Time
Magazine "Woman of the Year" Urges Congress to Honor the Anniversary of
9/11 by Enacting Protections for National Security Whistleblowers
Washington, D.C. September 11, 2009. On the 8th
anniversary of the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the
Pentagon, FBI whistleblower Coleen Rowley issued a plea to the
President and Congress to immediately enact whistleblower protections
for national security employees. In her letter Ms. Rowley stated:
"Today
is the 8th anniversary of the terrorist attacks on the World Trade
Center and the Pentagon. There are many ways that we can honor the
lives lost and one of them is preventing it from happening again.
Strong whistleblower protections for national security whistleblowers
are the key."
"I blew the whistle on the failure of the
government to approve a search warrant for Zacarias Moussaoui, an al
Qaeda operative who was attending flight school just weeks before the
tragic attack. The flight school instructors had numerous concerns
which matched up with intelligence from
abroad."
"Unfortunately as an FBI whistleblower, I
learned the hard way what exposing this and other post 9-11 mistakes
means to your career and your entire life."
"Although I
was honored by Time magazine in being named a Person of the Year for
having blown the whistle on this terrible security lapse, I know of so
many other national security whistleblowers that lost their jobs and
livelihood simply by doing the right thing. They need legal
protection! They need it now!"
"We must make sure that
the President and every member of the House and Senate hear our voice
and know that we need strong whistleblower protections for national
security employees that include the right of court access and trial by
jury for
national security whistleblowers. Please take action now before it is
too late to prevent the next major terrorist attack."
Ms.
Rowley worked as an FBI agent at the time, and blew the whistle on the
government's failure to approve a search warrant for one of the al
Qaeda operatives who was attending flight school shortly before the
attack. In 2002 she was named one of three "Person's of the Year" by
Time Magazine due as a result of the courage she demonstrated as a
whistleblower, and the importance of her disclosures in protecting
national security and fixing long-standing problems within intelligence
agencies.
Ms. Rowley's letter urges support for the Van
Hollen-Platts Whistleblower Protection Enhancement Act, which provides
protections for national security whistleblowers,
including due process rights and access to the federal courts. The
Senate bill does not include these rights. It is expected that
Congress will take action on federal employee
whistleblower rights this month.
Stephen M. Kohn, the
Executive Director of the National Whistleblowers Center confirmed that
"after 9/11/01 scores of highly placed national security whistleblowers
were retaliated against or fired for having the courage to disclose
threats to our nation or outright incompetence at the FBI, CIA and
other agencies. The American people have paid the price for letting
these agencies off hook, and excluding their employees from
whistleblower protections. Twice the House of Representatives has
passed legislation to fix this problem. Twice the Senate failed to
act. It's time to get the job done. National security employees know
that they can be fired simply for reporting waste, fraud and abuse.
They watched
as their colleagues who reported abuses after 9/11 were demoted,
harassed or fired. When these workers are bullied into silence, the
American people are the real losers."
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