Anonymous ID: 1b3b8f March 7, 2025, 6:05 a.m. No.22719404   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9423 >>9480 >>9563 >>9613

>>22718841

>DOGE effort to sell off federal properties inadvertently exposes CIA black site in Northern Virginia — Bloomberg TV

>>22718976

>black sit

>>22719043

>inadvertently

 

https://archive.ph/z5f3H#selection-1659.256-1659.373

 

Mar 6, 2025 4:27 PM

A Sensitive Complex Housing a CIA Facility Was on GSA's List of US Properties for Sale

Plans to redevelop a Northern Virginia warehouse site have long been complicated by the area’s worst-kept secret—the presence of a CIA facility. The GSA put the site up for sale anyway.

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A now-deleted list containing hundreds of US government properties that the General Services Administration (GSA) plans to sell includes most of a sprawling, highly sensitive federal complex in Springfield, Virginia, that also houses a secretive Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) facility, WIRED has learned.

The GSA’s effort to sell hundreds of US government properties is part of a blunt reshaping of the federal government and its workforce led by Elon Musk’s so-called Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE). Staffed in part by young engineers with no prior experience in government, DOGE’s efforts have resulted in mass reductions in force, the effective shuttering of entirely independent agencies, and a flurry of lawsuits that seek to mitigate DOGE’s razing of the government over the past six weeks.

The GSA published the list on Tuesday and pulled it down the next day. Before the full list of 443 properties was removed, more than 120 properties had already been quietly scrubbed, including 14 buildings that did not appear to be listed in the Inventory of Owned and Leased Properties, a comprehensive public database of GSA holdings.

 

Most of these properties, aside from one identified only as “Building A, 6810,” were labeled as either “Butler” or “Franconia.” According to public records, all of them are part of a large federal facility known as the Parr-Franconia Warehouse Complex, or the GSA Warehouse, which sits, fenced in by chain-link topped with barbed wire, at 6810 Loisdale Road in Springfield.

Most of the buildings in the complex, which dates back to the early 1950s and is dominated by a 1,005,602-square-foot warehouse long used as a government supply depot, are believed to be used by various government agencies for mundane purposes. Right in the middle of the complex, though, next to the warehouse and catty-corner to what’s listed as Transportation Security Administration headquarters, is a U-shaped building long notorious for its alleged ties to the CIA.

“Obviously, someone did no research about the long and well-documented history of this property,” says Jeff McKay, chair of the Fairfax County Board of Supervisors and a longtime advocate of redeveloping the complex, which is near a Metro station and sits in a prosperous area. “Normally a site like this wouldn’t be outed, so to speak, but everyone knows it’s here except, apparently, the people who put this list together.”

The CIA’s use of the building located at 6801 Springfield Center Drive, not all of which can necessarily be observed from street level, was first reported in 2012 by the Washington Business Journal, which in an article around the same time called the CIA’s presence in the area “perhaps the worst-kept secret in Springfield.” The most specific description of its purpose, as the publication noted, can be found in the 2011 spy-agency-focused nonfiction book Fallout: The True Story of the CIA’s Secret War on Nuclear Trafficking, by Catherine Collins and Douglas Frantz, who write, while describing a clandestine operation: “There were two pick-and-lock specialists from the agency’s secret facility in Springfield, Virginia. In a warehouse-like building there, the CIA trains a cadre of technical officers to bug offices, break into houses, and penetrate computer systems.” (Whether it is currently used for these purposes is unknown.)

Anonymous ID: 1b3b8f March 7, 2025, 6:08 a.m. No.22719423   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9480 >>9563 >>9613

>>22719404

> next to the warehouse and catty-corner to what’s listed as Transportation Security Administration headquarters, is a U-shaped building long notorious for its alleged ties to the CIA.

 

 

According to the Journal’s reporting, Fairfax County leaders like McKay were frustrated, because plans to redevelop the complex ran up against the existence of this facility.

“The entire challenge with redevelopment has been this entity,” McKay tells WIRED. “This idea that you can sell everything around it and it will be OK runs counter to all the intelligence information we’ve been given over the past couple of decades. Without divulging the specific details of the activities, the government has been very clear about the sensitivity of the property.”

Even a widely supported plan to relocate FBI headquarters to Springfield foundered due in part to the CIA presence. While the FBI would not have raised security concerns, its relocation to the site would have raised logistical ones. Some government agencies, says McKay, said redevelopment was impossible; others said the secret facility would have to be relocated at the expense of the incoming tenant, making it far more expensive than other potential sites.

 

Since Tuesday, GSA sources have been wondering about the possible inclusion of CIA buildings on the list that was posted and then deleted. One source with knowledge of CIA operations, when asked about concerns that the GSA may have listed at least one of the agency’s facilities as being for sale, immediately acknowledged “the Springfield building.” (The building itself, which in past reporting has been described as being held by a private owner, does not appear to have been listed for sale, but due to its sensitivity, selling the buildings around it would raise much the same concerns.)

