December 8, 2011 - After being wounded by a roadside bomb in Iraq in 2004, Army counterintelligence specialist Mike Helms endured a bureaucratic nightmare trying to get treatment for traumatic brain injury (TBI), post-traumatic stress disorder and other injuries.He wrote or called numerous congressmen, Defense Department executives, newspapers (including Federal Times), even then-President George W. Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney.
According to an inspector general's report obtained by Federal Times, the Army then retaliated against Helms for blowing the whistle on the poor treatment he received.
In 2008, his superiors suspended his access to classified information, recommended his security clearance be revoked, and suspended him indefinitely without pay. In November 2009, the Army fired him.
Army officials "reprised against Mr. Helms when recommending that his security clearance be revoked. We concluded that the agency did not establish by clear and convincing evidence a firm belief that it would have taken the same action absent Mr. Helms' disclosures," wrote Donald Horstman, deputy IG for administrative investigations, in the introduction of the IG report. The report was completed in October 2010, but the IG's office has refused to release it. Helms provided Federal Times with a copy. read more>>>
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