2008 – KBR’s 5th Year Of LOGCAP Fraud, Waste & Abuse

When I first came up with this idea to do a recap of KBR activity for 2008, I didn’t think it would take me three days to do the research and compile all the info. I haven’t been following everything that KBR has been up to. That would take a full-time “staff”. I found out things I didn’t even know were going on. And after all that research…all I can really say is…if it walks like a duck and talks like a duck….it must be a freakin’ duck!

I tried to get my dates as accurate as possible. If I’m incorrect, send me an email and I will correct it. If I missed something, send me an email and I will add it.

January 2008

01/02/2008SSG Ryan Maseth is electrocuted in his shower and dies at Radwaniyah Palace Complex in Baghdad, Iraq due to shoddy electrical work. Army Criminal Investigations Command (CID) opens investigation into manner of death.
01/??/2008 – KBR employee, Dawn Leamon was drugged and brutally raped in her room at Camp Harper in Southern Iraq.
01/25/2008KBR employee pleads guilty to conspiring to receive bribes, making false statements and filing false claims for his part in the Bagram AFB fuel scam. He was sentenced on April 11, 2008 to 26 months in prison, 3 years post prison supervision and restitution. (added to list on 01/04/09)

February 2008

02/27/2008 -KBR employee Tracy K Barker was raped in Basra, Iraq. – Another of KBR’s rape victims to come forward

March 2008

03/09/2008AP Exclusive – US troops may have become sick in Iraq from contaminated water supplied by KBR
03/12/2008Pentagon Dismisses KBR Contaminated Water: Troops Should ‘Just Drink Bottled Water’
03/19/08 – Cheryl Harris, SSG Ryan Maseth’s mother files “Wrongful Death” lawsuit against KBR in Pennsylvania.

April 2008

04/09/2008 – Former KBR employees Dawn Leamon and Mary Beth Kineston testify before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee about their rapes in Iraq – Closing Legal Loopholes:Prosecuting Sexual Assaults And Other Violent Crimes Committed Overseas By American Civilians In A Combat Environment
04/28/2008 – Senate DPC Hearing – Contracting Abuses in Iraq:Is the Bush Administration Safeguarding American Taxpayer Dollars? – KBR employees working in Iraq stole weapons, artwork and even gold to make spurs for cowboy boots, two former company workers told Senate Democrats.

May 2008

05/09/2008 – Former KBR employee and Jamie Leigh Jones gang rape case goes to trial instead of arbitration!
05/25/2008 – 9 former KBR employees file suit for sodium dichromate exposure.

June 2008

06/02/2008 – My first blog post about KBR and the soldier electrocutions. (It’s important to me!)
06/11/2008 – The Army Criminal Investigations Command (CID) finds SSG Ryan Maseth’s death was an “accident”. (CID reopens investigation 08/29/2008)
06/20/2008 – Senate DPC Hearing – The Exposure at Qarmat Ali: Contractor Misconduct and the Safety of U.S. Troops in Iraq Former KBR employees testify about how KBR knowingly exposed US Troops and their own employees to Hexavalent Chromium (Chrom-6).
06/20/2008 – Group demands that California Public Employees’ Retirement System (CALPERS) dump KBR Inc stocks. What a great idea!!!

July 2008

07/01/2008 – Senator Casey expresses concerns about KBR performing own electrical inspections.
07/09/2008 – Senate DPC Hearing – Safeguarding Taxpayer Dollars in Iraq: An Insider’s View of Questionable Contracting Practices by KBR and the Pentagon Former Chief of the Field Support Command Division testifies to personally witnessing KBR submitting over $1 billion in unsupported charges.
07/11/2008 – Senate DPC Hearing – Contractor Misconduct and the Electrocution Deaths of American Soldiers in Iraq Mothers Cheryl Harris, Larraine McGee, Soldier Rachel McNeil and Electricians Debbie Crawford and Jeff Bliss testify to shoddy electrical work done by KBR.
07/17/2008 - The H.R. HEART Act of 2008 goes into affect. KBR can no longer avoid paying millions in Social Security and Medicare taxes. To bad it’s not retroactive.
07/17/2008Fisher v. Halliburton – KBR Lawsuit Revived – The “Good Friday Massacre.” Friday, April 9, 2004. KBR truck drivers were sent out on convoy when KBR was told they would be attacked.
07/18/2008Electrical Risks at Bases in Iraq Worse Than Previously Said
07/18/2008Senators Want Independent Safety Review of KBR’s Electrical Work in Iraq
07/21/2008Larraine McGee, mother of SSG Christopher Everett file suit against KBR for his electrocution death at Camp Taqqadum.
07/30/2008 – Committee on Oversight and Government Reform hold hearings on Deficient Electrical Systems at U.S. Facilities in Iraq KBR’s Tom Bruni, the DoD and DCMA are totally humiliated by the Committee for their shoddy work and lack of oversight.

