No-Bid Contracts and Contract Fraud

September 13, 2008

More on Boeing and ICO and Lawsuits ongoing

Boeing:  Failed Satellite Contracts and Lawsuits - It just goes on and on.  -GFS

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Washington Post

September 10, 2008

Pg. D1

 

Contracting Audit Agency Target Of Investigations

By Robert O'Harrow Jr. and Dana Hedgpeth, Washington Post Staff Writers

 

 

In 2005 and 2006, the Defense Contract Audit Agency helped enable Boeing to recover about $270 million in losses from a failed commercial satellite business, approving unorthodox accounting methods that allowed the company to receive the payments through an Air Force contract, according to testimony to be presented to a congressional panel today.

 

When veteran auditors at the DCAA pointed out potential violations of federal acquisition regulations, they were repeatedly told by supervisors to ignore them, according to the testimony from whistle-blowers and a recent investigation by the Government Accountability Office.

 

"My office was directed by DCAA upper management to basically play along with this outrageous government bailout," Paul Hackler, a supervising auditor at DCAA, said in prepared testimony obtained by the Washington Post. "Boeing seized this opportunity to recover past losses by developing proposals that violated numerous procurement regulations."

 

Boeing spokesman Dan Beck said the company had not seen the testimony, and that the GAO's July report on the DCAA faulted the agency, not the company. "Boeing absolutely did nothing improper," he said. "Boeing will not comment on one agency reporting on another."

 

An Air Force spokesman declined to comment.

 

The testimony and investigations offer an unusually critical look at one of the most respected audit agencies in the country, which many lawmakers, watchdog groups and other federal auditors have traditionally considered a last line of defense against fraud, waste and abuse at the Pentagon and other agencies.

 

But the DCAA has suffered from sharp budget and stuffing cuts over the past 15 years. Since 2000, its workforce has dropped about 6 percent to 4,006, while Pentagon spending rose more than 136 percent to $315 billion last year because of wars in the Middle East and demands for new information technology and weapons systems.

DCAA director April G. Stephenson in her written testimony acknowledged shortcomings identified by the GAO's inquiry, which pinpointed problems on contracts overseen by agency auditors. She said some of the problems stem from perceived pressure by managers to issue audits by a certain date, which led to cutting findings they did not think were adequately supported. She said the agency has launched changes to ensure that audits are properly conducted, independent of outside influence.

 

"DCAA is committed to ensuring that the agency is above reproach -- that all of its audits are performed in accordance with auditing standards, that its culture promotes the kind of vigilance and quality that protects the interests of the American taxpayers," Stephenson said.

 

"My heart sank when I learned what has been happening in the trenches at the DCAA," said Danielle Brian, director of the Project On Government Oversight, a nonprofit watchdog group that has been tracking defense spending for years.

 

"The DCAA is perhaps the single most important entity in the government for its work in protecting taxpayers," Brian said. "They're our last hope."

 

Today's hearing, before the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, follows two years of investigations by the GAO, the Pentagon inspector general's office and the Defense Criminal Investigative Service, or DCIS. Calls by DCAA auditors to hotlines triggered those investigations.

 

DCIS investigators found that managers deleted material from audits without auditors' knowledge. The managers issued "clean" audit reports without supporting documentation, according to material to be disclosed at the hearing. The DCIS investigators also confirmed that pressure to issue audits on deadline contributed to problems.

 

The GAO probe found that three DCAA offices under scrutiny had repeatedly diverged from standard accounting practices in their audits. In some cases, agency supervisors allowed contract officials and contractors to subvert DCAA's independence and "improperly influenced" the scope and findings of audits. The GAO investigators also turned up evidence that managers had tried to intimidate or silence auditors, according to a recent report.

 

Greg Kutz, GAO managing director for forensic audits and special investigations, said the problems at DCAA may be widespread. "It's clear that the issues go beyond the 14 audits that we investigated," he said in an interview.

 

Hackler's testimony touches on a contract involving a Boeing satellite launch capabilities, including a Delta IV launch vehicle. At issue were complex pricing methods that Hackler said were used to help Boeing recoup some of the hundreds of millions in losses from a failed commercial satellite cellphone business that also involved launches.

Hackler, who supervised audits of the Boeing proposals, said they included "costing methodology" he had not seen before, according to his prepared testimony. Boeing also did not include pricing details from subcontractors, the testimony said. The Air Force awarded a contract granting Boeing the recovery of losses.

 

"Time after time, GAO investigators and others have found that DCAA has issued audits of contractors that are favorable to contractors but are not supported by facts, thus encouraging waste, fraud and abuse of taxpayer money," said Sen. Joseph Lieberman (I-Conn.), committee chairman. "It appears that DCAA is more interested in the speed of its process than the accuracy of the results. DCAA's mission is too important for this to be tolerated."\

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From Bloomberg:

 

Boeing Almost Drove ICO Global Out of Business, Lawyer Says

By Joel Rosenblatt and Valerie Reitman

 

 

Sept. 12 (Bloomberg) -- ICO Global Communications Holdings Ltd. should be awarded $1.5 billion because of Boeing Co.'s failed attempt to put the satellite-network company out of business, an ICO lawyer told a California jury.

 

 

ICO sued Boeing in Los Angeles Superior Court for an alleged contract breach that the Reston, Virginia-based company said led to its failure to build a network of satellites providing mobile-phone connections to remote locations.

