Largest Supplier of Private Guards at U.S. Nuclear Facilities Putting Homeland Security at Risk
There is mounting evidence of widespread security problems at sensitive U.S. nuclear power plants and nuclear weapons facilities guarded by Denmark-based security firm Group 4 Falck/Wackenhut, the largest supplier of private security officers to those sites. A comprehensive study of public documents, reports, news clippings, and court filings reveals security problems at multiple nuclear sites throughout the U.S. over the last several years. The most recent revelations, concerning the Oak Ridge Nuclear Weapons Plant in Tennessee were made public at the end of January.
Wackenhut has been caught:
Cheating on security drills at the Oak Ridge nuclear weapons plant in
Tennessee. U.S. Department of Energy investigators heard testimony of a pattern
of cheating during security drills at Oak Ridge.
Cutting corners on security at Indian Point nuclear plant near New York City.
Wackenhut also provided false information to plant management who was conducting
a government-ordered investigation into whether employees could freely report
safety concerns.
Ignoring security concerns raised by guards at nuclear facilities and
illegally punishing the guards who raised them. The concerns raised by guards
that went unheeded included lax perimeter security at the Salem Nuclear Power
Plant in New Jersey, negligence in taking inventory of plutonium stores, sloppy
emergency drills, and elimination of a bomb-detection unit at the Rocky Flats
Environmental Technology Site in Colorado, and shoddy employee screening at the
Callaway Nuclear Power Plant in Missouri.
More details about these cases and Wackenhut's security record at U.S.
nuclear facilities, are available online at www.EyeonWackenhut.com.
SEIU, America's largest private security officers' union, launched
www.EyeOnWackenhut.com to educate security consumers about Wackenhut's business
and employment practices. The site includes information based on a systematic
analysis of public documents, press reports, and surveys of employees that
reveal a Wackenhut track record of security problems at sensitive nuclear
facilties, questionable hiring practices, poor officer training, and illegal
retaliation against employees who raise security concerns.