Posted on Jul 21, 2012
Doctors and scientists working for the Food and Drug
Administration became targets of surveillance and some lost their jobs after
blowing the whistle on the agency’s approval of medical devices that they
believed were not safe for public use.
The seven professionals were in communication with President
Obama, members of Congress, federal law enforcement officials and journalists.
Obama, who has been waging a war against whistle-blowers, appears not
to have commented on the scandal yet. But it is difficult to imagine the
president disapproving of experts leaking sensitive information in the interest
of public safety, regarding matters that are not directly political.
The FDA monitored the scientists’ computers at work and
home, copying emails and data on thumb drives, and watching messages typed line
by line as they were composed. And it did so cheaply. The spyware, sold by
SpectorSoft, costs $100 for a single computer and can be placed on 25 machines
for less than $3,000. “Monitor everything they do,” SpectorSoft’s website says.
“Catch them red-handed by receiving instant alerts when keywords or phrases are
typed or are contained in an email, chat, instant message or website.”
The FDA defended its methods, saying it monitored only work
computers, did not focus on members of Congress or their staffs and at no time
attempted to interfere with scientists’ communications.
The surveillance was discovered when one of the scientists
browsed the Internet for information on himself while applying for a job. The
scientist discovered that the FDA had uploaded at least 80,000 documents
containing sensitive information gathered during the course of spying.
In an interview with “Democracy Now!” Stephen Kohn,
executive director of the National Whistleblowers Center and the attorney
representing the scientists, saidthe pretext of leaks is being used to justify large-scale
surveillance. He explains that documents pertaining to the program show that
the FDA targeted whistle-blowers who did not have access to the “so-called
trade secret information.” Then the agency targeted messages sent to Congress,
Kohn said, even though the law protects the confidentiality of federal
employees’ safety appeals to the Office of Special Counsel, which means the FDA
broke the law by violating confidentiality rights.
Kohn went on to describe the “insidious nature of domestic
surveillance.” Once the agency identified the first whistle-blower, it was able
to discover who he was talking to and create an “enemies list,” he said. And
the list grew. One list had seven names. Another held 21. And Kohn believes
there are more.
It takes courage to put one’s job on the line for the sake
of others, especially in economic hard times. For risking and in some cases
losing their livelihoods—at least for now—in pursuit of public safety, we honor
the seven FDA whistle-blowers as our Truthdiggers of the Week.
—Posted by Alexander Reed Kelly. Follow him on Twitter: @areedkelly.
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