Difference between revisions of "US/Office of Special Counsel"

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The [[United States Office of Special Counsel]] was set up to receive [[whistleblowing]] disclosures from federal employees. It has the power to demand investigation of charges made by whistleblowers, but very rarely does so - the OSC's annual report for fiscal year 1995 reveals that out of 333 whistleblowing disclosures, the office forwarded only 2 for agency investigation.<ref>[[Document:Whistleblowers - Risks and skills]]</ref><ref>[[Tom Devine]], (1997) ''The Whistleblower's Survival Guide'', Washington, DC, Fund for Constitutional Government, p. 68</ref>
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The '''United States Office of Special Counsel''' ('''US/OSC''') was set up to receive [[whistleblowing]] disclosures from federal employees. It has the power to demand investigation of charges made by whistleblowers, but very rarely does so - the OSC's annual report for fiscal year 1995 reveals that out of 333 whistleblowing disclosures, the office forwarded only 2 for agency investigation.<ref>[[Document:Whistleblowers - Risks and skills]]</ref><ref>[[Tom Devine]], (1997) ''The Whistleblower's Survival Guide'', Washington, DC, Fund for Constitutional Government, p. 68</ref>
 
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==References==
 
==References==
 
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Latest revision as of 16:13, 12 February 2019

Group.png US/Office of Special Counsel  
(Whistleblower protectionWebsiteRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
Osc gov.png
AbbreviationUS/OSC
Parent organizationUS
Headquarters1730 M Street, NW Washington, D.C.
Staff122
Interestswhistleblowers
Officially, in charge of ensuring whistleblowers are taken seriously.

The United States Office of Special Counsel (US/OSC) was set up to receive whistleblowing disclosures from federal employees. It has the power to demand investigation of charges made by whistleblowers, but very rarely does so - the OSC's annual report for fiscal year 1995 reveals that out of 333 whistleblowing disclosures, the office forwarded only 2 for agency investigation.[1][2]

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References

  1. Document:Whistleblowers - Risks and skills
  2. Tom Devine, (1997) The Whistleblower's Survival Guide, Washington, DC, Fund for Constitutional Government, p. 68