Stephen M. Kohn

Stephen Martin Kohn is an attorney for Kohn, Kohn & Colapinto, a Washington, D.C., law firm specializing in employment law. The author of the first legal treatise on whistleblowing, Kohn is recognized as one of the top experts in whistleblower protection law. He also has written extensively on the subject of political prisoners and the history of the abrogation of the rights of political protestors. His interest in First Amendment issues as related to political protest likely spurred his interest in whistleblowers, as whistleblowing cases typically are adjudicated on the basis of the First Amendment.

Biography

Kohn is a graduate of Boston University (B.S. in Social Education. 1979) and Brown University (M.A. in political science, '81); he received his law degree from Northeastern University in 1984. While at Boston University, Kohn was one of the founders of the B.U. Exposure, a student-run independent newspaper dedicated to exposing the ethical irregularities of the administration of B.U. President John Silber. (In an interview with Mike Wallace first broadcast on 60 Minutes in January 1980, Silber denounced the B.U. Exposure staff as "short-pants communists".[1]

After graduating from Northeastern Law, Kohn served as an Adjunct Professor and Clinical Supervisor at the Antioch School of Law, where he oversaw a legal clinic on whistleblower protections from 1984-88. He also served as the Clinical Director and Director of Corporate Litigation for the Government Accountability Project.

Stephen Kohn founded the law firm now known as Kohn, Kohn & Colapinto with his brother Michael, in 1988. The original focus of the Kohn brothers and their later partner David K. Colapinto, was on nuclear power, specifically, protecting nuclear industry employees who blew the whistle on their employers in regards to safety issues.

In addition to defending whistleblowers, Kohn, Kohn & Colapinto has filed numerous qui tam suits linked to the disclosure of government fraud. Kohn personally has represented whistleblowers in the O. J. Simpson murder case, the World Trade Center bombing cases, the Oklahoma City bombing case, the Linda Tripp-Privacy Act case, and the Bradley Birkenfeld-UBS AG tax evasion case. One of the firm's clients was Dr. Frederic Whitehurst, a supervisor at the FBI Crime Lab, who blew the whistle on the Bureau and its tainting of forensic evidence for use by prosecutors. Kohn introduced Whitehurst's 1995 testimony before the House Subcommittee on Crime.

In 2006, Kohn was the Daynard Public Interest Visiting Fellow at his law alma mater, Northeastern Law. He is the Executive Director of the National Whistleblower Center and Attorney-Trustee for the National Whistleblower Legal Defense and Education Fund.

Publications

Books

Articles

References

  1. "The most hated man on campus". The Hour (Google News). United Press International. March 5, 1980. Retrieved December 4, 2014.

External links