Search This Blog

Translate

Blog Archive

Middleboro Review 2

NEW CONTENT MOVED TO MIDDLEBORO REVIEW 2

Toyota

Since the Dilly, Dally, Delay & Stall Law Firms are adding their billable hours, the Toyota U.S.A. and Route 44 Toyota posts have been separated here:

Route 44 Toyota Sold Me A Lemon



Wednesday, April 12, 2017

RSN: Donald Trump: Liar in Chief




It's Live on the HomePage Now: 
Reader Supported News

Sure, I'll make a donation!

Donald Trump: Liar in Chief 
Donald Trump has falsely claimed, among other things, that 'between 3 million and 5 million illegal votes caused me to lose the popular vote.' (photo: Alex Wong/Getty Images) 
Tessa Stuart, Rolling Stone 
Stuart writes: "'What should a United States senator, or any citizen, do if the president is a liar?' Sen. Bernie Sanders mused in March. The media, elected officials, even Trump's spokespeople have all struggled to reckon with a chronically dissembling commander in chief." 
READ MORE
Federal Judge Rules - Again - That Texas Voter ID Law Was Passed to Intentionally Discriminate 
James Barragan, Dallas Morning News 
Barragan writes: "A federal judge ruled Monday for the second time that Texas' 2011 voter identification law was filed with discriminatory intent - another blow to the state in a six-year legal battle over the legislation." 
READ MORE
Official Involved in Bush-Era Purge of Gay Employees Now in Trump Administration 
Justin Elliott, ProPublica 
Elliott writes: "It was one of the uglier scandals of the Bush administration: Top officials at an agency dedicated to protecting whistleblowers launched a campaign against their own employees based on suspected sexual orientation, according to an inspector general report." 
READ MORE
The top official at a George Bush-era agency - according to an inspector general report - had launched a campaign against his own employees based on sexual orientation. (photo: AFP)
The top official at a George Bush-era agency - according to an inspector general report - had launched a 
campaign against his own employees based on sexual orientation. (photo: AFP)