 

``Boeing inflicted great damage on ICO and almost drove ICO out of business, but ICO was nimble and took the necessary steps to survive,'' Barry Lee, a lawyer for the company, said yesterday in his closing argument to the jury. ``We're still here, we're still alive. It's not what Boeing wanted. Boeing wanted ICO dead and gone.''

ICO signed a contract in 1995 to pay more than $2 billion for 12 satellites with Hughes Electronics Corp.'s satellite unit, a business Chicago-based Boeing acquired in 2000, ICO said in court documents. Two of the satellites failed, and Boeing demanded $400 million in additional costs for what were supposed to be fixed-price contracts, ICO lawyer Robert Zeavin told jurors.

 

Boeing, whose 27,000 machinists walked off the job on strike this month, has argued ICO gambled on a market for satellite phones that didn't materialize and is now trying to blame Boeing for its mistakes. Boeing is scheduled to present its closing arguments today.

Boeing was concerned ``that ICO's satellites be completed, that ICO pay for the satellites as agreed, and that ICO's business succeed,'' Boeing spokeswoman Diana Ball said yesterday in an e-mailed statement.

 

 

Business Nonexistent

 

ICO's business didn't exist and investors lost interest in the company by the time the suit was filed in 2004, Ball said in the statement. ICO's decision to end its contracts with Boeing ``was the result of ICO's decisions and choices, not any conduct by Boeing,'' she said.

ICO General Counsel John Flynn said in June that ICO would ask jurors to award it $2.7 billion. Flynn said yesterday in an interview that the total may be reduced to an amount larger than $2 billion, including $1.5 billion for the breach of contract as well as interest and possible punitive damages.

 

Founded in 1995 as a global satellite phone operator, ICO filed for bankruptcy in August 1999 and emerged in May 2000 with financing from mobile-phone pioneer Craig McCaw. The company now designs video and navigation programs for cars.

 

Boeing rose 86 cents, or 1.4 percent, to $62.57 in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. ICO fell 1 cent to $2.50 in Nasdaq Stock Market trading.

 

The case is Boeing Satellite Systems International Inc. v. ICO Global Communications (Operations) Ltd., BC320116, Los Angeles County Superior Court.

 

To contact the reporter on this story: Joel Rosenblatt in Los Angeles at jrosenblatt@bloomberg.net.

 

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From:  The Washington Post

The Boeing 702 model spacecraft, called NSS-8, was declared a loss when the Sea Launch Zenit-3SL vehicle carrying the satellite experienced an anomaly during the launch on January 30, 2007.

 

WASHINGTON, Feb. 19, 2007/Satnews Daily/ ― Telesat Canada and Japanese firm Space Communications Corporation are suing the Boeing Company for a combined $610 million in damages related to alleged malfunctions in the BSS-702 model satellite made by Boeing's Satellite International, Inc. and a failed orbital insertion. Boeing said the claims in both lawsuits were without merit.

 

Telesat Canada, the satellite unit of Canadian telecommunications company, BCE Inc., and its insurers are suing Boeing for $385 million in damages and $10 million in lost profits for the failure of its Anik F1 satellite, a Boeing 702 model. Telesat Canada filed an arbitration order against Boeing in November 2006 and an action in a Canadian superior court in December 2006.

 

On the other hand, Space Communications Corporation’s insurers are suing Boeing's satellite unit for $215 million related to a bungled 2004 launch of Japan's Superbird-6 satellite. Space Communications' insurers filed an arbitration request on Dec. 1. Superbird-6 was allegedly damaged in low orbit after the 2004 launch.

 

 

 

Several early model 702 satellites such as Anik F1 allegedly failed after having problems with their solar panel cells. Industry sources said six Boeing 702 models have failed in orbit due to long-term power loss from a degradation of their solar concentrators: Anik F1, Galaxy 11, PAS 1R, Thuraya 1, XM 1 and XM 2.

 

They said Anik F1 suffered from a generic failure of the early BSS-702 model: fogging of the concentrator mirrors on the solar arrays that led to reduced available power.

 

The first version of the 702 used solar arrays with concentrators. These concentrators tended to early fogging, leading to reduced operating lifetimes. The outgassing of the solar cells was higher than expected due to an inherent design flaw. The flaw was corrected in later versions with higher power triple-junction gallium arsenide solar cells.

 

Anik F1 was launched on November 21, 2000 by an Ariane 44 rocket from the European Space Agency space center at Kourou, Guiana. The primary customers are the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, Star Choice, Chum Limited and Canadian Satellite Communications, Inc. Anik F1 will be replaced by Anik F1R.

 

Boeing said Superbird-6 was launched into a lower-than-intended orbit and needed to expend additional fuel to get into the correct orbit. The unplanned fuel consumption in the orbit-raising maneuver reduced Superbird-6’s expected operational life below the planned 13 years. Superbird-6, a Boeing 601 model, was launched by an International Launch Services Atlas 2AS vehicle in June 2004.

 

 

September 07, 2008

Boeing Sued for $7.5 Million Contract Fraud

Here we go again.  Doesn’t anyone in oversight have the capability of getting The Boeing Company and other errant contractors under control?  Maybe not if the top of the food chain doesn’t want it to be.  Write your elected officials!  -GFS

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Boeing in trouble for $7.5 million contract fraud

Earlier this week, the United States Department of Justice filed a civil lawsuit against The Boeing Company for alleged price gouging. According to the Justice Department, Boeing unlawfully inflated the price tag by $7.5 million for manufacturing a missile decoy system designed for the Air Force's B-1 bomber.

