Unconstitutional Secrecy Provisions Hide Iraq War Costs and Public Safety Information From the Public
Taxpayers Have A Right To Know About Allegations Of Fraud Against The Government, Say Watchdog Groups
“Secret courts and secret proceedings have no place in this country,” said
Under the FCA, originally enacted by President Lincoln to combat war profiteering and other contractor fraud against the federal government, private citizens are entitled to bring complaints of fraud on behalf of the government. A 1986 amendment to the law requires that FCA complaints are automatically filed under seal and whistleblowers who file the complaints are gagged from speaking to anybody about them. The seal and gag are not lifted until the Justice Department decides whether it will pursue a complaint, which can be anywhere from 60 days to several years later. According to the Justice Department there were approximately 1,000 FCA cases under seal as of
According to today’s complaint, the FCA secrecy provisions have hidden an unknown number of allegations of military contractor fraud during the Iraq War from the public, raising concerns that the government may neglect to take action against certain contractors.
“Serious allegations of contractor misconduct should not be hidden from the press and the public,” said
The complaint also charges that the secrecy provisions can prevent the public from learning about ongoing threats to public health and safety, since alleged misconduct will remain a secret until the Justice Department takes action and the seal is lifted.
“Hopefully this lawsuit will be a wake up call for the Justice Department. There are circumstances where a confidentiality seal is essential, but Justice has used it as a blanket gag order under threat of criminal prosecution to lock in secrecy sometimes for years. That is defensible for cases solely concerned with financial recovery, but disastrous when a whistleblower challenges fraud that threatens health and safety, such as toxic dumping,” said
Today’s complaint was filed in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of
The complaint is available online at: www.aclu.org/freespeech/gen/38336lgl20090115.html
SOURCE American Civil Liberties Union
