Was There Something "Special" About the Victim Remains of the Fort Hood Shooting?
Thirteen purported fatalities of a gunman's attack at Fort Hood on Thursday, November 5, 2009, were transferred to the military mortuary at Dover Air Force Base in Delaware, probably on the following Saturday, November 7. That day, the facility's chief mortician, Bill Zwicharowski, volunteered to come in on his day off and help with the remains as they arrived at Dover. In a public humiliation, he was confronted and told to go home.
Caroline Lerner, who heads the Office of Special Counsel, a federal agency created to protect whistleblowers, says "it was clear they were trying to send a message to the other employees at the mortuary that that is what happens to people who come forward."
Perhaps this climactic moment of "public humiliation," in an "escalating campaign of retaliation against Zwicharowski," occurred not by plan, but by default---a public outing created by an unavoidable circumstance, due to Zwicharowski's presence at the facility on a day when "special" remains were to be processed, while he was scheduled to be absent.
March 30, 2012, CBS News, Air Force mortician pays price for whistleblowing, By David Martin,
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