WCBE: Voice of America CEO Accused of Fraud, Misuse of Office All In One Week
Voice of America CEO Accused Of Fraud, Misuse Of Office All In One Week
This article features our Senior Counsel David Seide and was originally published here.
Fresh crises and fresh challenges confront the Trump-appointed CEO of the parent of Voice of America, even with less than two weeks left of the Trump presidency.
To start, the Attorney General of the District of Columbia this week accused U.S. Agency for Global Media CEO Michael Pack of illegally funneling more than $4 million to his private documentary company through a not-for-profit that he also controls.
Voice of America CEO Accused Of Fraud, Misuse Of Office All In One Week
Friday, January 8, 2021
U.S. Agency for Global Media CEO Michael Pack faces accusations of fraud over his private documentary film company and separate allegations he s promoting propaganda at Voice of America.
U.S. Agency for Global Media
Updated at 7:35 p.m. ET
Fresh crises and fresh challenges confront the Trump-appointed CEO of the parent of Voice of America, even with less than two weeks left of the Trump presidency.
To start, the Attorney General of the District of Columbia this week accused U.S. Agency for Global Media CEO Michael Pack of illegally funneling more than $4 million to his private documentary company through a not-for-profit that he also controls.
U.S. Agency for Global Media CEO Michael Pack. Credit: U.S. Agency for Global Media
Voice of America CEO Accused Of Fraud, Misuse of Office All In One Week By
at 3:38 pm NPR
Fresh crises and fresh challenges confront the Trump-appointed CEO of the parent of Voice of America, even with less than two weeks left of the Trump presidency.
To start, the Attorney General of the District of Columbia this week accused U.S. Agency for Global Media CEO Michael Pack of illegally funneling more than $4 million to his private documentary company through a not-for-profit that he also controls.
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The director for the Equal Opportunity Office (EEO) at Hill Air Force Base in Utah has been removed from her position after three whistleblowers reported she improperly handled their complaints alleging sexual assault and discrimination.
The U.S. Office of Special Counsel (OSC) disclosed the EEO director’s removal in a notice last Tuesday. The OSC report did not identify the EEO director in question, but Air Force Times identified her as Lori K. Grimes, and a 2019 archived link to Hill Air Force Base’s equal opportunity office lists Grimes as an EEO director at the base.
An investigation by the Air Force’s Material Command Office of Inspector General substantiated the claims of the three whistleblowers, that the Air Force EEO director discouraged employees from filing claims, including telling one whistleblower that her sexual harassment claims against her supervisor “wouldn’t carry weight” and “wouldn’t go anywhere” when she initially tried to file her complaint.