A whistleblower is a current or former employee who reveals what he or she reasonably believes evidences fraud, waste, abuse, illegality, or a danger to …
Whistleblowers
A whistleblower is a current or former employee who reveals what he or she reasonably believes evidences fraud, waste, abuse, illegality, or a danger to public health and safety. The individual can disclose their concerns to their superiors, Congress, an interest group representative, or the media. Unfortunately, often nothing gets fixed when employees report internally; in fact, they often become the target of smear campaigns, sued under the Espionage Act, fired and new work made difficult, threatened, or even assassinated or ‘suicided’. This is especially true in the Intelligence Community, where whistleblowers lack strong protection from retaliation. It is easier to shoot the messenger than listen to the message.
On the other hand, those involved in the corruption and illegalities are never charged with anything. The word “whistleblower” was coined by Ralph Nader. All governments engage in leaks to control how the media reports a story (leakers), but hate unauthorized leaks (whistleblowers), because suddenly they lose control of the story. The evidence is undeniable and incontrovertible: there is a concerted campaign to suppress information that exposes government fraud, corruption or abuse.
Whistleblower Ted Gunderson helped expose this massive CIA / government cover up: In early February 1987, an anonymous tipster in Tallahassee, Fla, made a phone call to police. Two "well dressed men" seemed to be "supervising" six dishevelled and hungry children in a local park, the caller said. The cops went after the case like bloodhounds, at least at first. The two men were identified as ...
A false flag that occurred in 1986 at a Berlin discotheque called La Belle where U.S. soldiers had been frequenting. On April 5th of that year a bomb tore through it, killing two American servicemen and wounding over 50 others. U.S. intelligence then intercepted radio messages, originating in Libya, that congratulated alleged perpetrators of the crime. In response, President Ronald Reagan ordered the bombing of Libya ...
A story is published about whistleblower Mordechai Vanunu, who worked as a nuclear technician at Dimona, Israel’s secret nuclear installation from 1976 to 1985, a time when Israel was insisting it would not be the first to introduce nuclear weapons to the Middle East, however what Vanunu discovered is that Israel was secretly developing an extensive nuclear program, hiding its existence from the Israeli people and ...
Although a former French combat diver of the DGSE secret service who was in charge of sinking the Greenpeace ship Rainbow Warrior apologized on New Zealand TV 30 years later, revealing details of the clandestine operation, most people who looked into the truth of the matter knew a cover up was in play from the get-go. The two blasts occurred in the harbor of Auckland, New ...
James Bamford, having gathered extensive information on the NSA, wrote the "The Puzzle Palace", a nickname for the agency, and it was published on September 19, 1982. Before the book's publication, the Reagan administration claimed that unclassified source documents were released to Bamford in error, and threatened him with prosecution if he did not return 250 pages of documents he had obtained through Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) ...
Charlotte Iserbyt | written June 15, 2004 Although Ronald Reagan had made abolishing the unconstitutional U.S. Dept. of Education one of his most important campaign promises while running for President in 1979-1980, once elected he made a very strange choice for his Secretary of Education, T. H. Bell from Utah, who had not only been a former state superintendent of schools and United States Commissioner of ...
This is widely suspected to have been an assassination of Portuguese Defense Minister Adelino Amaro da Costa, who was planning to expose the October surprise conspiracy. This was not well understood at the time and the first few investigations declared it an accident. The incident was subject to many investigations, which established an official narrative that the crash was an accident caused by a lack of fuel in one of the ...
Operation Watchtower was one of many drug trafficking operations from Central America consisting of the placement and operation of low frequency radio beacons to guide low-flying pilots from Colombia to Panama. It also consisted of making available to the pilots the radio frequencies and schedules of drug interdiction aircraft so as to avoid detection. Because of the extremely low altitude these drug-laden aircraft flew, often less ...
According to Bob Baer, writing in the Pacific Free Press: What Stockwell had seen as an operative in Africa and across the Third World was a CIA that was purely interventionist – not gathering intelligence, but brutally machinating, vicious, a secret weapon of US presidents and White House policymakers to battle the Soviets for world control. CIA paramilitary operations through proxy forces – the funding of ...
Broaddrick, who was known as Juanita Hickey at the time, first met Clinton when he made a visit to her nursing home during his 1978 gubernatorial campaign. Clinton was Arkansas Attorney General at the time. Broaddrick wanted to volunteer for the campaign, and says Clinton invited her to stop by the campaign office in Little Rock. She contacted the office a few weeks later while in ...