August 2008

08/??/2008 – KBR changes it’s qualification requirements for it’s electricians requiring them to be licensed. It also increases journeyman wages to $3750 base and masters to $5000 base. Finally!!!
08/12/2008 – Curtis Coffey files suit. Iraq Injury Spurs Class Action Against KBR
08/27/2008 -KBR, Partner in Iraq Contract Sued in Human Trafficking Case – Suit Alleges Slavery
08/29/2008 – The Army Criminal Investigations Command (CID) re-opens the investigation into the cause of SSG Ryan Maseth’s death.

September 2008

09/??/2008Task Force Safe is implemented to inspect the electrical wiring at 90,000 DoD facilities including those maintained by KBR.
09/03/2008Former KBR Exec pleads guilty to bribery and is sentenced to seven years.
09/11/2008 – KBR issued Level III Corrective Action Request (CAR) by the DCMA in Iraq.
09/27/2008Electrical Review Turns Up 3700 fires Not The 483 Reported!
09/29/2008IBEW Urges Electrical Safety In Iraq

October 2008

10/??/2008 – KBR claims all electrical work in Iraq was done to British Standards
10/10/2008Former KBR employee gets 3 years for child porn in Iraq
10/24/2008Pentagon Finds Company Violated Its Contract on Electrical Work in Iraq – NY Times

November 2008

11/24/2008Contractor (KBR) for military committed serious violations-CNN
11/26/2008Suit claims Halliburton, KBR sickened base - Ice tainted with body fluids, rotten food and contaminated water.

December 2008

12/03/2008 – KBR involved in Human Trafficking…again.
12/08/2008Indiana National Guard file suit against KBR for chemical exposure at Qarmat Ali water plant.
12/29/2008New York City Comptroller William C. Thompson, Jr., on behalf of the New York City Pension Funds demands answers. I hope more Pension Funds SELL their KBR and HALLIBURTON shares because of the Waste, Fraud & Abuse in Iraq!!!
12/31/2008 – The last day for Contractor Immunity in Iraq

What I’d like to see for 2009

  • I want to know if KBR is invoicing the DoD (and therefore the American Taxpayer) for the costs associated with defending itself in the cases of “wrongful death” of soldiers, the Qarmat Ali chemical exposures, the Human Trafficking suits, the employee rape suits and any other cases that have to do with LOGCAP.
  • I would like to see the Army Criminal Investigations Command (CID) finalize their investigation in the Soldier electrocution cases, file criminal charges, and send out a press release on the above!!
  • I would like to see the Army Criminal Investigations Command (CID) open an investigation into the chemical exposure of our soldiers and civilians at Qarmat Ali. Is there one already? Send me an email.
  • I would like to start a “grass roots” campaign to get pension funds, retirement accounts and others to sell their shares of KBR and Halliburton stocks.  Yes…they are making money now. But drug cartels make money too and we don’t invest in them…at least knowingly.  I could use some help here! Email me.
  • I would like to see more Human Trafficking Organizations get involved in KBR’s Human Trafficking in the middle east.
  • I would like to see Congress demand an all out independent audit of KBR invoices and payments.
  • I would like to see Congress find out exactly what KBR charged the DoD for man hours worked. Did they charge more than straight time for overtime? Did they charge uplift for every hour worked and then only pay for 40 hours?
  • And most of all, what I would like to see for 2009 is KBR senior executives sentenced to prison for their part in the negligent deaths of US soldiers and US Civilians, human trafficking of third world laborers and the fleecing of the American taxpayer.

Happy New Year

Ms Sparky

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Forced Labor Is Not Against The Law…Says KBR

Nepalis’ Iraq murder case in US court

PRITHVI MAN SHRESTHA
KATHMANDU, Dec 30 – The hearing on a human trafficking case filed against prominent U.S. military contractor Kellogg Brown and Root Inc. (KBR) operating in Iraq on behalf of families of 12 Nepalis killed in Iraq in 2004 will begin on January 12 next year at the District Court of California, Los Angeles.

The US based law firm Cohen Milstein, which has been fighting against the wrongdoings of big corporations, had filed a lawsuit on August 27 this year with the help of Buddhi Prasad Gurung as witness.

Gurung was in another car and was thus not kidnapped by an Iraqi insurgent group, while 12 others were kidnapped and subsequently killed.

Cohen Milstein Attorney Mathew K. Handley who also worked as a peace corps volunteer in Nepal from 1997 to 1999, said on Monday that the court would decide after the hearing whether the case could be termed “human trafficking”.

