I'm often asked about my political affiliation or leanings. Some folks think that I'm a Democrat but others believe that I'm a Republican -- and the same goes for whether I'm a liberal or conservative. As I have noted from time to time in the BrokeAndBroker.com Blog, I always describe myself as a libertarian with a small "l".
I find the traditional labels of "liberal/progressive" and "conservative" to serve no purpose other than to divide our population into fairly meaningless feuding camps.
I have no use for organized political parties, which seem composed of opportunists, who promise the world and deliver nothing. As a self-professed cynic, curmudgeon, skeptic, and otherwise grouchy fellow, I aspire to be left alone to pursue my follies.
I want government out of my bedroom and boardroom but that desire does not give me license to harm others or to run a fraudulent business. Freedom comes with responsibilities and consequences. How to best balance an individual's rights with those of a larger community's has bedeviled mankind since we first ate the forbidden apple. I do not pretend to have the wisdom to solve the dilemma. It is a daily struggle between those who assert inalienable rights that do not flow from any government and those who believe that government is the best way to protect those same rights from the tyranny of the majority (and, at times, a minority). In waging war against those we deem encroaching on our rights and liberties, we should remember that sage admonition of Nietzsche: "He who fights with monsters should be careful lest he thereby become a monster. And if you gaze long into an abyss, the abyss will also gaze into you."
I want government to have the smallest footprint necessary so as to be nimble without expanding into an overblown bureaucracy. I want government services to be delivered fairly, timely, and in a respectful manner. I do not believe that bigger government is better but I also know that City Hall and the State House are rife with corruption. I detest the political patronage and cronyism that fills government with managerial hacks who are merely padding their resumes for a more profitable return to the private sector. I detest the arrogance of those in government who think they know better than those of us who have worked for a living. I champion a civil service based upon a "merit system," which enables competency and rewards excellence.
Ultimately, I detest the pervasive corruption that flows into every pipe and cistern of 21st Century government in America. Foolishly, perhaps, I believe that most Americans share my core values but have been overwhelmed by a sense of alienation from those who govern and from the tools of government. That is why I rage against the machine.
Year after year, we read about
government investigations that got waylaid or side-tracked when some higher-up
pulled a file from a lower-down investigator's hands and some twit of a supervisor inexplicably
sat on the case. The investigator calls and calls and calls about the status of
the aging matter, and, in response, there's usually a barrage of non-responsive
explanations about how it's "under review" or a semi-colon should be
a comma and the chosen font doesn't quite work. At some point, the superior
tells the subordinate to mark the file "Closed."
Trust me, I've been there
during my career as a Wall Street regulatory lawyer. I've been there when
trying to represent whistleblowers whose cases seem to disappear into some
bureaucratic black hole at the Securities and Exchange Commission
("SEC"). Frankly, you've probably been there too in one fashion or
another.
Darrell Whtiman Rages Against the Machine
In
2010, attorney Darrell Whitman became a Regional Investigator for the San
Francisco Region Office of Whistleblower Protection Programs ("OWWP"),
which was part of the United States Department of Labor's ("DOL's")
Occupational Safety and Health Administration ("OSHA"). As stated on
the homepage for
OWWP:
About the Program
OSHA's
Whistleblower Protection Program enforces the whistleblower provisions of more
than twenty whistleblower statutes protecting employees who report violations
of various workplace safety and health, airline, commercial motor carrier,
consumer product, environmental, financial reform, food safety, health
insurance reform, motor vehicle safety, nuclear, pipeline, public
transportation agency, railroad, maritime, and securities laws. Rights afforded
by these whistleblower protection laws include, but are not limited to, worker
participation in safety and health activities, reporting a work-related injury,
illness or fatality, or reporting a violation of the statutes
herein.
Workplace Safety and
Health
Section 11(c)
of the OSH Act prohibits employers from discriminating against their employees
for exercising their rights under the OSH Act. These rights include filing an
OSHA complaint, participating in an inspection or talking to an inspector,
seeking access to employer exposure and injury records, reporting an injury,
and raising a safety or health complaint with the employer. If workers have
been retaliated or discriminated against for exercising their rights, they must
file a complaint with OSHA within 30 days of the alleged adverse
action.
