Wednesday, January 31, 2018

Hawaii Missile Emergency Report: Employee Fired For Sending False Alert, Emergency Official Resigns



VOA: Hawaii Fires Emergency Official Responsible for False Missile Alert

The Hawaii state employee responsible for launching an erroneous January 13 warning of an incoming missile attack has been fired, following a report stating that the employee had a history of confusing practice exercises with real-life events.

The information was revealed Tuesday in a report by Investigating Officer Bruce Oliveira to the director of Hawaii's Emergency Management Agency.

Vern Miyagi, the administrator for the agency, resigned Tuesday, as the findings became public.

Read more ....

WNU Editor: So the person who had a long history of confusing practice exercises with real-life events was able to still keep his job until this week. I like to know who did he know so that he could keep his job.

More News On Hawaii's Missile Emergency Report

HI-EMA’s Miyagi resigns, ‘button pusher’ fired in aftermath of false missile alert -- Honolulu Star Advertiser
Hawaii worker who sent false alert had problems but kept job -- ABC News
Hawaii emergency chief resigns, officer fired over false missile alert -- USA TODAY
Emergency worker deliberately sent false Hawaii missile alert, believing attack was imminent, FCC says -- Chicago Tribune
The false-alarm missile alert in Hawaii was much more of a disaster than previously thought -- Business Insider
Here's what went wrong with the Hawaii false alarm -- CNN

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