- Prevailing whistleblowers, Co-Hosts Julia Davis and BJ Davis pay tribute to this fallen American heroine, murdered for her protected disclosure against big corporate corruption.
- Karen Gay Silkwood, a heroic whistleblower, as an American chemical technician, labor union activist reporting corporate, Kerr-McGee Plutonium Plant practices in Cimarron, Okla. related to health and safety of workers in a nuclear facility. Silkwood died mysteriously, en-route to meet a New York Times reporter with tangible evidence that Kerr-McGee was poisoning their workers, she never made the meeting, obviously murdered to be kept silent. In 1986 her family settled a lawsuit for $1.5 million. All indications, she was murdered to silence her. In the ensuing litigation a witness for Silkwood alleged committed suicide before testifying. The elements of evil are transparent without looking to deep into the corporate veil. In the government response and tradition, Silkwood was alleged to have been a troublemaker but more importantly her reporters were accurate and had to be silenced.—Fleur De Lis Film Studios Legal Counsel
- Prevailing whistleblowers, Co-Hosts Julia Davis and BJ Davis pay tribute to this fallen American heroine, murdered for her protected disclosure against big corporate corruption.
Karen Gay Silkwood, a heroic whistleblower, as an American chemical technician, labor union activist reporting corporate, Kerr-McGee Plutonium Plant practices in Cimarron, Okla. related to health and safety of workers in a nuclear facility. Silkwood died mysteriously, en-route to meet a New York Times reporter with tangible evidence that Kerr-McGee was poisoning their workers, she never made the meeting, obviously murdered to be kept silent. In 1986 her family settled a lawsuit for $1.5 million. All indications, she was murdered to silence her.
In the ensuing litigation a witness for Silkwood alleged committed suicide before testifying.
The elements of evil are transparent without looking to deep into the corporate veil. In the government response and tradition, Silkwood was alleged to have been a troublemaker but more importantly her reporters were accurate and had to be silenced.
The results can be perceived as covert or overt, to suggest this can happen to you, if you dare to speak out and take an ethical and legal stance.
A feature film was made about her "Silkwood", starring Academy Award winner Meryl Streep was made that touches on the story points mainstream media did not address.
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content