“There have been rumors swirling that some of the buildings identified house classified CIA space,” says one source at GSA, adding, “the release of ‘non-core properties’ was especially surprising, as this nebulous language has not been historically used” at the GSA.

As the Washington Business Journal reported in 2012, a real estate appraisal in the late 1990s listed the CIA as one of the complex’s tenants, indicating its presence there extends back at least three decades. It is nonetheless possible that the GSA does not know, at least officially, that the CIA has operated within the Springfield warehouse complex, a source at the GSA tells WIRED. “In general, we have agencies that perform many critical law enforcement and national security functions,” they say. “We are not always aware of what type of operations are being conducted within tenant spaces. We build out operations to their specs and ensure their spaces are up to code. In my own personal experience, there are spaces in our buildings that not everyone knows about. Not necessarily CIA specifically.”

“I think it just shows you how completely unorganized this bird-shot of a list is,” says McKay.

The CIA declined to comment. The GSA did not respond to WIRED’s request for comment. On Wednesday, the GSA issued a statement acknowledging the feedback the agency had received and asserting that inclusion on the originally published list did not mean a building would be up for sale immediately. “We anticipate the list will be republished in the near future after we evaluate this initial input,” the statement read, “and determine how we can make it easier for stakeholders to understand the nuances of the assets listed.”

“I am not saying it’s CIA or not,” a former intelligence analyst who worked at Langley for more than a decade tells WIRED. “But it’s reckless that this information is out there at all. It speaks to the fact that these guys have no interest in even understanding government operations.”

Matt Giles contributed reporting.

Anonymous ID: 1b3b8f March 7, 2025, 6:22 a.m. No.22719480   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9498

>>22718841

>DOGE effort to sell off federal properties inadvertently exposes CIA black site in Northern Virginia — Bloomberg TV

 

>>22718976

>black site

 

>>22719043

>inadvertently

 

>>22719404

> a U-shaped building long notorious for its alleged ties to the CIA.

>>22719423

 

 

Fairfax County Wants New FBI Headquarters in Springfield

by Articles by Kurt Stout

October 25, 2012

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As we noted in the previous post, GSA has begun setting the stage for the construction of a massive new FBI headquarters complex somewhere in the National Capital Region. Exactly where that complex will be located is the subject of much speculation, and while a number of jurisdictions are vying to attract it, Fairfax County, Va., officials are aiming to steer it away from one proposed site in the county—the soon-to-be vacated Exxon Mobil campus in Merrifield—and toward another: the partially vacant, 70-acre GSA warehouse complex in Springfield. Today, we take a closer look at that site, which is located west of I-95 and Loisdale Road, a half mile from the Franconia/Springfield Metrorail station (see aerial above).

 

Revamping the vast GSA warehouse complex has long been one of Fairfax County’s top economic development priorities; earlier this decade, the county had proposed the site for the Army’s Washington Headquarters Service (as part of BRAC 2005), but it was rejected in 2008 in favor of Alexandria’s Mark Center. Sometimes referred to as the Parr-Franconia Warehouse, the property contains about 1.3 million square feet of building space, including the approximately 1 million-square-foot Building A—which stretches one-third of a mile end to end and has the largest wooden roof truss system east of the Mississippi River—and the 232,000-square-foot Building B, both of which were constructed in 1953, as well as about a dozen modular buildings. County officials and local business believe the site—now secured by concrete barriers and a barbed-wire fence—is hugely underused. The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (PTO) stores paperwork in one of the warehouses, while GSA’s Federal Acquisition Service uses another to store furniture, computers, and other items. Past tenants have included the Defense Information Systems Agency (DISA), which relocated some leased facilities from there to Fort Meade as a result of BRAC 2005. More than a decade ago, Terra Real Estate Services—which was helping GSA evaluate an offer to purchase the property—listed eight federal agencies occupying the site, including the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA).

That agency appears to be the sticking point for any redevelopment plan. While it would appear to be fairly simple for PTO and GSA to relocate their storage facilities to other sites (on properties less ripe for redevelopment), Washington Business Journal reporter Michael Neibauer revealed back in January that the CIA may be operating a sensitive compartmented information facility (SCIF) at 6801 Springfield Center Drive. According to Fairfax County tax records, that building, which sits within the GSA fence and appears to be part of the GSA complex, is privately owned by an arm of Arlington-based Resi Management Company, whose owner declined to name the tenants. Digging deeper into the CIA’s presence at the complex, Neibauer quoted an excerpt from the book Fallout by Catherine Collins and Douglas Frantz (Free Press, 2011) that describes a warehouse-like building in Springfield where “the CIA trains a cadre of technical officers to bug offices, break into houses, and penetrate computer systems.” If the CIA really is operating a clandestine training facility out of the building, Neibauer concludes, that will be “the major hurdle in Fairfax County’s effort to lure the FBI to the … GSA campus.”