The lawsuit states that Boeing failed to disclose it would outsource the manufacturing of the majority of parts needed to create the Towed Decoy System - a tool for intercepting missiles fired at the B-1 - during contract negotiations. The company claimed, according to the suit, that it would instead build the parts in-house at a greater cost than required for outsourcing. Consequently, Boeing charged more for something they outsourced for less, and in effect, defrauded the government for the price difference.

The lawsuit alleges that the Air Force would have renegotiated a substantially lower price tag for the Towed Decoy System had Boeing informed them they intended to purchase most components at a lower cost.

"It's a significant amount and, of course, it's all taxpayer money," Assistant U.S. Attorney Lisa Palombo told The Associated Press. "We make it a priority to collect all taxpayer funds that are obtained through fraud. We don't make exceptions for anyone, individuals or large companies."

Evidence of Boeing's actions originally came from whistle-blowers inside the organization that complained to their managers that the company was overcharging. The managers allegedly ignored the complaints and failed to tell their client, the Air Force.

Boeing spokesman Forrest Gossett told Business Week that the company disputes the allegations and believes it properly negotiated and fulfilled its contract with the Air Force.

But investigators from the Air Force’s Office of Special Investigations, the Defense Criminal Investigative Service, and auditors from the Defense Contract Audit Agency claim to have evidence of 140 incidents of over billing by Boeing, equating to $7.5 million in fraudulent charges. Under the False Claims Act, the government may recover up to three times the amount of the loss and enforce criminal penalties for each of the 140 incidents of fraud.

Link to Original:  http://ohmygov.com/blogs/general_news/archive/2008/09/04/boeing-in-trouble-again-for-contract-fraud.aspx?postcat=1074&miid=27&pid=2899

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U.S. government sues Boeing over fraud

Posted in Business, Crime by eideard on September 3rd, 2008

The federal government has sued Boeing for allegedly inflating the prices of B-1 bomber equipment sold to the Air Force. The lawsuit alleges the military paid $7.5 million more than it should have because Boeing did not tell the Air Force during contract negotiations that it found a source for cheaper parts to build decoy systems that protect bombers from missiles…

"It's a significant amount and, of course, it's all taxpayer money," Assistant U.S. Attorney Lisa Palombo told The Associated Press.

"We make it a priority to collect all taxpayer funds that are obtained through fraud. We don't make exceptions for anyone, individuals or large companies…"

The lawsuit, filed in Los Angeles federal court, alleges Boeing told the Air Force during negotiations in 1990 that it would manufacture parts for decoy systems at its own facility in Palmdale. Boeing allegedly did not inform the Air Force that it planned to close the facility and buy parts from subcontractors at a lower price.

We paid Boeing $36 million for 57 of these decoy kits. Under the False Claims Act, the government can recover up to three times the amount it overpaid, plus penalties.

I hope they get every penny.

I heard this recently.  It seems to fit the occasion.  -GFS

 

“Wake up America!  Contractors want more.  Those war contractors want more.”  -Congressman Dennis Kucinich

August 18, 2008

GAO Reports Fraud in "Distressed Zones" Contract Bids

Corruption and lack of ethics are draining this country.  -GFS

 

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Link to original at Washington Post:  http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/07/17/AR2008071702760_pf.html

 

 

Bids for Work Falsified, GAO Reports
$100 Million in Contracts for Distressed Zones Go to Firms Operating Elsewhere

By Anita Huslin
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, July 18, 2008; D04

Over the past two years, at least 10 Washington area companies have won more than $100 million in prime government contracts set aside for small businesses in economically distressed areas by claiming they had residency in those communities.

A Government Accountability Office report released yesterday challenged those claims and said the agency plans to ask the Small Business Administration's inspector general to investigate.

The GAO said it reviewed records for 17 Washington area companies participating in the program and found that 10 allegedly failed to meet SBA requirements that their primary offices be based in an economically distressed zone and that at least 35 percent of their employees live in one.

In one instance, a roofing contractor with a $4.1 million Air Force contract listed his business as being in a Landover distressed zone. When government investigators visited, the office was in half of a duplex and a person who identified himself as a vice president said no employees worked there. According to payroll records, only 12 percent of the company's employees lived in the zone, the GAO said.

In another, an engineering company listed its primary address as the second floor of a house in Northeast Washington that had been converted into a dentist's office, but its Web site locates the company in McLean and employees answer the phone there. Audrey Price, president of the company, Quantum Dynamics, said she has an open-ended arrangement with the dentist for the space above his office. Her company is planning to move soon from McLean to Macon, Ga.

"We are preparing a complete response to the SBA and expect to be exonerated as far what the GAO is saying," she said by telephone.

In another case, investigators went to the address of CSI Engineering (DC/PC) in Greenbelt and found the office locked and several days of mail piled outside the door. The company president said he has two companies with similar names; one is in Greenbelt and another in Beltsville, which is not in an economically distressed zone.

"We do all of the engineering in Greenbelt every day," said CSI Engineering president Dave Ghosal, who works in Beltsville. "There's a lot of turnover in people, but if you call, there are people there" in Greenbelt. "The names, I think, are a little confusing."