“If the court decides the case can qualify as human trafficking, it will move ahead,” he said at a press meet adding, “Otherwise, the case will be scrapped.”

It is the first time Nepali citizens have sought protection of their human rights in a U.S. court, according to him.

His law firm has claimed in its lawsuit that KBR was involved in human trafficking as the 13 men were in the process of being transported to a U.S. military base in Iraq against their will.  It has been argued in the lawsuit that they were transported to Iraq after their passports were confiscated in Jordan by its Jordan based sub-contractor Daoud and Partner before they were taken to Iraq.

However, on November 22, KBR asked the court to dismiss the complaint arguing that the Nepali men were not deceived and trafficked. Forced labour and involuntary servitude are not violations of international law, according to KBR argument.  (Click HERE for entire article)

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A Soldier’s Night Before Christmas

Twas the night before Christmas, he lived all alone
In a one bedroom house made of plaster & stone.

I had come down the chimney with presents to give
And to see just who in this home did live.

I looked all about a strange sight I did see,
No tinsel, no presents, not even a tree.

No stocking by the fire, just boots filled with sand,
On the wall hung pictures of far distant lands.

With medals and badges, awards of all kind
A sober thought came through my mind.

For this house was different, so dark and dreary,
I knew I had found the home of a soldier, once I could see clearly.

I heard stories about them, I had to see more
So I walked down the hall and pushed open the door.

And there he lay sleeping silent alone,
Curled up on the floor in his one bedroom home.

His face so gentle, his room in such disorder,
Not how I pictured a United States soldier.

Was this the hero of whom I’d just read?
Curled up in his poncho, a floor for his bed?

His head was clean shaven, his weathered face tan,
I soon understood this was more then a man.

For I realized the families that I saw that night
Owed their lives to these men who were willing to fight.

Soon ‘round the world, the children would play,
And grownups would celebrate on a bright Christmas day.

They all enjoyed freedom each month of the day,
Because of soldiers like this one lying here.

I couldn’t help wonder how many lay alone
On a cold Christmas Eve in a land far from home.

Just the very thought brought a tear to my eye,
I dropped to my knees and started to cry.

The solder awakened and I heard a rough voice,
“Santa don’t cry, this life is my choice;

I fight for freedom, I don’t ask for more,
My life is my God, my country, my Corps.”

With that he rolled over and drifted off into sleep,
I couldn’t control it, I continued to weep.

I watched him for hours, so silent and still,
I noticed he shivered from the cold night’s chill.

So I took off my jacket, the one made of red,
And I covered this Soldier from his toes to his head.

And I put on his T-shirt of gray and black,
With an eagle and an Army patch embroidered on back.

And although it barely fit me, I began to swell with pride,
And for a shining moment, I was United States Army deep inside.

I didn’t want to leave him on that cold dark night,
This guardian of honor so willing to fight.

Then the soldier rolled over, whispered with a voice so clean and pure,
“Carry on Santa, it’s Christmas day, all is secure.”

One look at my watch, and I knew he was right,
Merry Christmas my friend, and to all a good night!

The orgins of this poem are as many as the versions. You can check those out at Snopes.com

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Did Contractor Expose Troops To Toxin? (CBS Video)

I challenge you to watch this video and then tell me that KBR Corporate cares about their client. Keep in mind they not only knowingly exposed their client, they exposed their own employees. Someone needs to go to prison for this. Army Criminal Investigations Unit (CID), I challenge you….to find KBR criminally negligent for this exposure.

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Depleted Uranium Weapons Kill US Soldiers In Iraq

While doing research on the burn pits and Depleted Uranium (DU)weapons, this article was sent to me. Unbelievable. How many people…soldiers and civilians have been exposed to depleted Uranium in Iraq and Afghanistan. Any soldier or civilian that worked on tanks or other vehicles that used DU weapons or that had been hit by DU weapons are at risk. Any soldier or civilian that went into an area where one of these weapons was detonated is at risk. How many KBR employees and soldiers have contracted some form of cancer and don’t know why. This is another damn Chrom-6 cover-up!!!

I think it is time for Congress to call for an all out medical assessment on every person that has gone to Iraq and Afghanistan. This is damn ridiculous that that we have to find out about this through the damn rumor mill! Not to mention soldiers and their families are being denied benefits. I am disgusted with the total disregard the military shows for our soldiers and civilians. Where is the damn CID!! A crime has been committed. If anyone has information, memo’s, emails, safety bulletins regarding depleted uranium exposure. Email me.

