A
20-year veteran of law enforcement, John Carman is in what he
calls the
real war on drugs: fighting corruption within the US Customs
Department.”
Carman, who began his career in the White
House Secret Service, became an inspector with US Customs/San
Diego in 1983. He was proud to be going to the frontlines,
where the movement of drugs into the United States could be
stopped. He was soon a top-rated inspector, nabbing drug couriers
before they could deliver their deadly goods.
But Carmans
job evaluations suddenly took a dive when he reported to his
superiors about corruption within his department. Carman broke
ranks when his many reports of illegal activity within the
agency were ignored. When, for example, he showed a supervisor
a memo from a ranking Customs official which allowed 167 Mexican
nationals to transit—without
inspection—through the San Diego Customs district, the
supervisor agreed that the order was illegal. But the only
action he took was to throw the memo in the trash.
Later, when
Carman supported allegations made by a former Customs inspector,
he became a marked man: a whistleblower. He was threatened
with dismissal on trumped up charges which proved baseless.
His car has been tampered with on more than one occasion. Hes
heard people trying to break into his house.
When
border inspectors get sick from spending endless hours in clouds
of carbon monoxide, they are moved to less toxic locations; when
Carman got sick, he was told to stand his ground or go home.