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Whistleblower Dr. Jonathan Fishbein is Retaliated Against at NIH Division of AIDS
Whistleblower protection must be given to anyone who speaks out against corruption and fraud, not just to Federal employees.
          
Government employees have a duty
to report waste, fraud and abuse wherever, and whenever, they occur. Jonathan M. Fishbein, M.D. did just this when he discovered widespread scientific and professional misconduct at the NIH Division of AIDS (DAIDS).

Rather than investigate Dr. Fishbein's documented allegations, senior NIH managers chose to cover-up the wrongdoing. Then they embarked upon a campaign of retribution against the very person they had hired to reform the Division.

This web site tells the story of Dr. Fishbein's ongoing struggle for justice. It also chronicles the failure of the federal government to adequately police AIDS clinical trials, shield its whistleblowers and recognize the courage of one Honest Doctor.

HHS Backs Protection For Special Consultant
Whistle-Blower Law Should Apply, It Says

By Christopher Lee, Washington Post Staff Writer, Wednesday, February 2, 2005; Page A21

LINK

The Department of Health and Human Services filed a legal petition this week in support of an employee the department is trying to fire.

HHS told the Merit Systems Protection Board that Jonathan M. Fishbein, a clinical research specialist who has been told he will lose his job at the National Institutes of Health, should be eligible for protection from any official retaliation under federal whistle-blower laws.

"There is nothing in the record indicating that there was ever any Congressional intent to exclude Petitioner from the protections of the WPA [Whistleblower Protection Act]," William A. Biglow, an HHS attorney, wrote in the department's six-page filing.

The petition is in response to a November ruling by an administrative law judge that Fishbein could not seek whistle-blower protection before the MSPB because the department had employed him as a "special consultant" outside regular civil service laws. Attorneys for Fishbein have appealed the ruling to the full board.

The MSPB is an independent agency whose mission is to ensure that federal hiring adheres to merit system principles and that federal employees are protected against abuse by managers.

Fishbein, a medical doctor trained at Johns Hopkins University who helps oversee AIDS research, was hired in 2003 under a special provision in federal law that allows HHS agencies to hire "without regard to the civil service laws." The provision, known as Title 42 209(f), enables NIH to attract high-level scientists by paying them higher salaries than allowed under the standard government payroll system. The agency has used the provision to employ nearly 1,400 people, most of them permanent or long-term workers.

Fishbein said NIH is trying to fire him in retaliation for his refusal to overlook shortcomings in research practices, including not obtaining proper informed consent, in NIH-sponsored studies of the drug nevirapine on African research subjects. NIH officials have said the doctor, who is in a two-year probationary period, is being let go because of poor performance.

Raynard Kington, deputy director of NIH, said agency policy prevented him from discussing Fishbein's case. But, he said it was never the agency's intention to exclude Title 42 employees from whistle-blower protection.

"We believe that any cases that are brought forth by employees who wish whistle-blower protection should be judged on the merits of the individual cases," Kington said in an interview.

Stephen M. Kohn, Fishbein's attorney, called the filing a "major concession" by HHS. He said denying such whistle-blower protection would deter many skilled scientists from working for the government or exposing wrongdoing.

"Before there was a lot of public attention on this, the NIH was very happy to have the MSPB throw the case out on jurisdiction [grounds]," Kohn said in an interview. "Now they've changed their position, and in a way that is helpful to employees. What was really bad about them arguing that the Title 42s were not protected was that, if you were a Title 42, would you blow the whistle? It had a big, chilling effect and it created a big problem."

Agency's Cross Petition for Review

Dr. Fishbein's Testimony

United States Merit Systems Protection Board Judge Raphael Ben-Ami Limits Protection Under the Whistleblower Law

Are YOU a Whistleblower?

Many members of the NIH community have contacted HonestDoctor.org to express their desire to report knowledge of waste, fraud and abuse in their Institute. All have spoken of their fear of reprisal in light of the retribution exacted by NIH against NIAID whistleblower, Dr. Jonathan Fishbein. HonestDoctor.org advises that before you make your disclosures to anyone consult with an attorney and know your rights! You are not alone. There are many individuals and organizations available to assist you.

Merit System Protection Board

James C. Greenwood, Chairman, Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations expands investigation of NIH

 
© 2003 The E-Accountability Foundation