Depleted Uranium Kills Indiscriminately

Dustin Brim, 21, of Daytona Beach, Florida, in Iraq in February 2004. Within two months Dustin would be severely afflicted with massive cancerous tumors that would prevent him from breathing and eating normally. Within seven months he would succumb to lymphoma at Walter Reed Hospital, age 22, a completely unnecessary and very tragic death from depleted uranium poisoning.

by Christopher Bollyn
American Free Press
January 29, 2006

ORMOND BEACH, Florida – An alarmingly high percentage of U.S. military personnel who have served in Iraq have been afflicted by a variety of health problems commonly known as Gulf War Syndrome. Exposure to uranium spread through the use of depleted uranium (DU) weapons is thought to be the primary cause of the high rate of chronic ailments and mortality among Gulf War vets.

While initial casualties from the first U.S. invasion of Iraq were light, long-term casualties from the 1991 war ultimately exceeded 30 percent, according to Terrell E. Arnold, former Chairman of the Department of International Studies at the National War College. The long-term casualty rate from the current war in Iraq, Arnold says, is likely to be much higher.

Official statistics of killed and wounded from the 15-year long war against Iraq do not reflect the veterans whose service-related injuries only become apparent after they return from Iraq. The official death rate of those killed and wounded in Iraq does not include these vets, many of whom suffer slow and painful deaths as a direct result of their service. Dustin Brim was one of them.

Lori Brim lost Dustin, her only child, when he died at Walter Reed Hospital in Washington at the age of 22 on Sept. 24, 2004, after a six-month battle with what was eventually diagnosed as Non-Hodgkins Diffuse Large Cell B Type Lymphoma. When Mrs. Brim asked the doctors how her young, healthy, strong son had contracted cancer all they would say was “bad luck”.

Her caseworker and nurses at the hospital were more forthcoming with information. At different times during the six months nurses would take Mrs. Brim aside and urge her off the record to do some research on DU.

Asked whose idea it was for Dustin to join the Army in summer 2002, Mrs. Brim said, “It was mine.”

As a single mother, Mrs. Brim had approached an Army recruiter out of concern for the well-being of her son. She thought the Army would be good for her son by giving him some discipline and direction.

Dustin had not wanted to join the Army, his mother said. But Dustin was never meant to be in a war zone, she added. The U.S. Army recruiter had promised her, that as her only child, he would not be sent to war.

Mechanically inclined, Dustin became an Army mechanic, an E-4 specialist serving in the 1st Maintenance Company under the 541st Maintenance Battalion from Fort Riley, Kan., and was deployed to Iraq in August 2003.

Dustin’s work in Iraq involved working on disabled Army vehicles, including tanks, which his unit repaired and retrieved, or if damaged beyond repair, destroyed with explosives on the spot. Most of these vehicles, having been in the battlefield, would have been heavily laden with DU and other toxins.

Dr. Doug Rokke, former director of the U.S. Army’s Depleted Uranium Project, said that mechanics like Dustin are not properly prepared or protected to be working on DU contaminated vehicles.

Mrs. Brim said that her son had not even been equipped with a pair of gloves, let alone a mask or protective garb. The Army’s failure to inform and instruct its personnel about the dangers of DU exposure is one of Rokke’s main concerns.

At Christmas 2003, Dustin surprised his parents with a visit home. It was the last time Mrs. Brim would see her son in a healthy condition. A photo of Dustin taken in Iraq in February 2004 shows him smiling and strong.

In early March, however, Dustin began to complain of abdominal pains. He went to the doctors on his base 11 times during the month complaining of severe pain and constipation that lasted for weeks. He was sent back to his job and told to “work it out.”

During the last two weeks of March, he wrote to his mother telling her that his pain was unbearable.

On March 31 he passed out from pain and breathlessness. His sergeant happened to be with him and took him to the doctors who thought he had gall bladder problems and sent him to the hospital in Baghdad. The next day, April 1, was Dustin’s 22nd birthday. After being assessed and heavily drugged, the doctors allowed him to call home to tell his mother that he had cancer.

In Baghdad, the doctors had discovered that Dustin had a huge cancerous tumor on his esophagus, which severely restricted his breathing, a collapsed lung, the loss of a kidney, numerous blood clots and a tumor progressing on his liver. The doctors could not believe that Dustin had been turned away so many times for medical help and still manage to endure as long as he did in his magnitude of pain while carrying an 80-pound pack on his back, his mother said. Dustin was flown to the military hospital in Landstuhl, Germany, and then to Walter Reed Hospital.

“The story of Dustin Brim is just one more avoidable tragedy of our insane use of uranium munitions,” Rokke said.

“When I lost Dustin, I lost myself,” Mrs. Brim said. “This is something that should not have happened. There is something going on but no one wants to talk about it on the record. I am sharing my son’s story with you in the hope that perhaps it will make a difference.”