The GAO discussed its findings yesterday during a hearing before the House Committee on Small Business. The report found fault with the SBA's oversight.

As a test of the program's screening process, investigators created fictitious companies and submitted applications for the Historically Underutilized Business Zone program. Four of them won certification, even though one listed a Starbucks as its company address and the employee and company information was fabricated on all the applications, GAO investigators told committee members.

"We created the bogus companies to test fraud controls, the gateway to the money," said Gregory Kutz, managing director of forensic audits and special investigations for the GAO. "That miserably failed."

The GAO said the program relies on limited documentation and there is little follow-up by the SBA. As a result, some companies rent space in a HUB zone to win certification, but then move elsewhere, investigators said.

After the hearing, SBA officials released a statement outlining steps they will take to correct problems and said they have already moved to rectify problems such as program maps that incorrectly designate HUB zones. Bad maps have resulted in ineligible small businesses participating in the program and in eligible businesses being blocked out, the GAO report said.

SBA officials said they would work on their internal systems to improve the verification process. Last year, administration officials quashed legislation that would have required on-site visits of applicants and other measures to ensure businesses' eligibility, calling them "burdensome or undesirable."

Under federal contracting rules, agencies are to award 3 percent of their annual contracts to qualified companies in HUB zones. In 2003 to 2006, the percentage of prime contracting dollars fell about 33 percent short of the statutory goal in 2006, according to the GAO.

 

 

August 17, 2008

Italy and Japan Penalize Boeing for Failure to Perform on Tanker Contracts

My Oh My!  Could this be a legitimate concern that should be taken into account in the decision to award the U.S. Tanker Contract?   A company’s past and present business practices and dealings perhaps should come into play when awarding huge defense contracts which concern the safety and security of the United States.  -GFS

 

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From Bloomberg.com

 

Boeing Delay on Italy, Japan Tankers May Harm Bid for U.S. Work

By Tony Capaccio and Toko Sekiguchi 

Aug. 12-- Italy will penalize Boeing Co. for being three years late in delivering the first of four aerial refueling tankers.

The company is negotiating with the Italian government over the penalty's size and composition, Cliff Hall, director of Boeing's international tanker programs, said in an interview. Boeing paid a fine to Japan last year for being one year late on delivering the first of four tankers to that nation's air force.

Performance on prior contracts is a factor in the U.S. military's contest between Boeing and Northrop Grumman Corp. for a $35 billion aerial refueling tanker contract. The Pentagon hopes to award a contract by late December.

Boeing's record on the Japanese and Italian tanker programs is ``totally relevant'' to its bid for the U.S. program, Scott Hamilton, an aviation consultant with Seattle-based Leeham Co., said. ``This goes directly to `past performance.' You don't pay penalties for good performance.''

Richard Aboulafia of the Teal Group defense industry consulting firm in Fairfax, Virginia, said delays on these two programs ``have prompted Boeing to play defense against charges of `underperformance' and therefore a high risk of technical difficulties on the U.S. program.''

Boeing's December 2002 contract with Italy promised the first tanker by November 2005. Delivery now is set for November, three years late, with the second slated for delivery in December, or 21 months late. Boeing expects the third and fourth planes to be delivered at least 16 months and 12 months late, respectively.

`Italians Were Angry'

Boeing is ``working with the Italians on different options'' for the penalty it must pay that could include cash and extra services, Hall said.

``It's not really safe to say what that might be or how much. The Italians don't move fast on these types of matters,'' he said. ``I expect it to be resolved next year.''

``The Italians -- they were angry, but I think they are starting to see that we are making solid progress,'' Hall said. ``I wouldn't call it an `excellent' relationship yet. I would say we are mending fences.''

Factors contributing to the delay included design changes, expanded U.S. flight testing, greater-than-expected challenges to software integration, and the complexity of getting the plane ready for certification by the Federal Aviation Administration, Hall said.

Italian Embassy Press Counsel Fabrizio Bucci in an e-mail said, ``We understand Boeing's problems. We are, however, confident that they will be soon overcome and the delivery will take place shortly.''

Penalized by Japan

Boeing's penalty from Italy will be the second incurred on its international tanker programs.

Delivering Japan's first tanker a year late on Feb. 29 cost Boeing ``well under $5 million,'' Hall said. The fine was paid by Itochu Corp., Boeing's Japanese partner in the deal, and Boeing reimbursed Itochu, Hall said.

The second aircraft was delivered in March, two days ahead of schedule; the third will be delivered to Itochu in December about two months early and the fourth about one month ahead in November 2009, he said.

``We have certainly turned the corner on this program and are performing better,'' Hall said.

 

August 02, 2008

Blackwater Expands

Blimp Contracts, hmmmm.  I wonder if Blackwater also does border fences?  Watch out Boeing.  -GFS

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Blackwater's Not Going Anywhere

by: Jeremy Scahill, The Nation

It seems that executives from Blackwater Worldwide, the Bush Administration's favorite hired guns in Iraq and Afghanistan, are threatening to pack up their M4 assault rifles, CS gas and Little Bird helicopters and go back to the Great Dismal Swamp of North Carolina whence they came. Or at least that's how it is being portrayed in the media.

