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The Whistleblowers' Senate Champion
BusinessWeek Online ^ | Lorraine Woellert

Posted on 12/13/2002 9:55:46 AM PST by Asmodeus

Remember the Pentagon's $600 hammer? Its $1,000 toilet seat? Those 1983 revelations of profiligate defense spending touched off months of hearings and recriminations. Almost overlooked amid the hubbub was the man who started it all -- an unassuming Iowa farmer named Charles Ernest Grassley.

Until the Pentagon follies, no one paid the junior senator from the Hawkeye State much notice. Nor did anyone have great expectations for this Republican who was labeled an Iowa bumpkin destined for a single term.

But don't underestimate Grassley. Since acting on whistleblower complaints about defense spending 20 years ago, Grassley has taken on fraud and abuse at almost every federal agency.

In the process, he has become a champion for whistleblowers. He cajoles and threatens agency heads on their behalf and listens to their complaints.

Most important, in 1986 he helped embolden whistleblowers when he put teeth in the languishing False Claims Act. His legislation awarded people who reported government fraud up to 30% of the recovered damages. Since 1987, some 3,600 FCA cases have recovered $5.2 billion for taxpayers.

"Whistleblowers stick their necks out. They're entitled to protection," says Grassley. In return, "I get valuable information to make sure taxpayers aren't defrauded."

"CONSCIENCE OF THE SENATE." At 69, the senator pulls no punches, even when they land on fellow Republicans. Grassley's exposure of Pentagon waste embarrassed the new Reagan Administration just as it was trying to increase defense spending. When President George W. Bush's father was in the White House, Grassley accused the Navy of keeping its books with "willy-nilly precision." "Whether the Administration is Republican or Democratic, he has been the conscience of the Senate," says Tom Devine, legal director of the Government Accountability Project.

Grassley's latest target is a fellow Republican, Janet Rehnquist, daughter of U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist and the top agency watchdog at the Health & Human Services Dept., which runs Medicare and Medicaid. Grassley says Rehnquist has politicized her division and accuses her of lax enforcement while Medicare fraud runs amok.

Next on his list: the White House, which Grassley says is watering down post-Enron protections that he helped pass in the Sarbanes-Oxley law. His aggressive tack has some GOPers grumbling that Grassley isn't a "real Republican." They can keep grumbling. He dreams of the day when a President holds a Rose Garden ceremony for a whistleblower.

Until then, Grassley says, "whistleblowers are still like a skunk at a picnic." He aims to fix that.


TOPICS: Activism/Chapters; Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: fbiincompetence; govtcorruption; govtincompetence; govtwatchdog; sencharlesgrassley; whistleblowers
From the TWA 800 Grassley Hearing.
[quote]
This is a story about how the world's preeminent law enforcement agency, at least in terms of image and expectation, sometimes acted like it did not even have a clue. I believe that each and every FBI agent and employee who showed up on the scene of that tragic crash did the best job they could and had the best motives. The same goes for the employees of the other agencies and groups that worked so hard. Many volunteered to do that, and they sacrificed their time and their commitment to a greater and humanitarian good.

There was a basic problem, however. In my view, it was one of leadership. FBI leadership in the case of the TWA Flight 800 was a disaster. The FBI says that its investigation in this case is a model for the future. The FBI believes that even now. I say that because of their testimony they submitted for this hearing. If the FBI still believes that after this hearing, then I think the American people should be very alarmed about whether or not the FBI gets the message, because this investigation, which by statute was supposed to be run by the NTSB but which was commandeered by the FBI, is a model of failure, not success. And anyone who doubts that is not confronting reality.

The testimony that we will hear today will describe three things. First, it will show how the FBI lacked the proper training to handle an investigation of this type and violated the most basic standards of forensic science in terms of collecting evidence, handling that evidence, and preserving the evidence. It is the kind of thing that would make even rookie cops wince.
[end quote]

See also FBI Whistleblower William Tobin

1 posted on 12/13/2002 9:55:46 AM PST by Asmodeus
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To: Asmodeus
From what I've seen of him I like Grassley, seems like an old style republican. Let's make him Majority Leader, would have to be better than Lott.
2 posted on 12/13/2002 10:07:03 AM PST by steve50
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To: steve50
Ditto your notes on Grassley, he sounds like an up and up guy with some principles, unlike Lott that's a) obtuse, b) has a checkered past, c) can't think for himself and d) is a horrible leader. Not that Grassley should be ML (Nickles should take the spot).
We need more federal protection for whistleblowers. I fear that Bush and Ashcroft want to take them away. Maybe its to hide their mistakes of the past, or they just don't want to be bothered with trying to root out corruption.
3 posted on 12/13/2002 10:16:06 AM PST by lelio
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To: steve50
From what I've seen of him I like Grassley, seems like an old style republican. Let's make him Majority Leader, would have to be better than Lott.

More likely to get a weak sister Hastert clone, tha anyone that can articulate the conservative view.

4 posted on 12/13/2002 11:27:41 AM PST by itsahoot
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To: lelio; steve50
Agreed. Grassley is invaluable in his present role.

The website of U.S. Senator Charles Grassley.

5 posted on 12/13/2002 11:36:55 AM PST by Asmodeus
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To: Asmodeus
Grassley looks like a plow horse with bad eyesight. But he's got a boundless spirit and an integrity that is almost saintly. Since the Senate might be looking for a new Majority Leader, perhaps Sen. Grassley would consider the position ...
6 posted on 12/13/2002 11:38:06 AM PST by IronJack
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To: IronJack
Grassley bump. Rare people in that august herd who have character.
7 posted on 12/13/2002 9:12:17 PM PST by Spirited
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