Photo – Dustin Brim, 21, of Daytona Beach, Florida, in Iraq in February 2004. Within two months Dustin would be severely afflicted with massive cancerous tumors that would prevent him from breathing and eating normally. Within seven months he would succumb to lymphoma at Walter Reed Hospital, age 22, a completely unnecessary and very tragic death from depleted uranium poisoning.

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James Risen-Committed Investigative Reporter

Jim Risen of the New York Times has always been very thorough and effective with his reporting of issues in Iraq. His coverage of the electrical issues has been key in getting the changes implemented that will save the lives of soldiers and civilians.

I applaud him for standing his ground, risking jail time and not divulging his sources. He won’t be bullied. I totally understand that.

I wish more news media would cover the tough stories. Too many times I have given accurate and factual information about KBR, the DoD or Iraq to the news media and it was “caboshed” because attorney’s got in the way. Too afraid of lawsuits. I guess companies like KBR can be intimidating with their limitless supply of attorney’s. Well…we will keep supplying the info and sooner or later it will get publicized.

Thanks Jim.

Ms Sparky

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Troops Worried About Exposure To The Burn Pits

Effects of toxic smoke worry troops returning from Iraq

By Adam Levine
December 15, 2008
CNN Supervising Pentagon Producer

WASHINGTON (CNN) — The pervasive smoke spewing from the junk heap at Balad Air Force Base in Iraq is causing many returning troops to be concerned about the effects on their long-term health.

Studies of the smoke from the burn pits suggests it contains dioxin and other toxins.

Studies of the smoke from the burn pits suggests it contains dioxin and other toxins.

For four years, the burn pit was a festering dump, spewing acrid smoke over the base, including housing and the hospital.

Until three incinerators were installed, the smelly pit was the only place to dispose of trash, including plastics, food and medical waste.

“At the peak, before they went to use the real industrial incinerators, it was about 500,000 pounds a day of stuff,” according to a transcript of an April 2008 presentation by Dr. Bill Halperin, who heads the Occupational and Environmental Health Subcommittee at the Defense Health Board. “The way it was burned was by putting jet fuel on it.”

A lawsuit filed against the burn pit operators, KBR, by a contractor alleges the burn pit also contained body parts. Video Watch burn pits spew black smoke »

“Wild dogs in the area raided the burn pit and carried off human remains. The wild dogs could be seen roaming the base with body parts in their mouths,” says the lawsuit filed in Texas federal court.

Aside from Balad, there are similar pits at bases elsewhere in Iraq and Afghanistan. Some still have no incinerators. Click HERE to read the rest of this amazing story!!

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FBI: Remains of Ronald Schulz recovered in Iraq

FBI: Remains of ND civilian recovered in Iraq

Thursday, October 30, 2008
By JAMES MacPHERSON, Associated Press Writer

BISMARCK, N.D. —  The remains of a North Dakota civilian taken hostage and killed in Iraq nearly three years ago have been recovered along with remains believed to be those of his fiancee, an interpreter for the military, his sister and FBI officials said.

Ronald Schulz’s family plans a burial Saturday in Jamestown, a day after his remains are expected to arrive in his hometown.

Schulz’s remains and those of the Kurdish woman to whom he was engaged were found by the U.S. military in a grave in September and were turned over to the government, FBI agent E.K. Wilson said Wednesday. He would not say what led the military to the remains.

The Islamic Army in Iraq claimed in December 2005 that it had killed the 40-year-old Schulz, of Eagle River, Alaska. He was working as an electrician when he was kidnapped.

Schulz’s sister, Julie, of Jamestown, said Wednesday that U.S. officials notified the family about a month ago that they believed her brother’s remains had been recovered, along with those of Susan Bushra, an interpreter for the U.S. military, in Iraq.

Julie Schulz said the FBI confirmed her brother’s remains through dental records and DNA provided by family members.

“They were fairly certain it was him before they came to us,” Schulz said.

Wilson said Wednesday that Bushra’s remains have not been positively identified. Schulz says her brother met Bushra in Iraq.

For the Schulz family, the news brings some sense of closure.

“This is a good thing but a hard thing,” Julie Schulz said. “It bothered us for all these years because we were unable to bring him home.”

Wilson said the FBI and the military considers the case open.

Family members have said they identified Schulz in two videos from insurgents, one showing a man held hostage and another showing a blindfolded, kneeling man being shot in the back of the head. The second video included Schulz’s identification card.

“We knew he was the one in the second video and it was very clear he was dead,” Schulz said. “But there was always that doubt when you don’t have a body.”

A memorial service was held for Schulz in January 2006 in Jamestown. A state judge in April 2006 issued a presumptive death certificate.

Schulz’s family has said he was captured in Iraq on or about Nov. 25, 2005. They said he had worked earlier in Iraq as a contractor for more than a year. He and Bushra had planned to return to his home in Alaska.

