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Salon: The War On Whistleblowers (Bush WH Email Aimed At Preventing Stronger Whistle-blower Law)

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Hissyspit Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Nov-01-07 11:55 AM
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Salon: The War On Whistleblowers (Bush WH Email Aimed At Preventing Stronger Whistle-blower Law)
http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2007/11/01/whistleblowers

The war on whistle-blowers
U.S. officials have long retaliated against employees who speak out, burying the dangers they expose. Now, Congress wants to give whistle-blowers greater protection -- but President Bush vows to stop it.

Editor's note: This story continues a multiyear series from Salon and the Center for Investigative Reporting scrutinizing the U.S. court system. For more background and resources related to this story, click here.

By James Sandler

Nov. 1, 2007 | If there is any doubt about how the Bush administration treats government whistle-blowers, consider the case of Teresa Chambers. She was hired in early 2002, with impeccable law enforcement credentials, to become chief of the United States Park Police. But after Chambers raised concerns publicly that crime was up in the nation's parks, she was rebuked by superiors and fired. When Chambers fought to regain her job through the legal system meant to protect whistle-blowers, government lawyers fought back, and associated her with terrorists. Despite a multiyear legal struggle, she is still fighting for her job.

Whistle-blowers have faced hostility not only under Republican administrations. During President Clinton's tenure, Bogdan Dzakovic, an undercover security agent with the Federal Aviation Administration, suffered retribution for speaking out about weak airport security -- three years before Sept. 11, 2001. Dzakovic was passed up for promotion time and again, and today, he says, he remains consigned to data entry duties for the Transportation Security Administration.

Every year, hundreds of federal workers sound the alarm about corruption, fraud or dangers to public safety that are caused or overlooked -- or even covered up -- by U.S. government agencies. These whistle-blowers are supposed to be guaranteed protection by law from retaliation for speaking out in the public's interest.

But a six-month investigation by the Center for Investigative Reporting, in collaboration with Salon, has found that federal whistle-blowers almost never receive legal protection after they take action. Instead, they often face agency managers and White House appointees intent upon silencing them rather than addressing the problems they raise. They are left fighting for their jobs in a special administrative court system, little known to the American public, that is mired in bureaucracy and vulnerable to partisan politics. The CIR/Salon investigation reveals that the whistle-blower system -- first created by Congress decades ago and proclaimed as a cornerstone of government transparency and accountability -- has in reality enabled the punishment of employees who speak out. It has had a chilling effect, dissuading others from coming forward. The investigation examined nearly 3,600 whistle-blower cases since 1994, and included dozens of interviews and a review of confidential court documents. Whistle-blowers lose their cases, the investigation shows, nearly 97 percent of the time. Most limp away from the experience with their careers, reputations and finances in tatters.

- snip -

Beth Slavet, a former judge on the Merit Systems Protection Board during the Clinton and Bush administrations, said of the court's record: "It has a chilling effect. Why would you bring a case that you don't think you can win?"

But the Bush administration has vigorously opposed stronger whistle-blower protections. In a confidential e-mail from 2006, obtained by CIR and Salon, the White House registered strong objections to a congressional committee that was reviewing a similar law to protect whistle-blowers drawn up last year, saying the "excessively overbroad definition of whistleblowing ... forbids using any common sense." And President Bush has said he will veto the new legislation moving through Congress, saying in a two-page Statement of Administration Policy that the new law would "increase the number of frivolous complaints and waste resources" and could "compromise national security."

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kestrel91316 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Nov-01-07 12:13 PM
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1. Can somebody please explain to me why the entire Republican Party
is not screaming and shrieking and demanding a stronger whistleblower law???? After all, they insist that government is too big and wasteful and inherently evil. What better way to prove their point and provide evidence of this to support their efforts to dismantle it, than stronger laws to support whistleblowers?

Just curious.
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Hissyspit Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Nov-01-07 12:21 PM
Response to Reply #1
2. Now, stop it with that logic stuff!
:)
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