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2019 Testimony of Former ICIG Michael Atkinson Confirms Change to Whistleblower Form Rules

Former Intelligence Community Inspector General Michael Atkinson testified in October 2019 that he ordered a revision to the whistleblower complaint form in August 2019. The change removed the requirement for first-hand knowledge, allowing second-hand information to qualify for expedited processing.

The Federalist
1 source·Apr 14, 7:40 AM·2m read
2019 Testimony of Former ICIG Michael Atkinson Confirms Change to Whistleblower Form Rulesthegatewaypundit.com
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The form was updated in August 2019 to remove language requiring first-hand knowledge of alleged wrongdoing for a complaint to be deemed credible and transmitted to Congress under the Intelligence Community Whistleblower Protection Act (ICWPA). Atkinson stated during the testimony that the timing of the change appeared suspicious but was coincidental.

The original form, approved in May 2018, included a section stating that the ICIG could not transmit complaints based solely on second-hand knowledge. It specified that first-hand information was necessary to process a complaint as an urgent concern.

This change coincided with the filing of an anonymous whistleblower complaint in August 2019 concerning a phone call between then-President Donald Trump and the president of Ukraine. The complaint, which involved second-hand information about suggestions for investigations into political corruption potentially implicating Joe Biden and his son Hunter, was processed under the updated rules.

The Department of Justice Office of Legal Counsel later determined that the complaint did not meet the statutory definition of an urgent concern.

Whistleblower Process Under the ICWPA, the ICIG evaluates complaints to determine if they qualify as urgent concerns warranting transmission to Congress.

Prior to the 2019 revision, the office's guidance emphasized the need for first-hand information to establish credibility. The law itself does not explicitly require first-hand knowledge for filing, but the form's language guided the processing of expedited complaints.

Atkinson explained in his testimony that media inquiries prompted the revision after highlighting the first-hand knowledge requirement.

He instructed staff to update the form secretly to allow second-hand hearsay as a basis for expedited processing. Atkinson acknowledged that greater transparency about the reasons for the change would have been appropriate. >"So the timing is unfortunate.

" — Michael Atkinson, October 2019 testimony The Federalist reported on the form change in 2019, noting the revision's timing relative to the impeachment inquiry. The ICIG later issued a statement indicating the original language could be misinterpreted and that the update was a clarification.

the Impeachment Inquiry The whistleblower complaint triggered a congressional impeachment inquiry into then-President Trump in 2019.

The inquiry focused on the Ukraine phone call and related foreign policy matters. The processed complaint, despite the Office of Legal Counsel's assessment, proceeded to influence the inquiry's initiation. Atkinson's testimony, which became public in 2026, provides details on the internal decision-making behind the form revision.

The testimony confirms that the change was ordered by Atkinson personally. No specific revision date beyond August 2019 is disclosed in the document markings. The revision affected how whistleblower complaints were handled within the intelligence community, potentially broadening access to expedited review.

Stakeholders include whistleblowers, intelligence officials, and congressional oversight bodies. Future implications may involve reviews of similar processes to ensure transparency in rule changes.

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