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May 11, 2005

Homeland Security Whistleblowers Need Protection

The Project on Government Oversight calls for legal protection of homeland security whistleblowers. See Homeland and National Security Whistleblower Protections: The Unfinished Agenda (April 28, 2005)

Executive Summary of the Report: Since the September 11th terrorist attacks, whistleblowers have felt compelled to come forward in greater numbers to address our nation’s security weaknesses – in fact almost 50% more have sought protection annually.1 Since 9/11, whistleblower-support organizations have heard a common theme from whistleblowers, many of whom have observed security weaknesses for years: That they could no longer stand by knowing that people’s lives were at risk.

However, patriotic truth-tellers across a variety of agencies have no protection against retaliation from the agencies they seek to reform. Today, the federal government’s policies support and reinforce wrongdoers who would seek to silence whistleblowers.

Whistleblowers at key government agencies tasked with protecting the U.S. (including the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Central Intelligence Agency, Defense Intelligence Agency, Transportation Security Administration, and National Security Agency) have been excluded from the meager protections afforded the rest of the federal workforce. Employees at other agencies such as the Department of Homeland Security must seek protection under the defunct Whistleblower Protection Act, a law rendered useless by a crippling series of judicial interpretations from a court with a monopoly on reviewing whistleblower cases.

The agenda for protecting homeland security whistleblowers is unfinished. Congress must act to implement laws that will provide meaningful protections for whistleblowers including reasonable standards for qualifying for protection, the right to seek remedies in the courts, prompt resolution of their cases, and an end to retaliation when it occurs.

Thanks to Behind the Front Lines for the tip.

Markey to Introduce Legislation. The Washington Post reports that Rep. Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.) would introduce legislation to extend to federal employees and contractors whistle-blower protections given to private-sector workers by the 2002 Sarbanes-Oxley Act.

May 11, 2005 in Think Tank Reports | Permalink

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