Politics & Government
Military Records For Rep. Don Bacon Incorrectly Released By Air Force
He says a third party paid by the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee was able to get his SSN and use it to obtain the records.

By Jennifer Shutt
February 21, 2023
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WASHINGTON β The U.S. Air Force unintentionally released military personnel records of at least two members of Congress β Republican Reps. Don Bacon of Nebraska and Zach Nunn of Iowa β eliciting frustration and concerns for veteransβ privacy.
βThe recent targeting of Members of Congressβs personnel military records, the breach of sensitive data, and the duplicitous forgery taken by political hacks isnβt only a violation of public trust β itβs criminal,β Nunn said in a written statement.
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βAs a country, we should be supporting veterans who want to continue their service instead of harassing and intimidating them,β Nunn added. βI strongly support bipartisan efforts being undertaken by the House Armed Services Committee to protect our service members and hold criminal actors accountable.β
An Air Force spokesperson said in a written statement that an internal audit of records released between October 2021 and October 2022 showed βunauthorized release of military duty information on 11 individuals.β
The Air Force declined to share information about the 11 people.
Air Force employees didnβt follow procedures that required getting a signature to release this type of information, though the spokesperson said there βwas no evidence of political motivation or malicious intent on the part of any employee.β
The Air Force spokesperson said that βvirtually all unauthorized disclosures were in response to a third-party seeking service records for employment or benefit purposes through a process commonly used by other federal agencies to conduct employee background checks.β
A letter from Air Force Maj. Gen. Troy E. Dunn to Bacon about his military personnel record release says that Abraham Payton, a background investigation analyst with Due Diligence Group, LLC, requested the congressmanβs records from the Air Force Personnel Center Military Records Branch in November 2021.
βHe inappropriately requested copies of your military personnel records for the stated purpose of employment and benefits,β Dunn wrote. βAlthough, Mr. Payton was already in possession of your social security number at the time of his request, the records branch still released your Personal Identifiable Information on November 12, 2021 without your authorization, which is protected under Privacy Act of 1974.β
Additional security checks
Dunn wrote in the letter to Bacon that the Air Force immediately changed its procedures to require a higher level review and additional security checks to avoid records being incorrectly released in the future.
Bacon was in the Air Force from 1985 through 2014, according to his official congressional biography.
Bacon specialized in electronic warfare, intelligence and reconnaissance. His military decorations include the Air Force Distinguished Service Medal, two Bronze Stars, two Legion of Merits, five Meritorious Service Medals, and the Aerial Achievement Medal, according to his congressional website.
Nunnβs campaign website says he was a combat aviator who deployed three times to the Middle East and is currently a lieutenant colonel in the Iowa Air National Guard. His official congressional biography lists the U.S. Air Force and Iowa Air National Guard, though it doesnβt list years of service.
The Freedom of Information Act says the public can access some information in military personnel records without approval from the veteran or their next-of kin. That information includes name, service number, dates of service, branch of service, final duty status and final rank.
It can also include salary, assignments and geographic locations, source of commission, military education level, awards and decorations, photograph, transcript of courts-martial trials and place of entrance and separation, according to the National Archives.
Bacon said in a written statement that βknowing that this third party paid by the Dem Campaign Congressional Committee was able to obtain my social security number and fraudulently use it to obtain my military records is concerning not only for myself and the other ten affected, but to every single veteran.β
DCCC payments
The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee made at least 35 payments totaling more than $100,000 to Due Diligence Group during the last two years, according to Federal Election Commission records compiled by Open Secrets. The payments are categorized as βGENERIC CMTE RESEARCH MATERIALSβ or βGENERIC STRATEGIC/POLITICAL CONSULTANT.β
Due Diligence Group LLC writes on its website that it specializes βin using public records research to provide our clients with the knowledge and insights needed to drive strategic decision making.β Due Diligence Group LLC did not respond to a request for comment.
The Due Diligence Groupβs website was lacking additional information Tuesday, after Politico first reported on the military records release.
An archived version of its website from January 2021 lists Payton as a partner and says he βfound his passion for transparency and ethics issuesβ after meeting a colleague at VR Research, an opposition research firm, in 2009.
Payton then trained to be βan adept due diligence researcher through various projects on behalf of political and commercial clientele over the next two years,β according to the archived website.
βAbraham joined a democratic SuperPAC in 2011, serving as Due Diligence Director,β the archived website says. βHe produced over 100 opposition research books and managed over 4,000 public record requests.β
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