Treason of the clerk: accused of sedition, a V.A. nurse beats the rap.

AuthorWeigel, David
PositionColumns; Veterans Affairs

LAURA BERG had never worried about speaking her mind. The 52-year-old psychiatric nurse at Albuquerque's Veterans Affairs Medical Center was no fan of the Bush administration, and neither were most of her colleagues at the V.A.

"We'd sometimes talk politics over lunch," Berg says. "We have a pretty liberal-leaning section. I can't say it's been a repressive environment."

Last September, Berg was off work and reading coverage of Hurricane Katrina that inflamed her feelings about the White House. Feeling irate and "full of passion," she pounded out a letter to her U.S. senators and several Albuquerque newspapers, scorching the administration for bungling the recovery.

"Bush, Cheney, Chertoff, Brown, and Rice should be tried for criminal negligence," she wrote. "We need to wake up and get real here, and act forcefully to remove a government administration playing games of smoke and mirrors and vicious deceit."

Alibi, a local alternative newspaper, printed the letter. When Berg came into work the next day, she was greeted by co-workers who loved what she wrote but had heard that "some people were upset." They told Berg to contact the American Federation of Government Employees Union. When she did, she was informed that Human Resources Director Mel Hooker had reported her insubordinate letter "up the ladder" to the FBI. Soon thereafter, Berg's work computer was seized and searched on the suspicion she'd used it to write the letter.

After her hard drive was copied and searched, Berg sent a memo to the higher-ups, asking exactly what was going on. In mid-November she got a response from Hooker, acquitting her of misusing the computer while ominously warning of more scrutiny to come. "You have insulted the very government that employs you," Hooker's letter read, "and the agency has a responsibility to investigate you for possible sedition."

That message shifted the momentum in Berg's favor. New Mexico's branch of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) offered to help her case, and its information requests and P.R. efforts threatened to embarrass the V.A. In February, Sen. Jeff Bingaman (D-N.M.) wrote a letter of concern to Veterans Affairs Secretary R. James Nicholson. A month later, Nicholson responded and made it clear that Berg's letter to the editor "did not amount to sedition."

Today Berg is off the hook, and the V.A. is waving off the whole affair. ("We have apologized," says department spokesman Bill Armstrong. "Our director has...

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