Sens. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), ranking members of the Senate Judiciary Committee, and Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) are calling on the Biden Administration to remove Federal Housing and Finance Agency’s inspector general (IG) Laura Wertheimer. The request follows separate years-long reviews by Congress and the Council of the Inspectors General on Integrity and Efficiency (CIGIE).
The Senators outlined their concerns about Wertheimer’s consistent failures, contempt for congressional oversight and whistleblower retaliation in a letter today to President Joe Biden.
“In this case IG Wertheimer has failed to meet the duties described by the IG Act. Her behavior certainly falls far short of your calls for unity, transparency, and integrity. To put it mildly, the only thing this watchdog appears to hunt is her own employees. She should be removed from office, in a manner consistent with applicable statutory notification requirements,” the senators wrote.
Shortly following Wertheimer’s appointment as IG in 2014, the lawmakers began receiving whistleblower complaints ranging from abuse of authority, privacy act violations, age and gender discrimination and whistleblower retaliation. The complaints prompted a series of oversight letters from Grassley and Johnson and a separate review by CIGIE’s integrity committee, which substantiated some of the complaints, and was obstructed by the IG in its efforts to examine others. As a result, CIGIE recommended substantial disciplinary actions, including removal. In today’s letter, Grassley and Johnson called on President Biden to remove the IG in a manner consistent with applicable statutory notification requirements.
“IG Wertheimer’s willful actions to impede an investigation into her own alleged misconduct and support of an environment that condones the intimidation of witnesses show that she lacks the attributes reasonably expected of an IG,” Grassley and Johnson wrote.
Grassley has long advocated for protecting IGs from political interference by any administration, while ensuring that IGs faithfully execute their duties to conduct aggressive oversight of the federal government.
“If inspectors general are doing good work, they should stay; if not, they should go. If the president is going to remove an inspector general, there’d better be a good reason. And there’s absolutely no good reason to leave an IG seat vacant for an extended period,” Grassley said last year in a Washington Post column.
Full text of the Senators’ letter to Biden follows.
April 28, 2021
VIA ELECTRONIC TRANSMISSION
The Honorable Joseph R. Biden
President
United States of America
1600 Pennsylvania Ave
Washington D.C. 20500
Dear President Biden:
On April 14, 2021, the Council of Inspectors General on Integrity and Efficiency’s (CIGIE) Integrity Committee (IC) sent your office a letter, and corresponding supporting documentation, regarding their findings which substantiate allegations of misconduct by the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) Inspector General (IG) Laura Wertheimer and several of her employees.[1] Further, in the letter the IC “conclude[d] misconduct of this nature warrants consideration of substantial disciplinary action, up to and including removal.”[2]
The IC’s report is long anticipated, following a series of separate letters from our offices to various governmental bodies requesting documents, evidence, and interviews.[3] Those letters include requests from 2017 to the Office of Special Counsel and the IC to investigate allegations brought to us by multiple whistleblowers of misconduct by the IG.
IG Wertheimer was nominated by then-President Obama and confirmed by the Senate in September of 2014.[4] Just over a year later, in October 2015, we began investigating whistleblower allegations. These allegations ranged from blatant abuses of authority involving coercive personnel actions, to flagrant violations of the Privacy Act by sharing personal identifying details of an Equal Employment Opportunity complaint with unauthorized personnel. Whistleblowers also reported that IG Wertheimer expressed a desire to discriminate on the basis of age and gender as well as severely hindered the audit mission of the OIG. Worse, reports indicated that IG Wertheimer, and other OIG employees, sought to identify and disparage those who brought these complaints to Congress.
The IC’s April 14 letter substantiates some of these allegations, and more. For other allegations, the IC reports it could not reach a conclusion due to the IG’s obstruction.[5] Specifically, the letter notes that the IG showed disdain for Congressional oversight and disregarded the IC’s multiple requests for documentation and employee interviews. IG Wertheimer’s willful actions to impede an investigation into her own alleged misconduct and support of an environment that condones the intimidation of witnesses show that she lacks the attributes reasonably expected of an IG.[6]
The IC’s findings largely parallel what our offices uncovered. The work that we did in addition to the public letters, was only possible thanks to the brave whistleblowers that came to us and exposed themselves to the potential of, and in some cases actual, retaliation. Their testimony, evidence, and dedication throughout this unreasonable five year ordeal was pivotal in discovering much of what has now been confirmed by the IC. In short, without these whistleblowers, this IG’s abhorrent behavior would have likely gone unnoticed.
In this case IG Wertheimer has failed to meet the duties described by the IG Act.[7] Her behavior certainly falls far short of your calls for unity, transparency, and integrity.[8] To put it mildly, the only thing this watchdog appears to hunt is her own employees. She should be removed from office, in a manner consistent with applicable statutory notification requirements.[9]
Sincerely,
Charles E. Grassley
Ranking Member
Senate Judiciary Committee
Ron Johnson
United States Senator
cc:
Laura Wertheimer
Inspector General
Federal Housing Finance Agency
Office of the Inspector General
400 7th Street, S.W.,
Washington, D.C. 20219
Kevin Winters
Chair of the Integrity Committee
Council of the Inspectors General on Integrity and Efficiency
1717 H St N.W.,
Washington, D.C. 20006
Original source can be found here.