    This story broke on July 21, when the Associated Press ran an article based on lengthy interviews with Blackwater's top guns. Since then, the story has picked up considerable steam and generated a tremendous amount of buzz online and in the press. After all, Blackwater has long been a key part of the US occupation and has been at the center of several high-profile scandals and deadly incidents. Add to that its owner's ties to the White House and the radical religious right in the United States and it is clear why this is news. On top of that, Barack Obama-a critic of Blackwater-had just completed a tour of Iraq, where he was touting his "withdrawal plan."

    Among the headlines: "Blackwater Plans Exit From Guard Work," "Blackwater Getting Out Of Security Business," "Blackwater Sounds Retreat From Private Security Business," and "Blackwater to Leave Security Business." One blogger slapped this headline on his post: "Blackwater, Worst Organization Since SS, To End Mercenary Work."

    Frankly, this is a whole lot of hype.

    Anyone who thinks Blackwater is in serious trouble is dead wrong. Even if-and this is a big if-the company pulled out of Iraq tomorrow, here is the cold, hard fact: business has never been better for Blackwater, and its future looks bright. More on this in a moment.

    Back to the matter at hand:

    Complaining that negative media attention and Congressional and criminal investigations are hurting business and that the Blackwater name had become a catch-all target for antiwar protesters, the company's brass told the AP Blackwater was shifting its focus to its other areas of government contracting, like law enforcement and military training, as well as logistics.

    "The experience we've had would certainly be a disincentive to any other companies that want to step in and put their entire business at risk," said Erik Prince, Blackwater's reclusive, 39-year-old founder and owner. Company president Gary Jackson said Blackwater has become like the "Coca-Cola" of war contractors, a brand representing all private companies servicing the Iraq occupation. Jackson charged the company had been falsely portrayed in the media, saying, "If [the media] could get it right, we might stay in the business."

    All of this sounds a bit like whining on a children's playground.

    Shame on journalists for not recognizing the noble work of the gallant heroes and patriots (who happen to be paid much more than US troops, have not been subjected to any system of law and can leave the war zone any moment they choose) and forcing Blackwater to consider abandoning its (very profitable, billion-dollar) charitable humanitarian campaign in Iraq. Remember, according to Blackwater, it is not a mercenary organization, it is a "Peace and Stability" operation employing "Global Stabilization Professionals."

    While they were at it, Jackson and Prince should have blamed those wretched seventeen Iraqi civilians who had the audacity to step in front of the bullets flying out of Blackwater's weapons in Baghdad's Nisour Square last September. After all, following those killings, Erik Prince told the US Congress that the only innocent people his men may have killed or injured in Iraq died as a result of "ricochets" and "traffic accidents." If that is true, Nisour Square might have been the most lethal jaywalking incident in world history.

    As for the current hype, the day after the AP story broke, Blackwater's longtime spokesperson Anne Tyrrell was quick to clarify the matter. Blackwater, she said, has no immediate plans to exit the security business. "As long as we're asked, we'll do it," she said. Meanwhile, the State Department, which renewed Blackwater's contract for another year in April, says it has received no communication from the company indicating it is not going to continue on in Iraq. "They have not indicated to us that they are attempting to get out of our current contract," said Undersecretary of State Patrick Kennedy.

    As of 2005-2006, according to the company, about half of Blackwater's business was made up of its security work in places like Iraq, Afghanistan and post-Katrina New Orleans. Today, Jackson says it is about 30 percent. "If I could get it down to 2 percent or 1 percent, I would go there," he said in the interview.

    Blackwater, like all companies operating in US war zones, is following political developments very closely. The company may be bracing for a possible shift in policy should Obama win in November. Blackwater could be contemplating resignation before termination. On the other hand, Obama has sent mixed messages on the future of war contractors under his Iraq policy. While he has been very critical of the war industry in general-and Blackwater specifically-he has also indicated he will not "rule out" using private armed contractors at least for a time in Iraq.

    Perhaps Blackwater has already gotten what it needed from Iraq: more than a billion dollars in contracts and a bad-ass reputation, which has served it well. In May, Blackwater boasted of "two successive quarters of unprecedented growth." Among its current initiatives:

    Erik Prince's private spy agency, Total Intelligence Solutions, is now open for business, placing capabilities once the sovereign realm of governments on the open market. Run by three veteran CIA operatives, the company offers "CIA-type services" to Fortune 1000 companies and governments.

    Blackwater was asked by the Pentagon to bid for a share of a whopping $15 billion contract to "fight terrorists with drug-trade ties" in a US program that targets countries like Colombia, Bolivia, Afghanistan and Uzbekistan. The New York Times said it could be the company's "biggest job" ever.

    Blackwater is wrapping up work on its own armored vehicle, the Grizzly, as well as its Polar Airship 400, a surveillance blimp Blackwater wants to market to the Department of Homeland security for use in monitoring the US-Mexico border.

    On top of this, Blackwater affiliate Greystone Ltd., registered offshore in Barbados, is an old-fashioned mercenary operation offering "personnel from the best militaries throughout the world" for hire by governments and private organizations. It also boasts of a "multi-national peacekeeping program," with forces "specializing in crowd control and less than lethal techniques and military personnel for the less stable areas of operation." Greystone's name has been conspicuously absent in this current news cycle.

    At the end of the day, maybe this is just a story, a whole lot of hype and a dash of misdirection from a pretty savvy company. Safe money would dictate that Blackwater plans on continuing to be, well, Blackwater.

    Consider this: the other day Blackwater president Gary Jackson told the AP, "Security was not part of the master plan, ever."