Since passage
of the OSH Act in 1970, Congress has expanded OSHA's whistleblower authority to
protect workers from discrimination under twenty-two federal laws. Complaints
must be reported to OSHA within set timeframes following the discriminatory
action, as prescribed by each law. These laws, and the number of days employees
have to file a complaint, are:
Occupational,
Environmental, and Nuclear Safety
Laws
Transportation
Industry Laws
Consumer and Investor Protection Laws
Beginning in 2011, Whitman and others in the San
Francisco OWWP office complained that they were being hamstrung and
short-circuited in their efforts to protect whistleblowers against perceived
retaliation -- essentially being prevented from doing the job that they were being paid to do. In
May 2015, Whitman was fired. How ironic that Whitman, an OWWP investigator charged
with protecting whistleblowers from retaliation, found himself the victim of
alleged retaliation by OWWP. In response to his termination, Whitman sued.
See, "Amended Disclosure and
Whistleblower Protection Act Complaint," (filed
by the Government Accountability Project, April 6, 2016). A reiteration of
the headings in Whitman's April 2016 Complaint
provides sufficient insight into the nature of his grievances:
Assigning enforcement of
whistleblower laws to unqualified staff without necessary
training;
Inexcusable delays in resolving
cases;
Obstruction of
investigations;
Violation of whistleblowers'
rights
Favoritism
to corporate defendants;
Falsification and censorhip of
record in final Reports of Investigation;
Abuse of settlement
process;
Rewriting whistleblower statutes to deny
protection;
Rewriting statutory burdens of proof;
and
Failure to issue final
orders.
Yesenia Guitron Complains
Among his various allegations, Whitman references how in
May 2010, a couple of Wells Fargo employees contacted OSHA with claims that the
firm had retaliated against them for raising issues about the opening of
unauthorized accounts. According to press accounts, Yesenia Guitron, one of the
whistleblowers, could never quite figure out why OSHA didn't follow up on her
complaints. She had first become aware of the opening of unauthorized accounts
at Wells Fargo in 2008. Guitron did what she thought was the right thing to do
and communicated her concerns to her boss, her human resources department, and
even used the firm's ethics hotline. Guitron believes that Wells Fargo
retaliated against her by firing her. She complained to
OSHA.
When Guitron's file came
to Whitman, who had been on the job for about three months, the newbie OWWP
investigator wasn't told to conduct an investigation of Guitron's allegations;
to the contrary, as Whitman alleges, he was told to close out the investigation
and move the paperwork. By the time Whitman prepared his final investigative
reports, Wells Fargo was still declining to defend against the allegations.
You'd sort of think that such silence would have imbued Guitron's allegations
with enough merit as to warrant some substantive action by OSHA on her behalf.
Whatever should have happened didn't. Her file was stamped "Closed."
Guitron sued Wells Fargo in furtherance of her wrongful termination
claims but her lawsuit was dismissed in 2012. In 2015 the last of her appeals
were denied. It is not my role here to spin the facts. Each BrokeAndBroker.com Blog reader should draw your own conclusion as to the merits of Guitron's allegations and Wells Fargo's defenses; however, as far as the federal court's conclusion, she lost and her former employer won. As stated in Yesenia Guitron, Plaintiff/Appellant, vs. Wells Fargo Bank, NA, Wells Fargo & Company, and Pam Rubio, Defendants/Appellees (Memorandum, United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, 13-16023 / July 27, 2015):
SOX whistleblower claims are governed by "a burden-shifting procedure
[under] which a plaintiff is first required to make out a prima facie case of
retaliatory discrimination." Van Asdale v. Int'l Game Tech., 577 F.3d 989, 996
(9th Cir. 2009). "[I]f the plaintiff meets this burden, the employer [then] assumes
the burden of demonstrating by clear and convincing evidence that it would have
taken the same adverse employment action in the absence of the plaintiff's
protected activity." Id. Because we find Wells Fargo met its burden in showing it
would have taken the same adverse employment action, we need not reach the
question of whether Guitron made out a prima facie case.
