April 2002 - VOLUME 23 - NUMBER 4
L E T T E R S
|
To the editor: The Enron case and many of your examples of corporate abuse in the Ten
Worst Corporations of the Year make clear the vital importance of whistleblowers
in calling attention to corporate wrongdoing. Yet, 12 years after the U.S. Congress passed the Whistleblower Protection
Act (WPA) in order to defend citizens who report wrongdoing in government
from on-the-job retaliation, there is disturbing evidence to show that
the new law has failed to accomplish its purpose. At the same time, the
increasing tendency for federal agencies to kill the messenger
who goes public with reports of public corruption has made it extremely
dangerous for concerned citizens to report mismanagement or outright theft
anywhere in the federal bureaucracy. As the president of Integrity International the non-profit and
non-partisan organization I founded 20 years ago to provide psychological
counseling and other services for whistleblowers Im alarmed
about the way in which the U.S. court system is now stacked against those
who seek to defend themselves by invoking the WPA. Our country needs these
courageous individuals to continue blowing the whistle on fiscal and management
abuses that cost the taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars each year. But who can blame whistleblowers for feeling betrayed and punished as
a result of their good deeds, in a court system that remains completely
unwilling to enforce the WPA? A compelling example of this judicial failure
can be found at the Federal Circuit Court of Appeals in Washington
where all 70 whistleblowers who appealed lower court decisions denying
them relief for alleged whistleblower-linked reprisals by government agencies
between 1994 and 2001 were denied their claims. As unlikely as it might sound, the judicial scorecard for whistleblower
cases at the appeals court now reads: U.S. Government 70, Whistleblowers
0. Make no mistake: If we lose our ability as a nation to speak out against
wrongdoing in government, we will pay a very high price. Don Soeken, Donald R. Soeken, Ph.D., was a Public Health Service officer for more than 25 years, until his retirement in 1996. He is the founder of Integrity International, a non-profit organization that assists whistleblowers. |