Group charges that federal government's 'war on whistleblowers' has shredded the US Constitution.
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http://www.mintpressnews.com/national-security-whistlebl…/…/
Photo of (left to right) Kirk Wiebe, Coleen Rowley, Raymond
McGovern, Daniel Ellsberg, William Binney, Jesselyn Radack, and Thomas
Drake. (Photo: Kathleen McClellan/ Government Accountability Project)
Prominent
national security whistleblowers are calling for the full repeal of the
USA Patriot Act, charging that under that legislation the federal
government has decimated the U.S. Constitution and warning that unless
action is taken, there is no end in sight to government secrecy and
manipulation.
The group, which included former National Security Agency (NSA)
official William Binney and Pentagon Papers whistleblower Daniel
Ellsberg, appeared Monday at the National Press Club in Washington D.C. to voice their backing for H.R. 1466, the Surveillance State Repeal Act, which was recently introduced by Reps. Mark Pocan (D-Wis.) and Thomas Massie (R-Ky.).
The bill would repeal the Patriot Act and the FISA Amendments Act of
2008 while installing a number of provisions to safeguard people’s
privacy and force the government to account for surveillance activities.
The legislation was introduced as Congress debates key segments of the Patriot Act, Secs. 206 and 215, which are due to expire on June 1.
During the press conference, former NSA senior executive and whistleblower Thomas Drake, who was among those present, said
that following the attack on September 11, 2001, the federal government
under former President George W. Bush and later under President Barack
Obama “chose in great secrecy to unchain itself” from the U.S.
Constitution.
Drake added that the individuals prosecuted by Obama’s unprecedented
“war on whistleblowers,” who brought national attention to the
encroaching national security state, are “the canaries in the
Constitutional coal mine.”
Former NSA employee J. Krik Wiebe added that he is increasingly
concerned that the country is not “going to be able to get out of this
mess.”
“We’ve become a society willing to look the other way in the face of wrongdoing,” Wiebe said said.
Former CIA analyst Ray McGovern, former FBI special agent Coleen
Rowley, and Jesselyn Radack, former Justice Department trial attorney
and ethics adviser, and now director of National Security and Human
Rights at the Government Accountability Project, also took part in
Monday’s discussion.
The whistleblowers also widely agreed that the light sentence handed
down last week for General David Petraeus exemplifies the favorable
treatment given to certain leakers, and stands in marked contrast to the
treatment of others such as Chelsea Manning, Edward Snowden, John
Kiriakou, and the soon-to-be-sentenced Jeffrey Sterling—who have all
been charged under the Espionage Act.
“We all owe a debt of gratitude to General David Petraeus for showing
us what a farce [the Obama administration’s] war on whistleblowers and
leaks more generally really is,” said Radack.
Radack has represented seven whistleblowers “charged under the
draconian Espionage Act,” which she called “the weapon of choice for the
Obama administration, except in the case of General Petraeus who was
allowed to enter a plea on a minor misdemeanor charge,” which subjected
him to two years probation and a $100,000 fine. Despite the inequity,
Radack noted that a probation and fine, such as Petraeus received, is a
“a more appropriate response” to unauthorized disclosure or leaks of
classified information, rather than prison sentences.