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Homeland Insecurity: Seven Years, Untold Dollars to Silence One Man
Homeland Insecurity
Seven Years, Untold Dollars to Silence One Man
By Peter Van Buren
What do words mean in a post-9/11 world? Apart from the now clichéd Orwellian twists that turn brutal torture into mere enhanced interrogation, the devil is in the details. Robert MacLean is a former air marshal fired for an act of whistleblowing. He has continued to fight over seven long years for what once would have passed as simple justice: getting his job back. His is an all-too-twenty-first-century story of the extraordinary lengths to which the U.S. government is willing to go to thwart whistleblowers.
First, the government retroactively classified a previously unclassified text message to justify firing MacLean. Then it invoked arcane civil service procedures, including an interlocutory appeal to thwart him and, in the process, enjoyed the approval of various courts and bureaucratic boards apparently willing to stamp as legal anything the government could make up in its own interest.
And yet heres the miracle at the heart of this tale: MacLean refused to quit, when ordinary mortals would have thrown in the towel. Now, with a recent semi-victory, he may not only have given himself a shot at getting his old job back, but also create a precedent for future federal whistleblowers. In the post-9/11 world, people like Robert MacLean show us how deep the Washington rabbit hole really goes.
The Whistle Is Blown
MacLean joined the Federal Air Marshal Service (FAMS) in 2001 after stints with the Air Force and the Border Patrol. In July 2003, all marshals received a briefing about a possible hijacking plot. Soon after, the Transportation Safety Administration (TSA), which oversees FAMS, sent an unencrypted, open-air text message to the cell phones of the marshals cancelling several months of missions for cost-cutting reasons. MacLean became concerned that cancelling missions during a hijacking alert might create a dangerous situation for the flying public. He complained to his supervisor and to the Department of Homeland Securitys inspector general, but each responded that nothing could be done. ....................(more)
The complete piece is at: http://www.tomdispatch.com/post/175697/tomgram%3A_peter_van_buren%2C_if_the_government_does_it%2C_it%27s_%22legal%22/#more
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Homeland Insecurity: Seven Years, Untold Dollars to Silence One Man (Original Post)
marmar
May 2013
OP
Lots of very important issues here.
blkmusclmachine
(16,149 posts)2. .
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bemildred
(90,061 posts)3. We do corruption really well, world class corruption. nt