ACLU Tells Congress to Strengthen Whistleblower Protections (5/21/2008)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: (202)
675-2312 or media@dcaclu.orgWashington, DC – Testifying at a hearing before
the House Judiciary Subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism, and Homeland Security
today, the American Civil Liberties Union urged members to extend whistleblower
protections to intelligence and law enforcement employees. ACLU National Security Policy Counsel
and FBI whistleblower, Mike German, was joined on the panel by Senator Charles
Grassley (R-IA) and Bassem Youssef, another whistleblower who currently works in
the FBI’s counter-terrorism division.
Both German and Youssef complained to superiors at the FBI about the
handling of counter-terrorism investigations. The ACLU is calling on Congress to offer
better protection for government employees who uncover wrongdoing or national
security breaches. “My experience with the FBI’s
treatment of whistleblowers is all too personal,” German testified. “I had worked within the system for two
years to try to get the deficiencies I saw addressed, with no success. My career was effectively ended while the
managers responsible for the failed investigation and the cover-up that followed
were promoted.” The ACLU noted there are several
flaws in current law that leave national security whistleblowers unprotected.
In particular, the Whistleblower
Protection Act, which was passed by Congress to encourage government employees
to disclose wrongdoing, does not apply to employees of most agencies involved in
intelligence and national security, including the FBI, the CIA, the NSA, and the
Defense Intelligence Agency. National security whistleblowers can be
retaliated against even for disclosing wrongdoing to
Congress. The few national security
whistleblowers covered by the law are still often left unprotected because the
administrative and federal circuit courts that oversee whistleblower claims
consistently interpret the Whistleblower Protection Act too narrowly, and have
been hostile to whistleblower claims. Congress has already amended the act at
least twice to correct narrowing interpretations of the
law. The ACLU also charges in its
report, “Disavowed: The
Government's Unchecked Retaliation Against National Security
Whistleblowers,” that the Bush administration is
using secrecy as a tool to shield itself from the disclosure of embarrassing and
even criminal information. In the
past few years, the government has aggressively argued that its need for
absolute secrecy prevents the disclosure of information pertaining to the
torture and abuse of detainees, NSA warrantless wiretapping, the CIA's practice
of kidnapping people and sending them to other countries for torture and
interrogation, and the FBI's use of the Patriot Act's expanded surveillance
powers. “Protecting FBI whistleblowers is
the first step in fighting corruption within the bureau,” said German. “Misconduct in the law enforcement and
intelligence communities can have dire effects on the American people. The role of whistleblowers has been
historic in bringing government abuses to light. Protecting that role, especially in
light of this administration’s flagrant disregard for the rule of law, should be
of paramount importance.” A copy
of the ACLU’s testimony can be seen at: www.aclu.org/safefree/general/35426leg20080521.html To read
the ACLU’s report on whistleblowers and to learn more, go
to: www.aclu.org/whistleblower
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