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Florida jury awards carpenter $210,000

Congratulations to carpenter Dennis Brown for his courageous efforts to expose unhealthy conditions at the Broward County School District in Florida. Brown raised concerns about the atrocious environment he was forced to work in. A mildew infested classroom made his asthma worse. He brought in notes from his doctor confirming the health effects, but officials never transferred him to a safer facility. Brown’s attempts to expose this danger fell on deaf ears, “I’ve gone to the superintendent and all the school board members, but they look the other way,” Brown said. EBossWatch reports that a jury has now determined that school officials must pay $210,000 to compensate Brown for the retaliation he suffered. Perhaps those jurors could relate to the parents who might wish that school carpenters, and students, have nothing but safe places in public schools. 

 

Intern Quinn McCall contributed to this blog entry.

 

 

Whistleblowing nurse Anne Mitchell acquitted in Texas

A jury in Andrews, Texas, has acquitted an experienced nurse of charges that she misused official information when she sent an anonymous letter to a state medical board to complain about a doctor's malpractice.  Anne Mitchell had been a nurse at the Winkler County Memorial Hospital for 25 years. In April 2008, Dr. Rolando G. Arafiles Jr. arrived. At the trial, other nurses confirmed that Mitchell had good grounds to be concerned about Dr. Arafiles' malpractice, and the hospital administration had not done enough. The New York Times reports that the jury foreman questioned why Mitchell had ever been arrested. “We just didn’t see the wrongdoing of sending the file numbers in, since she’s a nurse,” Harley Tyler, a high school custodian, told the paper. Mrs. Mitchell, who did not testify in her defense, said after the verdict that she had been trying only to protect her patients. “It’s a duty to every nurse to take care of patients,” she said, after wiping away tears of relief. Rebecca Patton, president of the American Nurses Association, told the Times that the verdict is “a resounding win on behalf of patient safety.” Mitchell's lawyer, John H. Cook IV, said “there was great damage done in this case, and this [acquittal] does not make them whole.” Cook has now filed a wrongful discharge case on behalf of Mitchell and her co-worker. This case is a good example of why whistleblowers need access to jury trials.  The jury could tell when the nurse was acting properly in reporting medical malpractice, even when the sheriff, the prosecutor and the judge could not.

Jury verdicts up this year in employment cases

Mark Toth's management-side blog, Manpower Employment Blawg, reports on findings from Jury Verdict Research. Jury verdicts in employment cases are up this year, a "whopping 60%" from $204,000 to $326,640. Discrimination verdicts rose 16%, from $208,000 to $241,119. Employers are losing 61% of the cases, their worst year this decade. Employees are winning 67% of age discrimination cases, but only 48% of disability cases. Employees do better in state courts where they win 63% of their cases, compared with 57% in federal courts.  State court verdicts were also higher, on average, than those in federal court.  The median settlement only cost $90,000 -- a bargain for any employer that actually cares about the bottom line. These statistics do not reflect the high hurdles placed on getting to a jury trial -- overcoming motions to dismiss and for summary judgment.

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Social worker gets $1M jury verdict

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A child welfare employee has won a million dollar jury verdict in Palm Beach County, Florida, according to the Miami Herald.  Gerolyn Shapiro says that she was fired because her testimony pointed to the negligence of another county employee.  Shapiro had worked for the county's Department of Children and Families for ten years.  She testified that the negligence resulted in the deaths of two children and the severe brain injury of a third child.

Notably, Shapiro's testimony occurred years before her 2006 discharge.  The jury was apparently unmoved by how the county managers allowed Shapiro to continue working for years after the testimony at issue, and was still able to connect the dots to find that the manager's anger over the testimony was still the cause of the discharge. This case well explains why whistleblowers everywhere need to have access to juries to have confidence that the legal system will protect them.

Today's Senate Whistleblower Hearing Confirmed the Need for Strong Protections

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Once again, the hearing record clearly and overwhelming proves that whistleblower reform is long overdue. There were no credible arguments presented that court access and jury trial should not be provided to all federal employees, including national security employees.
 
 Senate Committee Hearing June 11, 2008

Pictured here are Angela Canterbury of Public Citizen, Prof. Robert Vaughn, William Bransford of the Senior Executive Association, Sen. Daniel Akaka (D-HI), Danielle Brian of the Project on Government Oversight (POGO) and Tom Devine of the Government Accountability Project (GAP). White House Ethics Counsel Norm Eisen is between Mr. Bransford and Sen. Akaka.

  

Senator Akaka (D-HI) opened the hearing by stating that “federal employee whistleblower play a crucial role in alerting Congress and the public to government wrongdoing and mismanagement, protecting our civil rights and civil liberties, helping to keep us safe, and rooting out waste, fraud, and abuse.”   Senator Akaka explained that the purpose of the hearing was to determine how to best protect national security whistleblowers and whether or not federal employees should be provided with jury trials.
 

Deputy Assistant Attorney General for the Department of Justice, Rajesh De, basically repeated the same testimony that he presented at the House hearing on May 14th. The Administration remains supportive of a variety of the improvements to the Whistleblower Protection Act contained in the House and Senate versions of the bill. However, they have stopped short of fulfilling President Obama’s campaign promises. The Obama Administration has not taken a position on jury trials for Title 5 federal employees and has refused to support jury trials for national security employees, despite promising to do so in the National Whistleblowers Center’s candidate survey.
 

