New FOIA Law Contains Long Overdue Improvements


President Bush has signed into law the first legislation in more than a decade to strengthen the Freedom of Information Act. The Open Government Act of 2007, signed by Bush on New Years eve, contains several important changes and improvements to the Freedom of Information Act.


The new law establishes enforceable deadlines for agencies to process FOIA requests; extends FOIA's reach to certain records maintained by government contractors; establishes an ombudsman to resolve disputes; creates a FOIA tracking system; restores provisions for recovery of attorneys fees by FOIA litigants who successfully prevail in court, including cases where there is a voluntary or unilateral change in the government's position after filing of the lawsuit, so long as the FOIA requester's claim is not insubstantial; and requires that any award of attorneys fees be paid out of an agency's budget and not the Treasury Department's judgment fund.


Legislative improvements to FOIA were long overdue and the Open Government Act of 2007 is intended to speed up citizen access to government information. The Freedom of Information Act is an essential tool to assist whistleblowers, journalists, citizens and watchdog groups discover what their government is up to and provide outside oversight of government activities.


A copy of the Open Government Act of 2007 is linked here

Senate Passes S.274, A Whistleblower Protection Law for Federal Employees

 

Late last night, the U.S. Senate finally got the job done, unanimously passing S.274, the Federal Employee Protection of Disclosures Act. This law, along with its companion house legislation (H.R.985), if preserved in conference, would go a long way towards protecting every single federal whistleblower and federal government contractor from retaliation when they report illegal activity to their supervisor. This legislation will effectively overturn the terrible Supreme Court Decision in Garcetti v. Ceballos, which held that government employees are not protected by the First Amendment when they report concerns at work.

More on this issue to come...

Below is the text of today's National Whistleblower Center Press release:

 

Washington, DC., December 18, 2007. Last evening the U.S. Senate, by unanimous consent, passed the Federal Employee Protection of Disclosures Act (S.274). This law enhances the protection for federal employee whistleblowers by expanding the scope of protected activity to cover complaints within an employees chain of command.

Passage of S.274 now sets the stage for a conference between the House and Senate to agree final legislative language. On March 14, 2007 the House enacted the Whistleblower Protection Enhancement Act (H.R. 985), which expanded the scope of whistleblower protections to national security related agencies, permitted employees to obtain jury trials in federal court, provided enhanced protections for federal contractors and protected employees who exposed misconduct to their managers.

“The House and Senate whistleblower protections laws complement each other. They need to be melded together in conference and immediately enacted into law. Only by combining the best of both bills will federal employees obtain realistic protection. Until then, the taxpayers and citizens will remain the losers in this debate, as billions of dollars in waste remains unreported and government officials who violate the law and mislead the American people escape accountability,” said Stephen M. Kohn, the President of the National Whistleblower Center.

“The Senate Action now sets the stage for the final passage of what will be one of the most important laws enacted by this Congress,” added Kohn.

The House and Senate bills were strongly endorsed by a broad coalition of public groups, including the National Whistleblower Center, the Project on Government Oversight, the Government Accountability Project and Taxpayers Against Fraud, the No Fear Coalition, the Make it Safe Coalition, the Liberty Coalition, and the Bill of Rights Foundation, among numerous others.

-end-

 

Man Convicted on Faulty FBI Bullet-Lead Evidence Heading Back to Court

Today's Washington Post has an update on the FBI Bullet-Lead debacle. Lee Wayne Hunt , a North Carolina man who has maintained his innocence since being convicted of murder in 1986, is appealing his case to the North Carolina Supreme Court. 

This is not Mr. Hunt's first appeal, but this time he is doing so with the help of information obtained by the National Whistleblower Center's Forensic Justice Project. The FJP's lawsuits against the FBI produced a wealth of documents detailing how thousands of cases, including Mr. Hunt's, were prosecuted on the basis of a faulty forensic science known as bullet-lead analysis.

Dr. Frederic Whitehurst, a former FBI Special Agent and forensic expert, is the Executive Director of the FJP.

 

Will Congress Pass Whistleblower Protections Before the Next Disaster?

 

I call it the two crash rule: It takes two disasters for Congress to protect whistleblowers.


For example, for years airline pilots pleaded for Congress to enact modest protections for airline employees who exposed safety concerns. Year in and year out legislation was introduced, but stalled or was ignored. Then, in 2000, two Alaskan Airlines jets crashed. Only after two plane crashes were the whistleblower protections enacted. The same story holds true for almost every other federal whistleblower law. Disasters prompted action – but in each case the legislative response was limited to fixing the crisis at hand.


How many more disasters are needed to provide real whistleblower protection for all American workers? How many more billions lost in various schemes (such as the home mortgage fiasco)? How many tainted products will be imported into America? How many more taxpayer dollars will be wasted or swindled by contractors in Iraq?


Since January, 2007 numerous whistleblower protection laws have been introduced into Congress. But since the Democratic takeover of Congress only one whistleblower protection proposal has actually passed. This law provides enhanced protections for truck and bus drivers who complain about safety risks.


