Congress is not doing its job of protecting government
whistleblowers, nor investigating the national security weaknesses
those employees have tried to expose, several private watchdog groups
said Wednesday. They called for hearings into a particular case, that
of linguist Sibel Edmonds, fired in 2002 after alleging shoddy work and
possible espionage inside the FBI's translator program. "The time has
come for Congress to hold hearings and address the concerns raised by
Ms. Edmonds," said Danielle Brian, executive director of the Project on
Government Oversight. "Without congressional oversight, the FBI will
continue to hide its failures and quash whistleblowers." Brian spoke at
a joint press conference with the American Civili Liberties Union,
family members of victims of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks and
some dozen whistleblowers who have spoken out about alleged problems at
the Federal Aviation Administration, CIA, FBI and customs agency. "The
government is taking extreme steps to shield itself from political
embarrassment while gambling with our safety," said Ann Beeson, an ACLU
legal counsel. She named the firing of whistleblowers, retroactive
classification of public information and other actions she said were
taken "not to protect us but to cover up mistakes." The Justice
Department's inspector general said this month that the FBI never
adequately investigated Edmonds' complaints, even though evidence and
witnesses supported her. [more]
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