Wells Fargo presented clear and convincing evidence that Guitron (1) failed
to meet her quarterly sales goals, (2) had been insubordinate to her direct manager,
and (3) refused to return to work after Wells Fargo repeatedly informed her that
she had only been placed on administrative leave and not fired. This evidence
demonstrates that, even without Guitron's protected activity, Wells Fargo would
have issued her verbal and informal warnings, placed her on administrative leave,
and terminated her, respectively. See Halloum v. Intel Corp., 24-IER-50, 2006 WL
618383, Final Decision and Order (Dep't of Labor SAROX Jan. 31, 2006), aff'd,
307 F. App'x 106, 107 (9th Cir. 2009); Kim v. Boeing Co., No. C10-1850-RSM,
2011 WL 4437086 (W.D. WA. Sept. 23, 2011), aff'd, 487 F. App'x 356, 357-58
(9th Cir. 2012). Guitron has failed to create a genuine issue of material fact with
respect to the facts surrounding her warnings, administrative leave, and subsequent
termination. Therefore, we affirm the district court's summary dismissal of
Guitron's SOX claim.
Wells Fargo's $186 million Fines
About a year after its 9th Circuit victory over Guitron, Wells Fargo agreed to
pay $185 million in fines and penalties to settle a Consumer
Financial Protection Bureau ("CFPB") investigation that uncovered
some two million unauthorized accounts. The "relevant period" cited
in the CFPB Consent
Order was from January 1, 2011, to September 2016. READ the CFPB Wells Fargo Consent
Order.
The relevant period from 2011 to 2016, also covered the time when Guitron had complained to Wells Fargo, when she was fired
by the firm, when she filed her lawsuit against the firm, when she lost her
lawsuit, and when she lost her appeal. That relevant
period also covered the time when Whitman and his colleagues were
complaining about OSHA's half-hearted and half-assed oversight of its
whistleblower anti-retaliation mandate; and when they were fired; and when they
sued.
The Gift That Keeps On Giving?
We just don't seem to be quite done
with lurid tales about Wells Fargo's unauthorized account openings or inappropriate
insurance charges or questionable dealings involving the refinancing of
mortgages issued to veterans. As I read about the bank's practices in the press
and consider some of the allegations that were made by Guitron, Whitman, and
others, I have to wonder about the extent to which DOL and other regulators
were and continue to be complicit in covering up financial industry scandals.
How different would things have been if some regulator had traced those first
whisps of smoke to the fire. If only the SEC had pursued Harry Markopolos's
claims from 2000 that Bernie Madoff was running a Ponzi. If only some state or
federal regulator followed up on the warning signs about Allen Stanford. If
only some regulator had listened to Johnny Burris when he complained about
misconduct at J.P. Morgan . See, "Wall
Street Whistleblower Johnny Burris Speaks Truth to Power"
(BrokeAndBroker.com Blog, June 30,
2017).
SIDE BAR: Watch April 27, 2017, speeches by Guitron and Burris about their whistleblowing efforts:
Darrell Whitman asserts
that he was a victim of retaliation and another casualty in the tawdry politics
of federal regulation. In contrast, DOL asserts that he was canned because of
his unauthorized release of information and misuse of a transit card and . . .
well, you know, he just wasn't a team player and all that.
You ever notice how
those at the top of the bureaucratic feeding chain can't run fast enough to
appear on television when a government agency scores a high-profile victory but
when that same agency comes under scrutiny for dropping the ball, those same
big shots can't be found and their consistent excuse is that they didn't know,
nobody told me, and I relied upon lower-level supervisors to stay on top of
this? How did former White House Communications Director Anthony Scaramucci put
it? Oh yeah, I remember: A fish stinks from the head down.
