Department of Energy Photographer Fired for Leaking Photos of Secretary of Energy Meeting With Coal Mining CEO

Department of Energy Photographer Fired for Leaking Photos of Secretary of Energy Meeting With Coal Mining CEO

A staff photographer for the Department of Energy was recently fired and is now seeking whistle-blower protection after he leaked photos of Secretary of Energy Rick Perry meeting with a major coal mining CEO.

Photographer Simon Edelman frequently followed Secretary of Energy Rick Perry as part of his official duties. One such meeting took place early last year, just a few weeks after Perry had taken the job, between him and coal executive Robert E. Murray, who was also a major donor to the Trump campaign. At the meeting, Edelman took several photographs, including one of Perry and Murray hugging, as well as a few of an "action plan" that Murray had brought along, detailing policy changes he wanted that were beneficial to the coal mining industry. Edelman shared the photos with some other journalists in September and they eventually made their way out, where they were held up as evidence of an inside track for the coal industry in policy-making. 

https://twitter.com/dabeard/status/953682300788756481

Once it was revealed that Edelman took the photographs, he was fired, had his personal laptop and belongings seized, and was escorted from the federal headquarters. He, with the help of his lawyer, has now filed a complaint seeking federal whistle-blower protection, which is specifically offered by the Department of Energy where it notes "it is unlawful for agencies to take or threaten to take an adverse personnel action against an employee because he or she disclosed wrongdoing." During the meeting, Edelman notes he heard Murray say "this needs to be done" in regards to the plan he put forth (part of which was visible in the photographs and later became part of Perry's proposal six months later), to which Perry responded: "I think we can help you with this." Edelman noted he was startled by this and tried to hover in the room until his presence was eventually questioned. It wasn't until Perry revealed his proposal in September that Edelman noticed similarities between it and what he had seen in the meeting in March and decided to release the photos to help oppose it. 

After being fired, an agency supervisor sent an email demanding that Edelman give over the administrative access to his photo storage, while in a recorded phone call, another employee said: "I would suggest that doing it sooner rather than later would probably be a good thing for you." As mentioned, Edelman has now retained a lawyer from Whistleblower Aid, who argues the photos were not classified and fall under public domain and is fighting the termination of his employment. 

Lead image by Gage Skidmore, used under Creative Commons.

[via New York Times]

Alex Cooke's picture

Alex Cooke is a Cleveland-based portrait, events, and landscape photographer. He holds an M.S. in Applied Mathematics and a doctorate in Music Composition. He is also an avid equestrian.

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Please take a moment to read what Carter just wrote. Please. The US and most Western nations are forms of regulated capitalism. When these nation drift towards unregulated, life spans drop.
You actually just like to poke people and look for fights I think.

Troll

Bro, you may want to do some research before forming an opinion.
"I for one, am for American energy independence and I side with industry, not undue burdensome regulation on our wonderful energy people!"
This statement feels like it contains all your knowledge on the subject of fossil fuels, renewable energy, and their environmental impact.

You can’t find a definite answer because it a poorly constructed question. Might as well ask “how many rocks does a bucket hold?” It depends on a number of conditions.

That you dismiss a technology because you’re unable to comprehend it and lack the capacity to even ask the proper questions to understand it speaks to your low intellect. But you’ve already given plenty of examples of that.

Read what I wrote. What’s the average bucket hold? No answer to a stupid question.

The average output is dependent on the size, capacity, efficiency, and wind speed of the windmill, which is why it doesn’t make sense to ask for an average. It depends on more conditions than you specified. That’s why it was a stupid question. Not stupid to inquiry about wind power, stupid to not know how to ask it.

Now you’re asking real questions. Look harder

You’ve barely started knowing how to ask the right questions, and now you pretend to have an answer to a question you haven’t asked.

I mean this sincerely: if you really care about this, don’t just try to make a point or win an argument. Take some time to really open your mind, play devil’s advocate, and think critically.

But I don’t care enough about this conversation to continue. If you decide to go further with an open mind, best of luck.

“But I don’t care enough about this conversation to continue.”

?

.

I would have leaked them too, good for him, we need more revolutionaries like this photographer so we can stop living in delusion and killing our planet and ourselves :D

rumor has it, he works for Fstoppers undercover, more daily satire from beyond the mist

What?