From Roger Shuler:

An important Justice Department story is breaking in Alabama today . . .

Tamarah Grimes became known late last year as the Department of 
Justice whistleblower who disclosed prosecutorial misconduct in the 
Don Siegelman case. A little over a month ago, Grimes
sent a letter to Attorney General Eric Holder, outlining more 
allegations of wrongdoing in the Siegelman prosecution. What was 
Grimes' reward? She recently learned that she had been fired
from her job as a legal aide in the Middle District of Alabama:

TUESDAY, JULY 7, 2009
Justice Department Whistleblower Is Fired in Alabama

http://legalschnauzer.blogspot.com/2009/07/justice-department-whistleblower-is.html

A U.S. Department of Justice whistleblower has been fired from her 
job after speaking out about wrongdoing
in the Middle District of Alabama.

Tamarah Grimes, who served on the prosecution team in the case 
against former Alabama Governor Don Siegelman and former HealthSouth 
CEO Richard Scrushy, received notice of her termination on June 9.

A legal aide in Montgomery, Alabama, Grimes first came to public 
attention last November after Adam
Zagorin, of Time magazine, broke a story about her allegations of 
wrongdoing by the prosecution team in
the Siegelman case.

Grimes provided documents to Justice Department watchdogs showing 
that Leura Canary, U.S. attorney
for the Middle District of Alabama, had stayed on the Siegelman case 
long after she had supposedly recused herself. Grimes also provided 
evidence of improper contacts between jurors and members of the 
prosecution team.

More recently, attorneys for Scrushy had requested permission to 
interview Grimes about allegations of prosecutorial misconduct during 
the Siegelman/Scrushy case. And on June 1, Grimes submitted a letter
to Attorney General Eric Holder, providing more details about 
misconduct in the Siegelman case.

Roughly one week after those two events, Grimes received notice of 
her termination.

Terry Derden, from the DOJ's Executive Office for United States 
Attorneys, notified Grimes of her termination. The agency claims the 
firing was unrelated to her whistleblower actions, Grimes said. A 
press release from Grimes about her termination states:

In a letter sent to Ms. Grimes' attorney on June 9, 2009, the agency 
stated that the whistleblower
disclosures were unrelated to her termination. Rather, on behalf of 
the Executive Office for United States Attorneys, Mr. Derden alleges 
that Ms. Grimes's termination arose from a management decision made
(in an) after-hours meeting in the lobby bar at the Embassy Suites 
Hotel in Montgomery, Alabama, during
an active mediation more than 3 months after the agency learned of 
Ms. Grimes's whistleblower disclosures.

Grimes said her termination does not square with much of what she had 
been told as a DOJ employee:

"As a federal employee with a previously exemplary record, the 
decision to engage in protected activity and file whistleblower 
claims under the 'No Fear Act was a careful decision made of 
necessity and conscience. In consideration of necessity, as federal 
employees, we are continuously reminded of our duty to report waste, 
fraud, abuse and misconduct. We are assured that the U.S. Department 
of Justice is an Equal Employment Opportunity workplace. We are even 
offered 'safe conduits' for making EEO and whistleblower claims.

"It is my hope that any federal employee who may be considering a 
decision to engage in protected EEO or whistleblower activity under 
the 'No Fear Act' will learn from my example. In reality, there is 
much to fear from filing an EEO claim or a whistleblower claim under 
the 'No Fear Act,' and there are no 'safe conduits' for making such 
claims. Ultimately there is little value in the performance of your 
duty as a federal employee, or even as a loyal citizen of the United 
States, if the result is loss of your security clearance and 
termination of your federal employment. The knowledge that you have 
admirably performed your duties as a federal employee cannot pay the 
mortgage or buy food for your family when you are rewarded with 
whistleblower retaliation."

Grimes says she is the second employee to be terminated in the Middle 
District of Alabama for opposing unlawful conduct in the workplace. A 
third employee, she says, awaits her fate after seeking relief from
violence in the workplace.

Can someone act on behalf of DOJ employees who report wrongdoing? 
That, Grimes says, probably will be
up to Attorney General Eric Holder:

"My hope remains with the Attorney General of the United States. I 
remain confident that Mr. Holder will provide assistance to the 
employees of the United States Attorney's Office for the Middle 
District of Alabama, to wrongfully terminated former employees of the 
U.S. Attorney's Office, and to citizens of the United States within 
the Middle District of Alabama whose interests have not been well 
served under the Canary administration."

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