And lest you be too quick
to misunderstand, much of the pressure to
derail Whitman's work occurred during the Obama Administration, which began in
2009. Similarly, in 2011, the Republicans had control of the House of
Representatives and in 2015, the Senate. There's plenty of blame to go around
for both parties.
SEC Black Hole of Despair
As
I wrote in "SEC Whistleblower Program Is A Black Hole of
Despair"(BrokeAndBroker.com
Blog,April 9, 2015), I experienced my own horror story when representing an industry
whistleblower before the SEC's Office of the Whistleblower ("OWB"). In November 2014, I filed a complaint
with the SEC's Officer of Inspector General ("OIG") and requested an
investigation of what I deemed OWB's dilatory conduct in processing my client's
claim and rendering his eventual award of some $1.6 million. In submitting my
complaint, I was required to participate in a substantial telephone interview
by the third-party service provider that the SEC retained for such purposes.
During that interview, I provided the sum and substance of my complaint. I then
awaited some meaningful follow-up. And I waited. And I still wait. Nearly three
years later, not a single call from anyone at SEC, OWB, or OIG to follow up on
my complaints. I'm sort of wondering if some higher-up at SEC told some lower-down to mark my file "Closed."
Conclusion
It's one thing to write me off as disgruntled if my client's claim was denied but it's quite another thing to marginalize a lawyer whose client provided substantial assistance to the SEC and eventually gained a sizable award. Sadly, there probably wasn't a Darrell Whitman at the SEC looking out for my client or asking questions about my complaints.
Which may explain why Darrell Whitman's story resonated
with me.
Which may explain why I go to the mat for my
whistleblower clients and will persist in using every weapon at my disposal to ensure that
their allegations are investigated. I will always start off politely ringing the
doorbell, then I will rap my knuckles on the door, and, thereafter, I will go out and get one of
those siege machines and knock down whatever door is closed between me and the
self-serving bureaucrats. I'm not apologizing for doing my job on behalf of my
clients. They're trying to blow the whistle. They're the ones who have often
sacrificed their careers for what they think is a principle worth fighting for.
I may be little more than a battering ram but if that's my role, I will
continue to do it with abandon.
For the
record, I do not presently and never have represented Whitman. We have never even met or spoken.
Recently, he sent me a copy of the email reprinted below. I was honored to have been the recipient of such an important communication. Darrell Whitman isn't going down without a fight. I admire his zeal. Give 'em hell, Darrell!
Bill Singer
NOTE: The views expressed in Whitman's August 4, 2017,
letter are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of
BrokeAndBroker.com Blog.
Jeff Sessions, Attorney General of the United
States
U.S. Department of
Justice
950
Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington, DC
20530-0001
Re: Wells Fargo consumer financial fraud
cases
Dear Attorney General
Sessions,
The purpose of my letter and declaration below is to
alert you to a very serious failing
of government
to protect the public interest, and ask that you not abandon the Department
of Justice
(DoJ)'s effort to protect the public interest by holding federal agencies
and corporate defendants to account when they threaten the
nation's safety, health, and financial security. The public's faith in government is
at a historic low, and as a
former federal investigator I too have lost faith in the ability
of government to produce equal justice under law. Please prove us all
wrong.
Recently, I was advised the DoJ is concluding its
investigation of Wells Fargo
consumer
financial fraud cases without taking action. As a federal
investigator involved in three of
those cases, there was every reason to believe the DoJ
and its Grand Jury would find
reason to pursue not only the investigation of Wells
Fargo, but to expand
that
investigation to include the Occupational Safety and
Health Administration
(OSHA),
whose Whistleblower Protection Program (WBPP) played a
significant role in
concealing
that fraud for several years. For reasons cited below, I
strongly urge the DOJ
to
reconsider and reopen the investigation and look more
broadly at the critical role federal agencies
played in enabling the fraud to continue for years and engulf millions of
Wells Fargo customers, and thousands of Wells Fargo
employees.
