Doc Holliday said:
Booray said:
Doc Holliday said:
Booray said:
Doc Holliday said:
Booray said:
Doc Holliday said:
Booray said:
Doc Holliday said:
Am I the only person here who understands that this is not a whistleblower?
He cannot legally be viewed as whistleblower--& does not have protection under whistleblower laws--b/c he was not eyewitness to any corruption or fraud & has no firsthand info. His complaint is based on 2nd- & 3rd-hand information
You may be the only person who thinks that. The Intelligence Community Whistle blower statue directs the IG to:
receive and investigate ... complaints or information from any person concerning the existence of an activity within the authorities and responsibilities of the Director of National Intelligence constituting a violation of laws, rules or regulations, or mismanagement, gross waste of funds, abuse of authority, or a substantial and specific danger to the public health and safety.
Nothing about the statue requires the complaint or information to be based on first-hand knowledge.
Oh that's right. they just changed the law in AUGUST!
The rules for becoming a "Whistleblower" were changed to permit second-hand gossip in august 2019. The "Whistleblower," with his second-hand gossip, filed the complaint in august 2019.
https://thefederalist.com/2019/09/27/intel-community-secretly-gutted-requirement-of-first-hand-whistleblower-knowledge/
The changed form implements clear statutory language as explained above. I thought you were a fan of applying the law as written?
Also, DJT has been president for almost three years. "They: (as in "they changed the law" (sic-they didn't change the law, they changed the form)) is him.
A previous version of the whistleblower complaint document, which the ICIG and DNI until recently provided to potential whistleblowers, declared that any complaint must contain only first-hand knowledge of alleged wrongdoing and that complaints that provide only hearsay, rumor, or gossip would be rejected.
"The [Intelligence Community Inspector General] cannot transmit information via the ICPWA based on an employee's second-hand knowledge of wrongdoing," the previous form stated under the bolded heading "FIRST-HAND INFORMATION REQUIRED." "This includes information received from another person, such as when an employee informs you that he/she witnessed some type of wrongdoing."
They did this in August. Perfect timing.
Yes. You apparently missed the point. The previous form requiring first-hand knowledge was a form, not a law. As already explained in detail and with reference to the clear statutory language the previous form imposed a requirement that the law does not impose.
Should we apply the law as written or should we allow the intelligence community to make up its own laws?
Then why was it on the form prior to August?
There are millions of government forms. Thousands of them have mistakes. Because...Humans.
What does it matter? POTUS has already confirmed about 75% of what is in the complaint. The dispute here doesn't get resolved by whether the whistle blower heard the phone call first hand or was told about it; the dispute is about POTUS' intentions in making the statements on the call.
Oh bull*****
There has never been a WB form submitted with 2nd and 3rd hand info. Ever.
This is the first.
First, I did not agree or disagree with you.
Second, there is no way you or I can know that.
Third, I imagine plenty of forms have a mixture of types of information.
Fourth, the line drawing exercise is difficult. For example, WB reads a document that contains damning information. The document is technically hearsay. Does WB have direct knowledge.
Fifth, you are avoiding the question. Why does it matter to you whether the WB had direct or second-hand info? If investigated that info will turn out to be accurate, inaccurate or a mix. Eyewitnesses testify incorrectly everyday in Court. hearsay turns out to be true all the time,. Isn't what actually happened, rather than the provenance of the original report, what matters?