Schulz graduated from Jamestown High School in 1983, then joined the Marines. His family said he served in the Marine Corps from 1984 to 1991 before moving to Alaska. (end of article)

I worked with Ron Schultz in the Green Zone. He was one of the KBR electrical foreman on the Palace rewire project. There was a lot of controversy surrounding his dissappearance. I am glad his family can finally find closure. I am surprised that I missed this when it was published. Obviously didn’t make the main stream media!

Ms Sparky

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Posted in Miscellaneous. Tags: , . No Comments »

KBR Investigating Human Rights Issues?

BAGHDAD — The U.S. military and defense contractor KBR are investigating possible human-rights abuses at a compound near the Baghdad airport where a Kuwaiti company housed about 1,000 Asian men it recruited for jobs in Iraq that didn’t materialize.

About 400 of the men continue to wait for flights back to their home countries more than a week after officials from Najlaa International Catering Services said they were planning to repatriate the men.

The others were sent home, a Sri Lankan who’s still living on the grounds said Friday.

“We’re tired of their drama. We just want to leave,” said Manoj Kodithuwakku, 28.

The men’s plight was first reported Dec. 2.

The men — from Bangladesh, India, Nepal and Sri Lanka — reported paying middlemen $2,000 or more to get to Iraq, meaning that they’ll probably go home in debt.

Their jobs with Najlaa would have paid them about $600 to $800 a month.

KBR, a Houston contractor, is involved because it has managed Najlaa’s work in Iraq.  (End of Article)

I have huge issues with KBR involved in any investigation where KBR is involved. This is another “Fox watching the henhouse” situation…to which I testifified when the DoD tasked KBR to inspect it’s own electrical work.

Is there absolsutely no idependant oversight in Iraq? KBR knew this was going on. KBR as always known this was going on.  Give me a freakin’ break!!!

Ms Sparky

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U.S. troops exposed to toxins? – CNN Burn Pit Video

The DoD has a lot to lose by admitting they were wrong to expose 100’s of thousands of troops and civilians to air born toxins. Do I think the DoD would lie to protect themselves? HELL YES!!!

Tell me what do you think?

Update: This link was just sent to me: Great info:

Petraeus: Military studying burn pit fumes

Ms Sparky

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Ms Sparky’s Request For Information

Unless you have been stranded on a deserted island somewhere, you couldn’t help but hear the negative news coverage on KBR this past month. There’s the whole unresolved and questionable Level III CAR issue. The criminal investigation into SSG Ryan Maseth’s electrocution. Then an Indiana National Guard unit filed suit against KBR for knowingly exposing them to Hexavalent Chromium. Then there are the problems with KBR’s labor contractor Najlaa and their human trafficking issues. There’s the whole Burn Pit issues. And don’t forget the dogs and the human body parts issue. Poor ole KBR just can’t catch a break. They have just had the worst luck this month with public relations. And Heather Brown is starting to sound like Baghdad Bob….

Baghdad Bob: “There are no American infidels in Baghdad. Never!”

Heather Brown: “KBR does not in any way condone or tolerate illegal or unethical behavior.”

Does anyone else see the similarities there? I could go on and on but that’s not what this post is about.

We need more information from YOU!! We need first hand accounting’s, internal emails, photos, reports on the following just to name a few:

KBR’s Level III/IV CAR, Task Force Safe, the electrical inspections, KBR’s response to the CAR, KBR’s response to the electrical inspections.

Information regarding the investigation into SSG Ryan Maseth’s electrocution death at Radwaniyah Palace Compound.

Information regarding the investigation into SSG Christopher Everett’s electrocution death at Camp Taqqadum.

Anything on the burns pits at Balad or anywhere else.

Anything on Hexavalent Chromium (Sodium Dichromate) exposure at Qarmat Ali water plant in Iraq, any other locations in Iraq, Baghram AFB or any other locations in Afghanistan.

Anything on human trafficking and TCN/SCW abuses in Iraq, Kuwait and Afghanistan.

This list is not “all inclusive”. If you have information about fraud, waste or abuse or something that is unethical or immoral. Leave a comment or send me an email. I will do my best to get you in touch with the right investigative committee or the news media. NO MORE SECRETS!!! You may think your information is not important. But maybe combined with other information it is the key!!!

Do not let KBR intimidate you.

Ms Sparky

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Loss Of Immunity For US Contractors Retroactive

US-IRAQ:  Immunity Recedes for Private Contractors

By William Fisher

NEW YORK, Dec 5 (IPS) – The virtually total impunity from prosecution accorded to private contractors in Iraq may be coming to an end.