Please consider the remainder of this letter as a
Declaration under penalty of
perjury,
attesting the following statements are true and correct
to the best of my memory
and
belief:
From July 17, 2010, to May 5, 2015, I was a Regional
Investigator with the
Department of Labor/Occupational Safety and Health Administration's
Whistleblower
Protection Program, I worked in OSHA's Region IX office in San
Francisco, and have direct, personal knowledge of OSHA's management of three Wells
Fargo consumer fraud complaints filed in 2010 and 2011. These three
complaints, filed by Ms. Yesina
Guitron, Ms. Judy Klosek, and Ms. Claudia Ponce de Leon, all alleged
Wells Fargo was
generating fraudulent customer accounts. At the time I
was given the first two
Wells
Fargo accounts in November 2010, OSHA had not provided me
any training in the
investigation of financial fraud cases filed under
whistleblower provisions of the
Sarbanes-Oxley Act (SOX). These investigations required
knowledge I didn't have at
the time, and I only later discovered the multiple violations
of law, policy, and practice
by OSHA they represented. As noted below, these
included:
Both complaints had been
filed with OSHA and docketed for investigation on May 11, 2010, and the
complaints were identical, alleging the complainants had been terminated in
retaliation for reporting the fraudulent manipulation of customer deposit
accounts by Wells Fargo.
Wells Fargo was notified of the
complaints shortly thereafter, but no investigator had been assigned to the
cases, as was required by OSHA's Whistleblower Investigations Manual (WIM),
which provides the policy and practice guidelines for the Program. Rather, the
complaints were retained by Region IX's Regional Supervisory Investigator (RSI)
for almost six months, until the RSI gave them to me in November 2010 with an
order to close the cases.
Prior to transferring the
investigations to me, no interview had been conducted with either Ms. Guitron
or Ms. Klosek. As I later learned, this was a violation of law as well as a
breach of the protocols found in the WIM, which clearly intend that an early
interview be conducted with complainants to expedite case management and
complete an investigation within 60 days, as required by SOX.
The
letter notifying Wells Fargo of the complaints allowed the company the option
to file a response within 20 days from the date of receipt. That 20-day window
of opportunity ran out in late June 2010 without a response by the company.
Yet, OSHA took no further action. As I would later learn, the WIM directed that
if a company failed to respond to a complaint, the investigation would be
resolved based on evidence provided by the complainants. In this case, if the
complainants had been interviewed, that likely would have been a merit finding.
If OSHA had made a merit finding, it would have required OSHA to issue an order
to Wells Fargo to immediately reinstatement Ms. Guitron and Ms. Klosek, and pay
them back pay and benefits, and forward notice to the Securities and Exchange
Commission of OSHA's findings of merit.
On July 7, 2010,
Timothy N. Grubb, Senior Counsel of Wells Fargo, called and spoke to someone in
OSHA Region IX, asking for an extension of time to respond to the complaints.
While the phone call was logged, as required by the WIM, there was no report
about the substance of the call, which violated WIM protocols. Further, the
request was untimely according to WIM protocols, and OSHA by the time of the
request already should have been in the process of issuing a merit finding.
Even if the request was deemed timely, WIM protocols allowed OSHA only to grant
a 10-day extension, which would have expired on July 17, 2010. As Wells Fargo
failed to provide any response, WIM protocols should have triggered OSHA to
issue a likely merit finding and order for the immediate reinstatement of the
complainants before the end of July 2010.
On November 17, 2010,
shortly after these two cases were assigned to me, I authored a letter to Mr.
Grubb, noting his July 7, 2010, telephone conversation with OSHA and asking for
a response within 10 days. Mr. Grubb didn't respond to the letter, but on
November 24, 2010, I received a phone call from a Mr. Baldwin J. Lee, a San
Francisco attorney who advised me the complaints were being withdrawn in favor
of a federal court complaint. Mr. Lee didn't disclose he was representing Wells
Fargo, rather than the complainants, and forwarded a legal pleading regarding a
federal court case filed by complaints. Based on that conversation and
document, I authored withdrawal Final Investigative Reports (FIR) for both complains,
and gave them to the Region IX RSI without contacting either Ms. Guitron or Ms.
