Obama Whistleblower Program Requires Whistleblowers to Register to be Protected
by alethoBy Noel Brinkerhoff | AllGov | April 16, 2014
Are
whistleblowers—whose anonymity is often their best protection against
retribution—made safer by being forced to register as whistleblowers
with the U.S. government? Or are they being placed in greater danger?
The Obama administration is demanding they step forward and sign up.
Indeed,
exposing government corruption or other wrongdoing often means being
discreet, if not anonymous, on the part of the individuals blowing the
whistle, unless they want to face retribution from higher-ups involved
in the misdeeds. Keeping one’s identity hidden is almost always
essential for whistleblowers because of managers’ or executives’ impulse
to protect themselves and punish those exposing their mistakes. Thus,
any government program that requires whistleblowers to reveal
themselves—ostensibly for their own good—might seem disingenuous, if not
counterproductive to encouraging workers to expose law breakers.
But
the Obama administration is taking this approach by mandating that
government employees register as official whistleblowers under the Insider Threat
program it established three years ago. This program was adopted, the
president said, to protect against internal dangers lurking within
federal agencies.
One
of the biggest supporters on Capitol Hill of government whistleblowing
says the Obama program’s registration requirement is a terrible idea and
antithetical to the importance of whistleblowers coming forward.
Senator Charles Grassley (R-Iowa), who coauthored the Whistleblower Protection Act of 1989 (pdf), addressed the U.S. Senate recently to commemorate the 25th anniversary of the landmark bill. During his speech, Grassley criticized Insider Threat’s effort to expose whistleblowers, citing the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) as a prime concern.
The
Republican senator said he’s been trying for months to get the FBI to
share its Insider Threat training materials. But the bureau has
steadfastly refused.
At
one point, the FBI’s top Insider Threat official agreed to meet with
Grassley and Senator Patrick Leahy (D-Vermont) to discuss how the bureau
was training its people to
“distinguish between true insider threats and legitimate whistleblowers.”
The
official, according to Grassley’s speech, told them not to worry about
the training materials, which they had failed to bring along to the
meeting.
“He
said whistleblowers had to register in order to be protected, and the
Insider Threat Program would know to just avoid those people,” Grassley
said in his speech.
The official then “abruptly walked out” of the meeting after being there only 10 minutes.
“These
are clearly not the actions of an agency that is genuinely open to
whistleblowers or whistleblower protection,” Grassley stated.
The
senator, who has served in Congress since 1975, added that Obama’s
registration requirement was an idea that “should be pretty alarming to
all Americans. Sometimes confidentiality is the best protection a
whistleblower has.”
To Learn More:
Grassley Talks About the Anniversary of the Whistleblower Protection Act (Senator Charles Grassley)
Terrorists, Spies, Whistleblowers Treated the Same by Obama Administration (by Noel Brinkerhoff, AllGov)
Obama Anti-Whistleblower Program Requires Federal Employees to Report Suspicions of other Employees or Risk Punishment (by Noel Brinkerhoff and Danny Biederman, AllGov)

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