
WASHINGTON, July 26,
2001
Fishing rod in
hand, Attorney General John Ashcroft left on a weekend trip to Missouri Thursday afternoon
aboard a chartered government jet, reports CBS News Correspondent Jim Stewart.
In response to inquiries from CBS News over why Ashcroft was traveling
exclusively by leased jet aircraft instead of commercial airlines, the Justice Department cited
what it called a "threat assessment" by the FBI, and said Ashcroft has been advised to travel only
by private jet for the remainder of his term.
"There was a threat assessment and there are guidelines. He is acting under the
guidelines," an FBI spokesman said. Neither the FBI nor the Justice Department, however, would
identify what the threat was, when it was detected or who made it.
A senior official at the CIA said he was unaware of specific threats against any Cabinet
member, and Ashcroft himself, in a speech in California, seemed unsure of the nature of the
threat.
"I don't do threat assessments myself and I rely on those whose responsibility it is in the
law enforcement community, particularly the FBI. And I try to stay within the guidelines that
they've suggested I should stay within for those purposes," Ashcroft said.
Asked if he knew anything about the threat or who might have made it, the attorney
general replied, "Frankly, I don't. That's the answer."
Earlier this week, the Justice Department leased a NASA-owned G-3 Gulfstream for a
6-day trip to Western states. Such aircraft cost the government more than $1,600 an hour to fly.
When asked whether Ashcroft was paying for any portion of the trips devoted to personal
business, a Justice Department spokeswoman declined to respond.
All other Bush Cabinet appointees, with the exception of Interior and Energy with remote
sites to oversee, fly commercial airliners. Janet Reno, Ashcroft's predecessor as attorney
general, also routinely flew commercial. The secretaries of State and Defense traditionally
travel with extra security on military planes.
The Justice Department insists that it wasn't Ashcroft who wanted to fly leased aircraft.
That idea, they said, came strictly from Ashcroft's FBI security detail. The FBI had no further
comment.
-- Cherri (whatever@who.cares), June 13, 2002