On child
abuse: The New York Times reported in July that a federal health
services psychologist had told his superiors that child abuse on a North
Dakota reservation was rampant and being ignored.
Portions of his emails about the situation had appeared in the New
York Times.
Soon thereafter the Department of Health and Human Services
leveled punishment against the psychologist. And soon thereafter it rescinded
the punishment, according to the paper.
But in the midst of it all, HHS refused to allow the psychologist to
talk to the New York Times reporter.
That HHS prohibition against two people talking to each other came
just over two weeks after the investigative report headed by Louis Freeh on
child abuse at Penn State hit the news saying that powerful leaders had
concealed critical facts in that case.
Tuberculosis
outbreak: Also in July, a public information officer at the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention forbade reporter Stacey Singer of the Palm Beach
Post to speak to experts at that agency who had worked on a tuberculosis outbreak in Florida.
Singer had already identified staff involved in the work.
The reason given for prohibiting the communication was that “state/local
health officials have the lead in responding to this situation.”
A letter from CDC to local officials that Singer obtained said the
outbreak was one of the most extensive that the agency had been invited to
assist with in about 20 years.
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