    Interesting claim. It was, in fact, Jackson himself who, back at the beginning of the Iraq occupation, described his goal for Blackwater as such: "I would like to have the largest, most professional private army in the world."

Link to Original:  http://www.thenation.com/doc/20080804/scahill   

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Jeremy Scahill, a Puffin Foundation Writing Fellow at The Nation Institute, is the author of the bestselling "Blackwater: The Rise of the World's Most Powerful Mercenary Army," published by Nation Books. He is an award-winning investigative journalist and correspondent for the national radio and TV program Democracy Now!.

Ms. Sparky on Iraq Electrocutions and House Oversight Hearing

I DON’T KNOW…I DON’T KNOW…I DON’T KNOW

Intro and Link to Ms. Sparky’s post on her great blog site, regarding electrical failures and electrocutions of American Soldiers in Iraq: 

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There were a whole lot of “I don’t  knows” going on yesterday July 30, 2008. The House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform conducted a hearing on “Deficient Electrical Systems at U.S. Facilities In Iraq”. The following people testified before the committee.

  • U.S. Senator Bob Casey, (D-PA)
  • Gordon S. Heddell, Acting Inspector General, U.S. Department of Defense
  • Don Horstman, Deputy Inspector General for Policy and Oversight, U.S. Department of Defense
  • Charlie E. Williams, Jr., Director, Defense Contract Management Agency
  • Keith Ernst, Former Director, Defense Contract Management Agency
  • Jeffrey P. Parsons, Executive Director, Army Contracting Command, U.S. Army
  • Tom Bruni, Theater Engineering and Construction Manager, KBR, Inc.

I spent most of last night watching the Hearing video and going over the supporting documents. All I can say is…..what the hell??? There is so much material I can’t possibly put it all my my website. Do yourself a favor and go to the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform website and if you do nothing more…..download the video… and watch it. You will be rewarded for your patience when at the end of the video…Tom Bruni, Theater Engineering and Construction Manager for KBR, Inc. blames the Army. I hope I didn’t ruin the movie for you. Click HERE for video.

Click HERE to read the Majority Staff Analysis put together by Congressman Waxman’s staff. It’s very thorough. After reading the documents, watching the video and listening to all the “I Don’t Knows” and the circle talking, these are my conclusions.

1. I determined quickly, the DoD Investigators performing the initial investigation clearly were not knowledgeable about electricity and electrical equipment when they referred to the pump motor as the “pump engine”. Thit is just one of many examples of the clear lack of understanding of electrical systems…but to me the most blatant.

2. On January 26, 2008, the Army’s Special Operations Task Force – Central, which is based at the Palace Complex, issued a report detailing the results of its investigation. This investigation is also known as an Army Regulation 15-6 Investigation. The report stated that one cause of Staff Sergeant Maseth’s death was a defective pump that supplied water to his shower. The report stated:

It appears that the water pump engine overheated, thereby causing the failure of the breaker switch, capacitor, and internal fuse which melted the wire insulation and the electrical wire inside the motor compartment. This allowed the electrical current to flow directly from the water pump through the metal pipes and into SSG Maseth.

Electrically-this entire statement makes no sense at all. Electricians….give me your opinions on this one. This is bogus all the way around.

3. The statement by Mr Hardin, KBR Chief of Services and electrician by trade

The breaker box had tar drip into it and it got in the way with the breaker and stopped it from tripping.

doesn’t make sense to me. Breakers trip thermally on overcurrent. It’s internal and works off of heat. You can hold that breaker handle to the “closed/on” position all you want and it’s going to trip on the inside. Unless the breaker has welded itself together on the inside this doesn’t make sense. So…I am going to question that electrician’s qualifications.

4. “This was an O&M Level B Faciclity” They all clung to this statement like a life preserver in an ocean full of sharks!!! What does Level B mean? I’ll tell you.

An O&M Level B Facility receives Limited Maintenance meaning No Routine Inspections, No Preventive Maintenance and No Upgrades. Notice that Corrective Maintenance on that list. So everyone on the panel was hiding behind that fact they couldn’t do anything because it had a Level B contract. First, I believe this specific task could have been repaired under a Level B contract. At the very least, to investigate and isolate the power feeding this system was clearly within the scope of this Level B contract. To Investigate and not de-energize the system, walk away and leave the existing hazard in place was clearly negligence on the part of the KBR “HVAC” electrician. To allow the KBR “HVAC” electrician to do this was negligent on the part of KBR Management. To allow KBR to do this was negligent on the part of the Commander (DoD) of that building. To not properly oversee the contract was clearly the responsibility of the DCMA.

Why was an HVAC Electrician working on a water pump and building ground issues?

Bottom line…the KBR electrician could have prevented this whole thing had he been empowered to perform work in an safe and quality manner. If an electrician did that in the States and someone died, they could be held ‘CRIMINALLY NEGLIGENT”.

This is where I get back to OSHA and licensing. In the States we are empowered by OSHA. We must not perform work unsafely and there is recourse if the contractor insists on it. Overseas there is not. In the States we are empowered by our licenses. We must not do work unsafely or in violation of the National Electric Code and again, there is recourse if the contractor insists on it. Overseas there is not. THIS MUST BE CHANGED!!

Electricians and Inspectors, I invite you to read the reports and documentation. Tell me what you think?

