One whistle-blower he was referring to is Federal Agent John Dobson.
One of the whistle blowers, Kirk McElhearn, said Apple had "done the right thing".
BBC's Match of the Day 2 programme showed that, by the letter of the law, referee Martin Atkinson should have blown his whistle one second before Owen's winning goal.
Atkins claimed that after a year he could examine and cross-check two files at once, but you never saw him try to do it, though he could whistle one song and hum a different one.
No one was blowing the whistle on the boards of the big banks.
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In his book No One Would Listen, the whistle-blower Harry Markopolos observed that a revolving door has existed between the Securities and Exchange Commission and Wall Street, with inexperienced employees expecting to spend a few years as regulators and then move to much more lucrative jobs on Wall Street with the firms they were regulating.
Or the one about the London metals trader turned whistle-blower who alleged JPMorgan Chase is suppressing the silver price?
And that is little comfort to Pompey's fans who fretted until the final whistle, knowing that just one goal for their side may have seen them in Europe.
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Harry was the one dissenter who was going to blow the whistle on the rhapsody of Brigadoon.
"If I was to have a testimonial it was always going to be against Ajax and their fans have put in a lot of effort to come here, " he said in an emotional speech after the final whistle when he gave thanks to one and all.
Fans chanted "we want Houllier out" on the final whistle and the result leaves Villa just one point clear of the Premier League drop zone.
It seems one dolphin can call another specifically by mimicking the distinct whistle of that other dolphin.
There are fears that public spending cuts in Spain will affect the teaching of silbo at schools, one of the few places nowadays where children learn to whistle.
The Tigers, who will face London Irish in the final at Twickenham on 16 May, set out determined to finish this one inside regulation time and they dominated from the opening whistle.
"The State Department would never tolerate or sanction retaliation against whistle-blowers on any issue, including this one, " he said.
They circled Colorado State when the Rams brought it up, with more than one turnover coming on a desperation heave across midcourt to beat the whistle.
Since the dawn of mutual fund regulation in the United States (1940) only one Compliance Director of a mutual fund company has ever blown the whistle on his employer.
The sour expressions of Hammers fans at the final whistle painted this result as two points dropped rather than one gained, although Hitzlsperger's leveller 12 minutes from time could yet prove vital in the east London side's survival fight.
For a black candidate in an era of dog-whistle politics, it was a gamble: tackling head on one of the trickiest subjects in America.
And one of the jobs of the courts is to police the press by protecting whistle-blowers while also punishing libel and treachery.
One public prosecutor, Noha al-Zeiny, achieved instant fame for blowing the whistle on her own experience of fraud, in a contest between a Brotherhood candidate and a former adviser to Mr Mubarak.
Wembley has seen many glorious occasions and historical landmarks in its 77-year history - but this would not have been remembered as one of them except for the drama that unfolded behind the scenes after the final whistle.
Every one of the Birmingham's starting XI were up for the battle from the first whistle, although they were given an early scare when Benjani's shot struck the post.
In politics, a dog whistle is a rhetorical device--an oral expression susceptible to two interpretations, one straightforward and one, metaphorically speaking, at a higher frequency.
These shots at the Stern report whistle in from different directions, but Mr Nordhaus and Sir Partha both agree on one point: Sir Nicholas's choices are inconsistent with each other.
" As we explained last August: "In politics, a dog whistle is a rhetorical device--an oral expression susceptible to two interpretations, one straightforward and one, metaphorically speaking, at a higher frequency.
Paul Scholes ambled through the Rest of the World's defence to pull one back for the home side, before the referee decided he had seen enough and blew the whistle with a minute to go.
BBC: News | Football | Fergie's testimonial played for laughs
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