Jim McElhatton
Articles by Jim McElhatton
Redskins name drew no public complaints, patent office reveals
The recent decision by an obscure administrative law board to cancel the Washington Redskins' trademark registrations came despite the fact the agency hadn't received a single letter from a member of the public complaining about the team's name, records show. Published July 1, 2014
Civil libertarians seek high court review of Antwuan Ball’s harsh drug sentence
Two prominent civil libertarian groups have filed a joint petition asking the U.S. Supreme Court to take up the case of a D.C. man serving nearly 19 years in prison after his conviction on a $600 drug deal, citing concerns about "carte blanche" powers given to federal judges. Published July 1, 2014
Lawmaker pushes for interview of background firm CEO
The ranking Democrat on the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform wants congressional investigators to interview the head of the government's biggest background check company, saying Monday that the firm has has failed to cooperate with Congress's inquiry into executive bonus payouts. Published June 30, 2014
Background check firm that vetted Snowden faces fraud, bonus pay investigation
The background check company that vetted Edward Snowden and faces fraud accusations from the Justice Department has refused a congressional request for details about executive bonus payouts and the identities of some former officials. Published June 22, 2014
VA official pressed over exec who falsely claimed degree
The official in charge of human resources at the Department of Veterans Affairs faced pointed questions from lawmakers while trying to explain Friday why a high-ranking executive who falsely claimed she'd earned a master's degree received tens of thousands of dollars in bonuses. Published June 20, 2014
Contracting officers given overly high marks by Army
Army contracting apparently is like the schools at Lake Wobegon — everybody is above average. Published June 19, 2014
IG audit finds background checks problematic for federal contractors
The background check contractor that vetted Edward Snowden and faces accusations of bogus billing from the Justice Department has doled out more than a half-million dollars to a powerful Washington lobbying firm in recent months — a strategy that seems to be paying off. Published June 18, 2014
VA inspector general defends subpoena to watchdog group
The Department of Veterans Affairs Office of Inspector General is defending its decision to issue a subpoena last week to a nonprofit watchdog group, saying the information could lead to criminal charges tied to a scandal involving patient delays and falsified wait times. Published June 16, 2014
Resume-padding VA employee got big bonuses
A top Department of Veterans Affairs executive received tens of thousands of dollars in bonuses even after an internal investigation found she lied about having a master's degree, according to a senior member of Congress who has asked the department to justify the bonus. Published June 16, 2014
‘Pork’ spending may curb invasive wild hogs
The feds are offering big money to anyone who can hunt and kill wild pigs on federal lands in South Carolina — the latest move in the government's battle against an invasive species causing an estimated $1.5 billion in damage to farmland and property each year. Published June 15, 2014
GOP lawmakers to EPA’s McCarthy: Stop impeding federal probes
Two Republican congressional leaders demanded Friday that Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Gina McCarthy tell her employees to quit stonewalling federal law enforcement agents as they investigate EPA fraud and misconduct. Published June 13, 2014
Judge keeps Jack Abramoff scandal plea records sealed
A federal judge has rejected a bid by former lobbyist Kevin Ring to unseal records in his Jack Abramoff scandal case that he says will help expose how prosecutors negotiate plea deals. Published June 12, 2014
Flaw with guest network exposed Interior Department to possible cyberattack
The Department of Interior left itself vulnerable to a cyberattack and unwittingly granted people off the street outside of its headquarters access to a guest wireless network — a security flaw flagged only when an unknown user was detected engaging in sexually explicit online chats with a child, records show. Published June 11, 2014
Watchdog rebuffed on EPA data turns to NSA
A pro-business watchdog group sued the National Security Agency on Monday, demanding that the spy agency turn over metadata logs for some phones registered to top EPA officials in a pioneering legal maneuver that seeks to use the government's own secret data to check up on other agencies. Published June 9, 2014
VA IG subpoenas watchdog group
A watchdog group that's trying to keep tabs on mismanagement at the Department of Veterans Affairs said Monday that it won't comply with a law enforcement subpoena seeking its correspondence with current or former VA employees. Published June 9, 2014
Convicted murderer wins legal battle against Justice Department
Acting as his own lawyer from a federal prison cell, a D.C. man convicted of two murders has won a significant legal battle against the Justice Department, forcing federal prosecutors to acknowledge or deny the existence of taped conversations that the prisoner believes will exonerate him. Published June 5, 2014
Feds drop criminal charges over damaged bird nest
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has dropped plans to pursue criminal charges against a California tree trimmer who accidentally injured some baby birds -- an incident that attracted the attention of the House's chief investigator and charges of "bureaucratic bullying." Published June 5, 2014
Official on key EPA fracking advisory board has suspect degree
An official on the Environmental Protection Agency's hydraulic fracturing scientific advisory board got a doctorate degree from an unaccredited, shuttered online correspondence school that congressional auditors targeted a decade ago in an investigation into diploma mills. Published June 4, 2014
Texas VA probe finds more waiting list problems
Veterans seeking mental health care through the El Paso VA system were forced to wait more than two months just to get an appointment, a delay five times longer than the Veterans Affairs Department's official estimates, according to a study released Wednesday by a congressman from Texas. Published June 4, 2014
GSA exec with top-secret clearance didn’t disclose China trip, past felonies
Top General Services Administration officials learned of a troubling discovery by the agency's watchdog office back in December: a GSA executive responsible for intelligence agency customers had gone to China a year earlier without telling anyone. Published June 2, 2014