My compliments to Congressman Waxman and this House Committee. My only comment is….why didn’t you have an electrical inspector or engineer to testify to the discrepancies in the original reports?

Get all the documents from this hearing by clicking HERE.

Ms Sparky

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Much more on the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform Hearings regarding Faulty Electrical work and the electrocution of U.S. Soldiers in Iraq may be found at Ms. Sparky’s site here:  http://mssparky.com/2008/07/i-dont-knowi-dont-knowi-dont-know/

July 28, 2008

More Iraq Waste, Fraud and Abuse Detailed

Audit Finds Millions Wasted in Iraq Reconstruction Contract

»

by: Agence France-Presse

Washington - Millions of dollars were likely wasted on a $900 million army contract to build courthouses, prisons, police and other security facilities in Iraq, an audit released Monday has found.

    The audit by the congressionally appointed Special Inspector General for Iraq, Stuart Bowen, found that the contractor, Parsons Delaware Inc., completed only about a third of 53 planned construction projects.

    "Although the failure to complete some of the work is understandable because of its complex nature and the unstable security environment in Iraq, millions of dollars in waste are likely associated with incomplete, terminated and abandoned projects under this contract," the audit report said.

    The contract was one of a dozen design-build construction contracts awarded by the army in 2004 to restore Iraq's infrastructure in broad areas such as security and justice, water, oil, electricity and transportation.

    Parsons was supposed to build police and civil defense training areas, two prisons, two courthouses, fire stations, and border control facilities.

    The report said more than $142 million, or nearly 43 percent of the funds disbursed so far, "were spent on projects that were either terminated or cancelled, although a number of the projects were subsequently completed."

    Repeated construction delays prompted the government to cancel the construction of two partially built prisons, one at Nasiriyah and the other at Khan Bani Saad, the audit said.

    The Nasiriyah prison was later completed by another contractor, but the facility at Khan Bani Saad was turned over half finished to the Iraqi government which has no plans to use it, the audit said.

    It said about $40 million has been spent on the Khan Bani Saad prison.

    "At this point the entire amount disbursed for this project may ultimately be wasted because the government of Iraq currently has no plans for completing or using this facility," the audit said.

    The audit said there were "significant weaknesses" in the government's oversight of the contract, which created "an environment that was conducive to waste and inefficiency."

From:  www.truthout.org

July 21, 2008

7-21-08 Yes, More KBR Fraud and Corruption

Besides incompetence and indifference to the electrocution of soldiers, see in this video, information about contaminated water supplied to the troops for bathing and drinking, food/mess hall problems, and generally outrageous waste, fraud and abuse.  I'd ask where the whistleblowers are, but I know many of them are already trying to blow the whistle; no one will listen.  And apparently, those whistleblowers are enduring extreme retribution.  Why are contractors who commit such acts not arrested, tried and dealt with in a just way?  Why is this allowed to go on and on and on?  -GFS

Go to Brass Check at the following link:

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Brass Check TV:  What is the war in Iraq for?

To get the oil? To protect the dollar?
Regime change?

Probably all those things, but don't
forget, while it's bringing suffering
to millions, it's the pay day of the
century for Bush insiders.

That's the real reason they
don't want to "cut and run."

Here's how one administration
favorite is poisoning US troops,
getting paid for it, and getting
away with it:

http://www.brasschecktv.com/page/369.html

- Brasscheck
- Brasscheck

P.S. Please share Brasscheck TV e-mails and
videos with friends and colleagues.

That's how we grow. Thanks.

July 20, 2008

Gates Separates Air Force from Next Tanker Decision

Someone sent me this today to follow up on the Tanker Deal 2 Debacle… -GFS

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(From Military.com, 17 Jul 08)

Tanker Decision Out of Air Force Hands

July 09, 2008

Military.com | by Colin Clark

Defense Secretary Robert Gates has stripped the Air Force of authority to decide who will get the new contract award for the KC-X tanker.

Gates, who made the announcement at a July 9 Pentagon news conference, said the DoD hoped to issue a new contract before the end of the year. Undersecretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology and Logistics John Young will make the decision whether to award the tanker buy to the Northrop Grumman-EADS team or Boeing, Gates said.

Video: Pentagon Will Reopen $35B Tanker Bid

The Air Force awarded a $49 billion contract on Feb. 29 for 179 refueling tankers to Northrop Grumman and European Aeronautic Defense and Space to replace Cold War era KC-135 Stratotanker jets, beating out Boeing Co. which many thought had a lock on the contract.

After congressional uproar, Boeing protested the decision to the Government Accountability Office which ruled in mid-June that significant errors had been made during the bidding process.

The re-bid decision also creates a new advisory commission overseeing the new contract process, Gates added. Young, who spoke later in the press conference, said that once the contract is awarded he expects the Air Force to resume management of the program, signaling that service still retains the fundamental confidence of the Pentagon's senior acquisition officials.

But Congress is going to play a major role in this rebid - which pits one of America's defense giants against a European conglomerate -- and the defense secretary made very clear he knew lawmakers would be watching, noting that his office had informed the main congressional committee leaders of his decision earlier in the day.

For its part, Boeing issued cautious praise of Gates' decision.

"We welcome the decision by Defense Secretary Robert Gates not to proceed with the contract award to Northrop Grumman/EADS and to reopen the KC-X tanker competition," a company official said in a statement. "However, we remain concerned that a renewed Request for Proposals (RFP) may include changes that significantly alter the selection criteria as set forth in the original solicitation."

