2010


Washington Examiner: SEC whistleblower wins wrongful termination case

The SEC has settled a wrongful termination suit from an attorney who was fired in 2005 after he tried to subpoena a high powered banker.

New York Times: Diabetes Drug Maker Hid Test Data, Files Indicate

Pharmaceutical giant GlaxoSmithKline has spent 11 years trying to cover up the results of a study that suggest that its diabetes drug Avandia poses serious heart health risks.

NPR: Diabetes Drug Poses Safety Test For FDA (June 29)

FDA regulators say Avandia, a popular diabetes drug, may lead to a greatly increased risk of heart attack and stroke.

NPR: Obama’s Crackdown on Press Leaks (June 15)

Joined by Scott Shane of the New York Times and Kim Zetter of Wired, the Government Accountability Project’s Jesselyn Radack and the Hudson Institute’s Gabriel Schoenfeld debate the need for whistleblower protection in the intelligence community. Without adequate internal channels, Radack says whistleblowers are forced to go to the press.

KPFA: Letters to Washington (June 14)

Letters to Washington - June 14, 2010 at 10:00am

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Daniel Ellsberg, the man who became famous for leaking the Pentagon Papers, discusses the manhunt for WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange. Justice Department whistleblower Jesselyn Radack, now Director of Homeland Security and Human Rights at the Government Accountability Project, discusses Obama administration’s hard line on prosecuting whistleblowers.

New York Times: Administration Takes a Hard Line Against Leaks to Press (June 11)

Thomas A. Drake, a former NSA employee, faces 10 felony charges related to classified information he shared with a reporter. Drake’s case is but one of many that show an increased focus on prosecuting whistleblowers and leakers under the Obama administration, the Times says.

Washington Post: SEC’s regional offices present managerial problems, become an obstacle to reform (June 10)

Whistleblowers in the Securities and Exchange Commission’s Fort Worth office faced retaliation after speaking out against lax enforcement and inspection practices.

CNN: Whistleblower says poor inspections partly to blame for spill (June 9)

A 22-year veteran of the Minerals Management Service details the “culture of corruption” and lack of proper inspection that he says led to the disastrous Deepwater Horizon oil spill.

ABC 7 Washington: Whistleblowers gather in Washington (May 28)

Washington, DC’s ABC 7 reports on the 2010 National Whistleblower Assembly held May 24-25. Includes interviews with Daniel Ellsberg, the Defense Department employee who leaked the Pentagon Papers; NYPD whistleblower Frank Serpico, and DoD whistleblower Franz Gayl.

C-SPAN: National Whistleblower Assembly (May 24)

The Huffington Post: Government Whistleblower Protection: the Long Ignored Way to Better Connect the Dots (May 22)

Former FBI Special Agent and 9/11 whistleblower Coleen Rowley and Government Accountability Project Legal Director Tom Devine discuss the importance of whistleblower protection reform in the national security and intelligence communities.

Wall Street Journal: “I Didn’t Want to Be Responsible for Somebody Dying”: Whistleblower (May 13)

The Wall Street Journal examines a May 13 special report from the New England Journal of Medicine about the motivations of whistleblowers in the pharmaceutical industry. The full report can be found here.

Los Angeles Times: When whistle-blowers suffer (April 27)

Using her experiences as a Justice Department whistleblower and the case of Thomas A. Drake, an NSA whistleblower, as examples, Jesselyn Redack’s op-ed in the LA Times illustrates the need for members of the national security and intelligence communities to have safe internal channels through which they can lodge ethics and legal complaints.

Kansas City Star: Whistleblower campaigns for more protections (March 21)

George Sarris, a former civilian Air Force mechanic, expressed concerns about aircraft maintenance practices and faced heavy retaliation in response to his actions.

USA Today: Whistle-blowers’ rights get a second look (March 14)

USA Today details the hurdles faced by federal whistleblowers who have been retaliated against. The article specifically examines the case of Robert MacLean, a federal air marshal who lost his job for telling the media about an unclassified plan to remove air marshals from flights during a terrorism alert in 2003.

Coverage from 2009 can be found here.