MILWAUKEE — Wisconsin Attorney General Brad Schimel has asked everyone who works at the state Department of Justice to sign a nondisclosure agreement covering their time in office and even after they have left.

The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported today that Schimel sent an e-mail to staffers in his agency on Aug. 10 telling them to sign the statement. It included a spreadsheet with 129 employees who had yet to sign it.

“If your name is on the attached list, please print and sign the attached [a]greement,” the e-mail said. It lists no punishment for those who would violate the agreement, but Justice Department spokeswoman Rebecca Ballweg told the newspaper they could be guilty of a “work rule violation.”

The nondisclosure agreement applies to current full-time employees as well as “limited term employees, contractors, interns, externs and law enforcement partners.”

Ballweg said that the agreement is not related to the Republican Schimel’s run for re-election or the fact that the agreement was finalized a month after Democrat Josh Kaul got into the race, in May 2017.

“There were absolutely no political considerations involved in updating or requiring the policy” Ballweg said. She said she is unaware of any other state agency that requires all staffers to sign a similar nondisclosure agreement.

Wisconsin Democratic Party spokeswoman Courtney Beyer said today that Schimel has “created a culture of secrecy at his Department of Justice. Wisconsin needs a new attorney general who is committed to transparency and fighting corruption.”

Former Wisconsin corrections secretary Ed Wall has been outspoken against Schimel and Gov. Scott Walker for their handling of problems at the state’s juvenile prison, writing a tell-all book about his time in the administration.

Wall said today that the nondisclosure agreement was in reaction to him speaking out against Schimel and the Walker administration.

“It’s an effort by (Schimel) to conceal from the public what’s going on and hold DOJ employees over a barrel,” Wall told The Associated Press.

Ballweg said the agreement would not prevent whistleblowers from coming forward. She said the agreements were needed because Justice Department employees regularly handle sensitive and confidential information.

Last year, Ballweg said, human resources staffers at the Justice Department realized different bureaus and offices were using different nondisclosure agreements. Ballweg said all 757 staffers have been asked to sign the new nondisclosure agreement.

“DOJ employees have been very cooperative in returning the signed form,” Ballweg said.