Klosek. I would later learn WIM protocols require an interview with
complainants to confirm their desire to withdraw their OSHA complaints, and to
advise them that a withdrawal would terminate the OSHA investigation and
extinguish their rights to appeal to OSHA.
After submitted
my draft FIRs, there was no further discussion of them with the RSI. As I would
later learn, the RSI is tasked with reviewing these documents and discussing
them with the investigator to ensure they met legal and WIM standards. Then, if
the RSI and investigator agreed on the outcome, the RSI and the investigator
would sign the FIR's to confirm their agreement. In this case, there was no
meeting, I never signed either of the FIRs, and the investigations were closed
by the
RSI.
The mismanagement of these two Wells Fargo complaints in
2010 was not an
isolated
incident. Rather, the pattern of failing to timely assign
investigators, interview
complainants, and apply statutory time limits to company
responses and completing
investigations repeated itself in many other cases,
including a subsequent Wells
Fargo
case (Ponce de Leon), which I briefly managed in early 2012.
In many cases, OSHA
either failed to interview complainants, or failed to
conduct credible investigations.
In
some cases, OSHA slow walked investigations for years,
apparently for the purpose
of
denying a merit finding. In others, OSHA encouraged to
investigators to short-circuit
investigations and close cases for the purpose of
improving OSHA's statistics.
Then,
during a 2014 staff meeting, the Region IX RSI advised
investigators entire classes of
complaints should be closed without investigations,
including SOX complaints, because
OSHAs national Office of Whistleblower Protection, wanted
to clear a backlog of
cases.
All of these actions and failures to act involved violations
of law, rules, and
regulations,
which OSHA apparently doesn't feel itself
bound.
This pattern of OSHA mismanagement extends well beyond
SOX cases to include
other
cases involving major corporations and complaints where
preliminary reinstatement
of
qualifying whistleblowers is at issue. These cases raise
concerns about a broad
spectrum of
safety, health, and financial security involving: trucking (Surface
Transportation Assistance Act), railroads (Federal Railroad Safety Act),
sea transport (Seaman's Protection Act), air carriers (Wendell H. Ford Aviation
Investment and Reform Act
for the
21st Century), pipeline safety and security (Pipeline Safety Improvement Act),
transit systems (National Transit Systems Security Act), consumer
product safety (Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act), health care (Affordable
Care Act), consumer financial protection (Consumer Financial Protection Act of
2010), consumer investment
protection (Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection
Act of 2010), and food
safety (FDA Food Safety Modernization Act). Failing to respect
the requirements of the
law under any one statute presents a serious risk to the
public interest. Failing to respect
the law
under thirteen statutes covering a full range of safety and health issues is
potentially catastrophic.
It's unconscionable that senior Agency bureaucrats are
allowed to effectively
legislate
away protection for whistleblowers and the public. Ms.
Guitron's request to OSHA
to
reopen her investigation was denied earlier this year,
and hundreds, if not thousands
of other Wells Fargo employees who attempted to find justice
through OSHA's
Whistleblower Protection Program have been betrayed by
indifference, if not outright
hostility to their claims by OSHA managers. This is a
denial of fundamental due process
and equal justice under law, and should not be allowed to
stand.
In January 2015, I made a formal disclosure of these
problems to the Office of
Special
Counsel (OSC), which has to date failed to investigate.
In April 2016, after being
terminated from OSHA in the context of publicly
disclosing a culture of corruption
in
OSHA's management of the WBPP, I filed a complaint with
the OSC, which to date the
OSC has similarly failed to address. Thus, it appears
that the culture of corruption which I first saw in OSHA extends to the OSC, leaving federal
whistleblowers no better off
than the
private sector whistleblowers who receive no protection by OSHA. We cannot have
a credible system for protecting the nation's safety,
health, and financial security
without having a credible system to protect those who report
risks, mismanagement and abuse
of authority. As the chief law enforcement officer, only you
and the DoJ can do
that.