And Northrop Grumman launched a confident salvo of its own.

"We are reviewing the decision to ensure the re-competition will provide both companies a fair opportunity to present the strengths of their proposals," said Northrop Grumman spokesman Randy Belote. "The United States Air Force has already picked the best tanker, and we are confident that it will do so again."

Soon after Gates spoke, Boeing supporter Sen. Maria Cantwell (D-Wash.) kept the pressure on with a statement calling for "a real bid not a rehash," adding that "Congress must play a strong oversight role…."

She repeated a call made in a July 7 letter to Senate Armed Services Committee leaders for a full committee hearing to consider "several classified issues of concern that must be fully investigated" relating to the tanker deal. In her latest statement Cantwell said that if the Defense Department does "not address these concerns, it's a non-starter and I will place a hold on the nominations of the Secretary of the Air Force and ask that this information be declassified for public debate. This issue is too important to have another whitewashed contracting process."

Sen. Richard Shelby (R-Ala.) who wants to see Northrop Grumman's tanker jobs come to his state, said Gates' decision was "the best of all options," adding that the plan is "an appropriate solution to remedy the minor procedural flaws the GAO found in the initial award."

The chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, Rep. Ike Skelton (D-Mo.) issued a short statement saying he had spoken with Gates this morning and had "confidence in Secretary Young and I hope he can assemble the right people to move ahead with this important contract in a reasonable period of time."

Michael Donley, acting Air Force Secretary, spoke after Gates and tried to puncture one of the increasingly common assumptions arising from the Government Accountability Office's criticisms of the Air Force decision to award the tanker deal to Northrop Grumman, that the Air Force's acquisition system is broken.

He conceded the "need to rebuild confidence in" the military's ability to award and manage large contracts but said he did not believe the Air Force's systems was "fatally flawed."

Contracts and Falsified Bids: GAO Report

Once again, more corruption…   The GAO continues to try to investigate, write scathing reports, and yet nothing really gets done.  This is only one of many.   -GFS

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Bids for Work Falsified, GAO Reports
$100 Million in Contracts for Distressed Zones Go to Firms Operating Elsewhere

By Anita Huslin
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, July 18, 2008; D04

Over the past two years, at least 10 Washington area companies have won more than $100 million in prime government contracts set aside for small businesses in economically distressed areas by claiming they had residency in those communities.

A Government Accountability Office report released yesterday challenged those claims and said the agency plans to ask the Small Business Administration's inspector general to investigate.

The GAO said it reviewed records for 17 Washington area companies participating in the program and found that 10 allegedly failed to meet SBA requirements that their primary offices be based in an economically distressed zone and that at least 35 percent of their employees live in one.

In one instance, a roofing contractor with a $4.1 million Air Force contract listed his business as being in a Landover distressed zone. When government investigators visited, the office was in half of a duplex and a person who identified himself as a vice president said no employees worked there. According to payroll records, only 12 percent of the company's employees lived in the zone, the GAO said.

In another, an engineering company listed its primary address as the second floor of a house in Northeast Washington that had been converted into a dentist's office, but its Web site locates the company in McLean and employees answer the phone there. Audrey Price, president of the company, Quantum Dynamics, said she has an open-ended arrangement with the dentist for the space above his office. Her company is planning to move soon from McLean to Macon, Ga.

"We are preparing a complete response to the SBA and expect to be exonerated as far what the GAO is saying," she said by telephone.

In another case, investigators went to the address of CSI Engineering (DC/PC) in Greenbelt and found the office locked and several days of mail piled outside the door. The company president said he has two companies with similar names; one is in Greenbelt and another in Beltsville, which is not in an economically distressed zone.

"We do all of the engineering in Greenbelt every day," said CSI Engineering president Dave Ghosal, who works in Beltsville. "There's a lot of turnover in people, but if you call, there are people there" in Greenbelt. "The names, I think, are a little confusing."

The GAO discussed its findings yesterday during a hearing before the House Committee on Small Business. The report found fault with the SBA's oversight.

As a test of the program's screening process, investigators created fictitious companies and submitted applications for the Historically Underutilized Business Zone program. Four of them won certification, even though one listed a Starbucks as its company address and the employee and company information was fabricated on all the applications, GAO investigators told committee members.

"We created the bogus companies to test fraud controls, the gateway to the money," said Gregory Kutz, managing director of forensic audits and special investigations for the GAO. "That miserably failed."

The GAO said the program relies on limited documentation and there is little follow-up by the SBA. As a result, some companies rent space in a HUB zone to win certification, but then move elsewhere, investigators said.

After the hearing, SBA officials released a statement outlining steps they will take to correct problems and said they have already moved to rectify problems such as program maps that incorrectly designate HUB zones. Bad maps have resulted in ineligible small businesses participating in the program and in eligible businesses being blocked out, the GAO report said.

SBA officials said they would work on their internal systems to improve the verification process. Last year, administration officials quashed legislation that would have required on-site visits of applicants and other measures to ensure businesses' eligibility, calling them "burdensome or undesirable."

Under federal contracting rules, agencies are to award 3 percent of their annual contracts to qualified companies in HUB zones. In 2003 to 2006, the percentage of prime contracting dollars fell about 33 percent short of the statutory goal in 2006, according to the GAO.

Link to Original:  http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/07/17/AR2008071702760_pf.html