Under the new Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA) approved by the Iraqi government last week, U.S. contractors will be subject to Iraqi law for the first time. Moreover, some observers believe that Iraq may be able to hold them legally accountable for offenses allegedly committed even before the SOFA was approved.

And, at the other end of the U.S-Iraq equation, after months of seeming inactivity — marked by continuing doubts about whether the U.S. even has legal jurisdiction over the contractors — the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) may soon bring charges against three to six contractor-employed security guards for their involvement in the shooting of 17 Iraqi civilians in Baghdad in September 2007.

The guards are employees of Blackwater Worldwide, the largest and most high-profile player in the massive army of private contractors employed by the U.S. in Iraq.

The U.S. media is reporting that charges against the Blackwater employees may be based on a 1980s-era anti-drug law, even though drugs were not involved in the Blackwater shooting. The Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1988, passed to help stem the nation’s crack epidemic, calls for 30-year prison terms for using machine guns to commit violent crimes of any kind, even where drugs are not involved. Prosecutors are reportedly reviewing draft indictments for manslaughter and assault.

The Blackwater guards — decorated military veterans hired to protect U.S. diplomats overseas — were responding to a car bombing when a shooting erupted at a crowded Baghdad intersection. The guards allegedly opened fire with government-issued machine guns and turret guns mounted on their armoured trucks. Blackwater claims its convoy was ambushed by insurgents. Eyewitnesses say the guards were unprovoked. (Read the rest of the story here…)

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Posted in LOGCAP-KBR. Tags: , , , . No Comments »

KBR’s Human Trafficking Labor Contractor-See Video

It is incomprehensible to anyone with any common sense to think this is something new and that KBR was not aware of this and other human rights violations. They continue to reward this contractor and others by continuing to use their services. That encourages this kind of situation.

KBR is as guilty at this labor contractor and others. And….where in the hell is the MILITARY OVERSIGHT!!!

Ms Sparky

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Balad Burn Pits-A Families Tragic Reality

This is my deceased husband, Major Kevin E. Wilkins, RN, whom was with the 920th ASTS Reserve Unit at Patrick AFB, Florida. He went on his first tour to Balad, Iraq, May 2006 to August 2006 where he cared for our critically injured soldiers and civilians at the Balad Air Force Base Hospital while being assigned to the 332nd Expeditionary Medical Operations Squadron. His second tour was January 2007 through April 2007 where he was assigned to the CCAT team flying missions in and out of various areas transporting our soldiers to various hospitals. Kevin’s headaches started approximately 6 to 7 months after his first tour. In the beginning, he just treated his headaches with medication until the medication no longer responded. He had a CAT scan on March 26, 2008 and he died on April 1, 2008 from a brain tumor. The emergency room physician, who did the original CAT scan, asked Kevin if he had been exposed to any chemicals while on tour in Iraq, and Kevin told him about the “burn pit”. The physician told Kevin that the chemicals from the burn pit may have caused the brain mass, and should be investigated. Major Wilkins died within 1 year of his last deployment. Major Wilkins has received many service awards over the years with his last award being, “The Meritorious Service Medal” (First Oak Leaf Cluster) 1January 2005 to April 2008.

Proud Wife of deceased USAF Major Kevin E. Wilkins, RN

Jill R. Wilkins

Here is a link to Special Commentary about USAF Major Kevin E. Wilkins, RN in Angel Wings Magazine, March/April 2008 edition, Page 4 “Not Every Hero Gets A Parade

If you have any information about the Balad Burn Pits or any burn pits in Iraq, or know someone who has died of or developed tumors or other unusual medical conditions please leave a comment on this post or contact me using my “Contact Us” tab at the top of my page.

Ms Sparky

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KBR Allows Dogs To Carry Off Body Parts-suit alleges

Suit claims Halliburton, KBR sickened base

By Kelly Kennedy – Staff writer
Army Times
Posted : Wednesday Dec 3, 2008 18:30:40 EST

A Georgia man has filed a class-action lawsuit against KBR and Halliburton, saying the contractors exposed everyone at Joint Base Balad in Iraq to unsafe water, food and hazardous fumes from the burn pit there.

Joshua Eller, who worked as a civilian computer-aided drafting technician with the 332nd Air Expeditionary Wing, said military personnel, contractors and third-country nationals may have been sickened by contamination at the largest U.S. installation in Iraq, home to more than 30,000 service members, Defense Department civilians and contractor personnel.

“Defendants promised the United States government that they would supply safe water for hygienic and recreational uses, safe food supplies and properly operate base incinerators to dispose of medical waste safely,” according to the lawsuit, filed Nov. 26 in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas. “Defendants utterly failed to perform their promised duties.”

