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Govt. IGs Charged With Exposing Fraud Help Cover it Up, Whitewash Reports
Judicial Watch ^ | December 5, 2014

Posted on 12/05/2014 3:07:37 PM PST by jazusamo

The “independent” watchdogs that are supposed to root out waste, fraud and corruption inside U.S. government agencies often help cover it up, according to a scandalous newspaper exposé that reveals sometimes they actually become the lapdogs of the agencies they’re charged with overseeing.

Published this month by the capital area’s conservative newspaper, the four-part series exposes the state of inspectors general tasked with keeping an eye on the government. In all there are 72 inspectors general—with heads appointed by the president—thanks to a decades-old law that passed with strong bipartisan support in Congress. The idea is to have a completely autonomous office that has total access to all materials without conflict of interest or fear of retaliation. The findings are then to be shared with Congress and ultimately the American public.

Instead, the watchdogs soft-peddle their findings, whitewash reports and bury evidence of wrongdoing, according to congressional investigations and reports by outside groups cited in the news articles. In fact, for decades the perennial complaint has been that too often the IGs “can become lapdogs of agency management.” For instance, in the past two years IGs at half a dozen cabinet-level agencies have been accused of retaliating against whistleblowers or softening their findings to protect department executives or the White House.

Furthermore, the series reveals that damning information about high-level misconduct has been scrubbed from recent inspector general reports at crucial agencies such as the departments of State, Defense, Homeland Security and Interior. As an example one of the stories mentions the Department of Veterans Affairs, where the IG is in trouble for downplaying whistleblower claims and absolving the VA of blame for patient deaths. “Even investigators within IG offices have faced retaliation for reporting internal wrongdoing or attempts to withhold embarrassing findings, according to congressional reports,” the story says.

Jolting as the details in the news series may seem, this sort of thing has been going on among federal agency watchdogs for many years. Judicial Watch has reported on this repeatedly and in fact, back in 2007 wrote that the IG scandals were so rampant that a group of bipartisan U.S. Senators introduced legislation to clean up the offices. At the time former and current employees at inspector general offices disclosed that the watchdogs worked too closely with leaders of the agencies they investigated and that many succumbed to political pressure from the Bush administration. Among them was State Department IG Howard Krongard, who quit amid accusations of hampering investigations of widespread wrongdoing in Iraq. Commerce Department IG Johnnie Frazier also quit after being accused by employees of demoting whistleblowers and National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) IG Robert Cobb got busted interfering with investigations because he had a cozy relationship with NASA leadership.

Years later nothing has changed to root out persisting problems at these crucial entities responsible for exposing wrongdoing inside the federal government. Under President Obama many of the biggest agencies with the largest budgets have gone without adequate oversight for years because the commander-in-chief didn’t bother appointing permanent IGs. Among them are the departments of State, Defense, Homeland Security and Labor. The high-level agencies that for years have gone without a watchdog account for about $843 billion in annual spending, nearly a quarter of the entire federal budget.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Extended News; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: corruption; coverup; inspectorgeneral; obama; oig; watchdogs; whitewashreports
It seems the Office of Inspector General whose job it is to root out waste, fraud and corruption in the federal government suffer from a good deal of corruption as well.

Reading between the lines in the four-part series by Mark Flatten at The Examiner that's linked in this article it seems to be worse in the more corrupt administrations. No surprise that this administration has been fraught with IG problems.

1 posted on 12/05/2014 3:07:37 PM PST by jazusamo
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To: jazusamo
In all there are 72 inspectors general—with heads appointed by the president

Typical corrupt behavior from Obama appointees.

2 posted on 12/05/2014 3:09:55 PM PST by Blood of Tyrants (Good Muslims, like good Nazis or good liberals, are terrible human beings.)
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To: jazusamo

I have an new idea.

Put the very people who need to be investigated onto the investigating commissions.

Oh wait. That was already done with the 9/11 commission.

Never mind


3 posted on 12/05/2014 3:39:28 PM PST by BenLurkin (This is not a statement of fact. It is either opinion or satire; or both.)
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To: jazusamo

I’m sorry, but we are going to have to hang some thieves. That includes female thieves. There are too many thieves in this country. That means we have too many people who aren’t afraid of jail.


4 posted on 12/05/2014 3:42:25 PM PST by blueunicorn6 ("A crack shot and a good dancer")
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To: BenLurkin; blueunicorn6

You’re both dead on the mark.


5 posted on 12/05/2014 4:00:55 PM PST by jazusamo (0bama to go 'full-Mussolini' after elections: Mark Levin)
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To: Blood of Tyrants

The IG problem pre-dates Obama.


6 posted on 12/05/2014 4:13:04 PM PST by PAR35
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To: jazusamo
I had no idea that the IG system was begun under Carter...
That certainly explains the eventual failure of the purported goal.

My only reporting experience with them was within the DOD, and I found them to be both professional and thorough.
It certainly helped that I had my entire operational command’s support prior to initiating my complaint, had diligently followed chain of command, and thus was not considered a “whistle blower”.

Fast forward 30 some years, and it appears the civilian IG is less ....respected or trusted to do their job.

But I will openly admit that I am extremely biased, because I don't trust any civilian government entity at the Federal level to act ethically and IAW laws.

That many of the citizenry is only now finally opening their eyes to the depth and breadth of corruption is not exactly comforting.

7 posted on 12/05/2014 6:03:01 PM PST by sarasmom ( Extortion 17. Obama's revenge on the DOD for the killing of Osama Bin Ladin.)
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To: sarasmom

I couldn’t agree more.

Sadly our government now has way to many people that lack honesty and integrity. Many years ago there were those types but it has exploded into tragic numbers.


8 posted on 12/05/2014 6:50:16 PM PST by jazusamo (0bama to go 'full-Mussolini' after elections: Mark Levin)
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To: PAR35

But the current IGs are all Obama’s appointees.


9 posted on 12/05/2014 7:20:42 PM PST by Blood of Tyrants (Good Muslims, like good Nazis or good liberals, are terrible human beings.)
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To: jazusamo

Down at the unit level, they nitpick every little thing - it appears that it is the agencies with a lot of horsepower are the ones being catered to; probably via some serious strong-arm tactics and threats to careers if they don’t look the other way...


10 posted on 12/06/2014 4:26:52 AM PST by trebb (Where in the the hell has my country gone?)
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