Obviously, truck drivers need whistleblower protection, but what about the tens of millions of employees who remain completely unprotected?


Congress needs to enact a comprehensive national whistleblower protection law, a law which will provide all legitimate whistleblowers with adequate legal protections.


Below is the list of whistleblower protection laws are currently pending in Congress. They all deserve our support. But why has no member of Congress introduced a national whistleblower protection act, which would protect all honest employees who expose violations of law or threats to the public safety? Why are most whistleblowers still without any adequate protection under federal law? When will Congress finally act?


Here is a list of the major whistleblower protection proposals introduced into Congress since January, 2007. As of today, none of these laws have passed:

General Whistleblower FAQ

What laws cover the alleged retaliation?

The first step in reviewing a whistleblower claim is to determine what statutes or common law actions may provide a remedy. A case may be covered under more than one whistleblower protection provision. Depending upon whom one works for and in which state one is employed, the nature and scope of whistleblower protection is varied. In addition to explicit whistleblower protection laws, employees may also be protected under traditional tort or contract for damages resulting from retaliation for whistleblowing.

Federal Whistleblower Laws and RegulationsThe National Whistleblower Center has released a comprehensive publication of all Federal whistleblower laws and regulations. This book is offered on their website as a free download for whistleblowers and their political and legal advocates. Donations are urged, and commercial users are required to pay $120. 

 

 


What is protected whistleblower activity?

The underlying purpose of whistleblower protection laws is to allow employees to stop, report, or testify about employer actions which are illegal, unhealthy, or violate specific public policies. However, one of the most hotly contested issues in whistleblower law is the exact definition of protected whistleblower activity. Some states have very narrow definitions while others are very broad. An employee or his or her attorney should thoroughly research the state law regarding the definition for his or her state.


How long are the statutes of limitations?

One major weakness in many statutory whistleblower protection laws is the short statute of limitations. Failure to comply with a statute of limitations is one of the favorite defenses in whistleblower cases, and the statute is generally held to start at the time an employee learns that he or she will be retaliated against- not the last day of employment. Each state has its own statute of limitations for common law wrongful termination actions. Federal statutes protecting whistleblowers also have their own statutes of limitations, some as short as thirty days.


What are the remedies?

The decision on how to pursue the claim will determine what statute of limitations is applicable, the types of damages that are recoverable, and in what forum the claim will be adjudicated. In some states, if the employee is covered by a federal statute, the employee may be preempted from bringing a state action. Some employees have filed for both administrative and common law remedies. Although this approach has been successful, it raises other issues besides preemption, such as res judicata and collateral estoppel. The employee should use extreme care in determining the pros and cons of each potential strategy.


What is a basic prima facie case?

The following elements are the basic components of most whistleblower protection claims: 

  1. that the plaintiff is an employee or person covered under the specific statutory or common law relied upon for action;
  2. that the defendant is an employer or person covered under the specific statutory or common law relied upon for the action; 
  3. that the plaintiff engaged in protected whistleblower activity; 
  4. that the defendant knew or had knowledge that the plaintiff engaged in such activity; 
  5. that retaliation against the employee was motivated, at least in part, by the employee engaging in protected activity; 
  6. that plaintiff was discharged or otherwise discriminated against with respect to his or her compensation, terms, conditions or privileges or employment; or suffered some other wrong actionable under state tort or contract theory; 
  7. that the plaintiff can demonstrate, by a preponderance of the evidence, that he or she would not have been subject to an adverse action in the absence of protected conduct.

How does an employee prove discriminatory motive?

The following general categories of facts or circumstances are used to establish a reasonable inference that the discharge was discriminatory:

  • employer's hostile attitude toward matter underlying employee's protected conduct; 
  • employer's knowledge of protected conduct;
  • nature of protected conduct; 
  • special conditions of employment following protected conduct and leading up to discharge; 
  • disparate treatment of discharged employee prior to protected conduct; 
  • previous expressions of satisfaction with work record; 
  • disparate treatment of similarly situated employees; 
  • termination procedure; 
  • timing of discharge; and 
  • threats or retaliation against other employees for similar conduct.

Other factors which have been used successfully to establish circumstantial evidence of discriminatory motive are:

  • high work performance ratings prior to engaging in protected activity, and low ratings or "problems" thereafter; 
  • manner in which the employee was informed of his or her transfer or termination; 
  • inadequate investigation of the charge against the employee; 
  •  discipline, transfer, or termination shortly after employee engaged in protected activity; 
  •  the magnitude of the alleged offense; 
  •  absence of previous complaints against employee; 
  •  differences in the way complainant and other employees were treated; 
  •  determination that the employee was not guilty of violating work rule charged under, and 
  •  charges of "disloyalty" against an employee for engaging in protected activity.


Concepts and Procedures in Whistleblower Law

These issues and others are discussed in greater detail in Concepts and Procedures in Whistleblower Law; (Quorum, 2000). For more information about this and other whistleblower publications, please visit the National Whistleblower Center’s publications page.

 

 

 

If you are a whistleblower seeking legal representation, please fill out our Attorney Referral Service / Report Fraud Now form.