The main difference from last month’s House hearing was the hard hitting questions by Senator Claire McCaskill (D-MO). Senator McCaskill stated that she was “perplexed and confused” why anyone would not want “every whistleblower on the face of the planet” to have access to a jury trial, especially federal employees. The Senator asked Mr. De to give her “any rational basis” for treating federal employees like second-class citizens. Mr. De’s response that it was too soon to tell the ramifications from the recently passed bills containing jury trials and that the Administration needed more time to investigate the issue was less than convincing. Senator McCaskill responded that whistleblower cases are hard to make, expensive to pursue, and it is difficult to find attorneys willing to take whistleblower cases. She continued that whistleblowers are doing the “heavy lifting” when it comes to reporting fraud and abuse and it is about time that we start “respecting and being deferential to whistleblowers.”
 

Senator Roland Burris (D-IL) also asked some important questions on the new “Intelligence Community Whistleblower Protection Board” proposed as an alternative to the Merit Systems Protection Board for national security employees. National security employees, who are responsible for preventing the next 9/11, must be able to report intelligence agency failures without fear of retaliation, and there was no coherent rationale provided at the hearing for excluding employees at the intelligence agencies and FBI from court access provisions contained in the House bill.
 

The testimony of William L. Bransford, General Counsel for the Senior Executive Association, was equally unconvincing arguing against providing for jury trials in whistleblower cases. Mr. Bransford argued that managers will be afraid to discipline “problem employees” if whistleblowers are provided access to jury trials. My question is: What is wrong with that? Why shouldn’t managers be afraid to retaliate against employees? If an employee really is a ‘bad apple’ their supervisor should be able to document why the employee should be reprimanded and proceed with proper disciplinary procedures. In my opinion, this general argument that supervisors will be chilled has little basis in reality. Managers already face jury trials for discriminating against employees on other grounds, however they are still able to effectively discipline employees and maintain a productive workforce.
 

Robert Vaughn a professor at American University’s Washington College of Law, Danielle Brian the Executive Director of the Project On Government Oversight, and Tom Devine the Legal Director of the Government Accountability Project presented compelling testimony on why all federal employees, including national security employees, should have full access to court and jury trials. Professor Vaughn submitted a mini treatise on the role of juries as his written testimony and provided support through detailed analysis dispelling stereotypes that are commonly used to argue against juries. Prof. Vaughn reminded the committee that academic studies show that juries decide complex cases without difficulty and that they are not biased in favor of the “little guy” in cases brought against large organizations.

I hope that after hearing today’s testimony the Senate takes action to finally protect all federal employee whistleblowers.  You can do your part by sending a letter to Congress and calling Senator Akaka (202-224-6361) and Senator Susan Collins (R-ME) (202-224-2523) Chairman and Ranking Member of the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs.

If you would like more information on the Senate hearing please visit the new Federal Employee Whistleblower Protection page on the NWC website.

 

McCaskill Amendment pushes employers to action

How do you know when a whistleblower remedy is effective?  When it drives employers to avoid violations, and establish internal protections for whistleblowers, that would be a good clue.  That is what has happened with Sen. Claire McCaskill's amendment to the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA).  The McCaskill Amendment provides whistleblowers with a right to jury trials, compensatory damages, and investigations by Inspectors General.

The management-side law firm, Epstein Becker & Green, issued a "Client Advisory" last week to warn employers about their enhanced liability to whistleblowers under the McCaskill Amendment.  Here is what they are telling corporations who receive government contracts under the stimulus package:

Employers receiving covered funds should take proactive steps now to prevent whistleblower claims under ARRA. As part of a comprehensive compliance program, it may be worthwhile to assure appropriate procedures are in place to prevent and detect mismanagement, fraud, waste, situations creating public danger, abuse or unlawful activity concerning covered funds. Broadening existing hotline or other reporting channels and complaint procedures to cover matters under ARRA may be in order.†ARRA also may occasion review and updating of policies and related orientation, training and monitoring programs, with specific regard to employee whistleblower issues that accompany the receipt of covered funds.

 

This is precisely the impact we hope for from enacting strong whistleblower provisions.  There were no such warnings issued after Congress passed billions of dollars in TARP spending.  Only when employers know that their employees are being encouraged to detect and report fraud – and when those employees have effective legal protections and rewards – will employers start the reforms necessary to change their culture. That will save the taxpayers billions of dollars.  

Taxpayers will save even more money if Congress acts promptly to:
1. Make the current ARRA protections permanent and apply them to all taxpayer spending;
2. Extend the whistleblower remedies to all employees – including federal employees; and
3. Fix procedural defects in the current False Claims Act so that all employees are strongly encouraged to expose waste, fraud and corruption in the spending of taxpayer dollars.

Disclosures by employee-insiders (namely, whistleblowers) are the single most important factor in detecting fraud. Stephen M. Kohn, President of the National Whistleblowers Center issued the following statement: “The stimulus whistleblower provision has already begun to have an effect on the internal corporate culture which may significantly reduce fraud and create an environment where employees are encouraged to tell the truth.”