A government investigation found that Jim Renne was a key player in a scandal in which staff were targeted on the basis of sexual orientation.
t was one of the uglier scandals of the Bush administration: Top officials at an agency dedicated to protecting whistleblowers launched a campaign against their own employees based on suspected sexual orientation, according to an inspector general report.
Staffers were abruptly reassigned from Washington, D.C., to a new office 500 miles away in Detroit in what the head of the office reportedly described as an effort to “ship [them] out.” Staffers who refused were fired.
Crude anti-gay emails were found in the agency chief’s account.
Now one of the major players in the scandal has a new assignment: He works in the Trump administration.
In December, James Renne was appointed to the Trump “landing team” at the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, as part of the transition effort between the election and the inauguration. He was then hired Jan. 30 in a senior role at the Department of Agriculture, though his exact job duties are not clear.
Renne was part of the wave of early political appointees on so-called “beachhead teams,” whose role is to lay the groundwork for the new administration’s policies. (We published details on hundreds of beachhead hires, obtained through public records requests.)
In the Bush administration, Renne was hired in 2004 as deputy special counsel of the Office of Special Counsel, the small federal agency that is supposed to protect employees across the government from retaliation for whistleblowing. The tenures of Renne and his boss, Special Counsel Scott Bloch, were almost immediately mired in controversy after career employees said they were improperly fired. Language stating that job discrimination protections extend to sexual orientation also disappeared from the agency website.
A little-noticed inspector general report, released in 2013, depicts Renne as a central player in the efforts. Bloch and Renne, it found, hatched the plan to abruptly open a new “Midwest Field Office” in Detroit and reassign career staff there. Employees who declined to move lost their jobs.
The report found that the employees were targeted for no legitimate reason, pointing to “facts which reflect that Mr. Bloch and Mr. Renne may have been motivated in their actions by a negative personal attitude toward homosexuality and individuals whose orientation is homosexual.”
One evening shortly after he was hired in 2004, Renne took the lead in removing the language from the agency’s website about how job protections cover sexual orientation, the report says.
From the report: “Mr. Renne was depicted as intently searching the OSC website with the assistance of a senior career official to identify passages which interpreted [the nondiscrimination law] as extending protection to employees on the basis of their sexual orientation. According to this account, Mr. Renne demanded that OSC’s information technology manager remove these materials from the website immediately.”
That change was later the subject of congressional hearings.
Renne did not respond to requests for comment. The Department of Agriculture, which hired him, declined to comment.
The scandal at the Office of Special Counsel dragged on for years, spawning congressional and criminal investigations.
In a formal complaint filed at the time, the employees who were reassigned to Detroit pointed to a “Concerned Catholic Attorneys” letter Renne had signed in 2000 that is a broadside against a range of gay rights efforts. It warns that the “homosexual lobby’s power has grown exponentially.”
The inspector general report found that Renne played a central role in the plan to open a Detroit office,noting that “the reorganization was formulated by Mr. Bloch and Mr. Renne very early in their tenure.” An outside consultant they hired to help with the plan told investigators that “it appeared that Mr. Bloch may have been heavily influenced by Mr. Renne.”
That consultant, retired Lt. Gen. Richard Trefry, told investigators:
Mr. Bloch indicated to General Trefry that there was a sizeable group of homosexuals employed by OSC, which had developed during the years prior to his taking office, that he “had a license” to get rid of homosexual employees, and that he intended to “ship them out.”
The report continues:
Further, in the portions of Mr. Bloch’s official e-mail account that were available to the investigative team, there were crude and vulgar messages containing anti-homosexual themes that appeared to have been forwarded from his personal email. … Similarly, Mr. Bloch’s public media references to [his predecessor as Special Counsel, Elaine] Kaplan contained repeated, negatively-phrased assertions regarding her sexual orientation. For example, in interviews he granted during 2007, Mr. Bloch described her as a “lesbian activist,” a “public lesbian,” a “well-known gay activist”, and similar depictions.
Now in private practice, Bloch told ProPublica the report is “filled with untruth, outright falsehoods, and innuendo.” When the report was released, Bloch denied that he ever talked about targeting gay employees.
The inspector general report says it was based on interviews with more than 60 people and examination of over 100,000 emails.
The affected employees ultimately came to a settlement with the government. The terms were not released.
During the investigation into his tenure, Bloch’s home and office were raided by the FBI and he ultimately pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor charge arising from his hiring the company Geeks on Call to do a “seven-level wipe” on his government computers. Years later, Bloch later unsuccessfully sued the government over his firing.
There’s little public record of what Renne has been doing since his time working with Bloch. The Trump landing team announcement identified him as working for Renne Law. A fellow member of the Office of the Director of National Intelligence landing team said that Renne had worked at the ODNI inspector general office. And Bloch said he also heard that Renne had gotten a job in the intelligence community after their work together. An ODNI spokesman declined to comment.

New Military Adviser Ivanka Trump Reportedly Convinced Her Father to Bomb Syria 
Esther Yu Hsi Lee, ThinkProgress 
Lee writes: "Ivanka Trump - an official government employee without military experience but with her own White House office - reportedly influenced President Donald Trump's decision to strike against Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad last week, according to her brother Eric Trump." 
READ MORE
"We're Coming for You": Florida Sheriff Records Anti-Drug Message Surrounded by Masked SWAT Team 
Amy Goodman, Sherrilyn Ifill and Juan Gonzalez, Democracy Now! 
Excerpt: "A viral Facebook video posted by the Lake County Sheriff's Department in Florida shows Sheriff Peyton Grinnell, surrounded by four masked men wearing sheriff's department uniforms and Kevlar vests, warning people who deal drugs: 'To the dealers that are pushing this poison, I have a message for you: We're coming for you.'" 
READ MORE
African Migrants Traded in Libya's 'Slave Markets' 
Al Jazeera 
Excerpt: "Hundreds of African refugees and migrants passing through Libya are being bought and sold in modern-day slave markets before being held for ransom, forced labour or sexual exploitation, survivors have told the UN's migration agency." 
READ MORE
Shell, Dow Hid Cancer-Causing Chemical in Pesticides, Contaminating Drinking Water for Millions 
Environmental Working Group 
Excerpt: "For decades, Shell and Dow hid a highly potent cancer-causing chemical in two widely used pesticides, contaminating drinking water for millions of people in California and beyond, according to lawsuits detailed in a new report from the Environmental Working Group (EWG)." 
READ MORE

Contribute to RSN
Become a Fan of RSN on Facebook and Twitter








No comments: