US
President Obama has signed into law expanded whistleblower protections that
cover intelligence agents for the first time. But the protections still do not
apply to contractors, such as ex-NSA analyst Edward Snowden.
Deutsche Welle, 10 July 2014
Five years
after vowing to strengthen whistleblower rights, President Barack Obama has
extended statutory protections to intelligence agency employees who report
abuse, closing a major gap in a law at least ostensibly designed to shield
federal workers from retaliation.
Part of the
Intelligence Authorization Act of 2014, the provisions would protect
intelligence agency employees from retaliation if they report waste, fraud or
abuse to designated entities. Those entities include superiors at the agency in
question, one of the inspector general watchdogs, and the House and Senate
intelligence committees.
For the
first time, intelligence agency employees can use whistleblowing as an
affirmative defense if they suffer retaliation; for example, if their security
clearance is taken away. In addition, they are protected from retaliation for
cooperating with an investigation or providing testimony under oath. They can
also appeal to an internal administrative board to have their grievances
redressed.
"It's
a significant precedent," Shanna Devine, the Government Accountability
Project's legislative director, told DW. "No time before in history have
there been enforceable statutory protections for intelligence community
government employees."
Rights
codified into law
In 2012,
Congress passed and President Obama signed the Whistleblower Protection
Enhancement Act (WPEA), which sought to bolster safeguards for federal
employees who reveal waste, fraud or abuse. Although the WPEA originally
included protections for intelligence agency employees, that language was
removed from the legislation before the president signed it into law.
"Historically
speaking, the intelligence community has rejected these types of protections
and has been able to muster enough persuasive strength on the congressional
intelligence committees to have language stripped from it," Mark Zaid, a
lawyer who represents intelligence agency whistleblowers, told DW.
The White
House subsequently sought to close the gap in the WPEA by issuing a
presidential directive that extended whistleblower protections to intelligence
agency employees. Although the directive carried the force of law, it could
have been reversed at anytime by the current president or one of his
successors.
"The
presidential policy directive largely mirrors the protections included in the
Intelligence Authorization Act, but the directive was not a statute,"
Devine said.
"Those
rights couldn't be codified; it was essentially an executive order," she
added. "These protections are very similar, but they have become
law."
Lack of
independent hearing
Although
intelligence agency whistleblowers are now protected by an act of Congress,
some lawyers are concerned that, in practice, the law could fall short of its
aims. According to Zaid, internal reporting channels are often used to identify and punish whistleblowers instead of actually redressing their grievances.
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| Intelligence agency contractors still do not have whistleblower protections |
"Now
we supposedly have a substantive package, but we have to determine whether its
effective or legitimate and that's only going to be determined by time when we
have our first cases," Zaid said.
For
example, whistleblowers can appeal to an administrative board under the new
law, if they believe that they've been retaliated against for reporting abuse.
But the board's members will all be selected by the director of national
intelligence.
"In
practice there are serious concerns about the access to a fair and independent
hearing," Devine said. "You simply don't have an independent hearing,
per se, through this new law. No, it's not a guarantee that a whistleblower
will be protected when they exercise their rights under this new
provision."
Contractors
not covered
In
addition, if an intelligence agency employee signs a non-disclosure agreement,
they won't enjoy whistleblower protections at all. And defendants are not
allowed to view the evidence against them if it's classified.
But perhaps
most glaringly, intelligence agency contractors are not protected under the law. Former National Security Agency (NSA) analyst Edward Snowden, who revealed
the agency's massive surveillance operations to the press, was a contractor
employed with Booz Allen Hamilton.
According
to Devine, the House intelligence committee, chaired by Representative Mike
Rogers, stripped protections for contractors from previous legislation.
"From
2007-2012, through the stimulus law and the National Defense Authorization Act,
contractors at select intelligence agencies did have very strong whistleblower
rights, including access to due process and an independent hearing,"
Devine said.
"Those
rights were removed in 2012, really just months before Snowden made his
disclosures."


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