Wired has learned that a now -deleted list containing hundreds of US government properties to sell GSA (GSA) is a large and highly sensitive federal collection in Sprintfield, Virginia, which also includes a central information hidden facility (CIA).
GSA’s attempt to sell hundreds of US government real estate is part of the federal government’s replacement and its workforce led by the so -called Foreign Ministry of Foreign Affairs (DOGE). In part of the young engineers without prior experience in the government, DOGE efforts have led to the effective decline in force, the effective closure of fully independent agencies, and a petitions that have sought to reduce the disposal over the past six weeks.
GSA released the list on Tuesday and lowered it the next day. Before deleting the full list of 443 properties, more than 120 properties were already quietly disappeared, including 14 buildings that do not appear to have been listed in the rented and rented assets, a comprehensive general database of GSA Holdings.
Many of these characteristics were known as “Butler” or “Frankunia”, past one, only known as the “A, 6810 building”. According to public records, they are all part of a large federal center known as the Parr-Franconia Warehouse Complex, or GSA warehouse, which is located by the chain link at the top of the barbed wire, on the 6810 Loisdale Road in Springsfield.
Most of the buildings of the complex, which dates back to the early 1950s, are dominated by a warehouse of 1,005,602 square feet that have long been used as a government supply warehouse. Right in the middle of the complex, though, next to the warehouse and the corner of what is mentioned as the headquarters of the transportation security management, is a U -shaped building that is defamed by the claimed links with the CIA.
“Obviously, no one has done any research on the long and documentary history of the property,” says Jeff McKay, head of the Fairfax County Supervisory Board and a long -standing defender for the development of the complex, near a metro station. “Typically a site of this kind does not come out of this way, but everyone knows that here, except for the people who put this list together, here.”
The CIA’s use of the building located at 6801 Springfield Center Drive, all of which are not necessarily visible from the street, was first reported by Washington Business Magazine in 2012, which was the worst secret in Springfield in the same time in the CIA. As the magazine mentioned, the most specific explanations of its purpose can be found in the non -fictional book of espionage. Fallout: The true story of the CIA’s secret war on nuclear traffickingWriting by Catherine Collins and Douglas Franz, describing a secret operation: “Two pickups and locks from the Agency’s secret agency center in Springgfield, Virginia. In a building like Anbar, the CIA provides technical officers to remove offices, home and infiltrate systems.”