Eller filed his claim after he deployed in February 2006 for 10 months. The lawsuit claims he developed skin lesions that subsequently spread, filled with fluid and burst. He said they went away, then reappeared, followed by blisters on his feet that made it painful for him to walk. He said they healed, but continue to return every three to four months.

Then, Eller said he experienced vomiting, cramping and diarrhea, and continues to suffer severe abdominal pain.

“Plaintiff witnessed the open air burn pit in operation at Balad Air Force Base,” the lawsuit states. “On one occasion, he witnessed a wild dog running around base with a human arm in its mouth. The human arm had been dumped on the open air burn pit by KBR.” (Read the rest of the story here…)

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Ind. Soldiers sue(KBR) over chemical exposure in Iraq

INDIANAPOLIS — Sixteen Indiana National Guard soldiers have filed a federal lawsuit against a defense contractor they say knowingly allowed them to be exposed to a toxic chemical in Iraq.

The suit filed Wednesday against KBR Inc. in U.S. District Court in Indianapolis claims the Guardsmen from a Tell City-based unit were exposed to a carcinogen while protecting an Iraqi water pumping plant shortly after the U.S. invasion in 2003.

The lawsuit says that officials of Houston-based KBR knew at least as early as May 2003 that the plant was contaminated with sodium dichromate, a known carcinogen, but concealed the danger from civilian workers and the soldiers.

The lawsuit says the extent of KBR’s knowledge of the hazard didn’t become clear until congressional hearings this June.

A message seeking comment was left for a KBR spokesman. (End of Article)

For more details about this heinous crime click HERE. I have already received emails that this is not the only location where KBR knowingly exposed employees and troops to hazardous materials. When this can be verified I will blog it!

Update: Here’s a great CNN story that came out today (12/05/08) Click HERE

Ms Sparky

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KBR Contradicts Itself On Human Rights Stand In Iraq

KBR is all over the news…or at least the foreign news. Apparently Americans are more interested in Britney Spears birthday that their tax dollars supporting human trafficking in Iraq!

I have had issues with KBR’s “hands off” policy when it comes to reprimanding labor contractors such as D&P, PPI, UPI, ESS, NASA and others. KBR is currently being sued for Human Trafficking of Napoli workers. I have been blogging about KBR’s involvement in human trafficking for awhile. Click HERE to see those. Be sure to read the astonishing comments from current and former KBR employees.

An article was recently published regarding 1000 Sub Contract Workers (SCW) also known as Third Country Nationals (TCN) being held in deplorable conditions in a warehouse in Baghdad, all promised jobs for KBR. KBR’s response to this article was:

“When KBR becomes aware of potential violations of international laws regarding Trafficking in Persons, we work, within our authority, to remediate the problem and report the matter to proper authorities. KBR then works with authorities to rectify the matter,” the company said in a statement.

Hmmmm. OK. Below is an email I received from a former KBR employee with regards to the quality of food being fed to SCW’s at his camp.

Ms Sparky, here is some info I saved from last year that a senior sub contract administrator put out to all of us – basically telling safety, and all other shops to keep our noses out of “our” subcontractor’s business on how they fed their employees (our SCW’s). There was literally worms in the food and also the same food was given to these young Indian and Nepalese kids everyday. This made a lot of us angry, but you know the old KBR tactic, keep you and me fearful for our own jobs and keep our mouth shut or go home. . . I think this high paid SOB is still around the XX-sites. What a a**hole he was/is. . . we all wanted to tell this SOB “you eat their food then”.

The time frame is May 2007. Evidently, many KBR employees had complained to the Sub Contract Administrator (SCA). When that SCA elevated the concerns to the Procurement Manager, this was his response. Please note-I have removed the name and location of this manager. Although I have no reason to doubt the authenticity, I can not verify the accuracy of this email. I have forwarded this email to the appropriate investigative Senate committee.

To All:

The food is not mandated by KBR, the Military or anyone else. We are to stay out of issues with food and the business of the Subcontractors. We are not dietitian, medics, or Subject Matter Expert on food and diets therefore we cannot impose our opinion on these contracted companies.

KBR will not dictate any food source to any Business that is contracted by the US Government through KBR, no more then we will dictate to the Military what they feed us.

If there are ANY question regarding food you are to send the SCW to discuss this with their Management Staff and stand down from generating issues where when you do not understand that other personnel within KBR have that responsibility. The facilities are in compliant with requirements and we will not determine what other countries are to eat or why they eat the way they do nor do we have any say over their menus or diets.

KBR will not be held liable for imposing food menus on other business based on our feelings where many Nationalities eat differently and the Subcontractors have to meet their needs for their diets. KBR will not be held liable for feeding them incorrect diets.

This is not our issue and KBR will not impose itself in this matter. KBR will hold the subcontracted companies to the Term and Conditions in the Contract.

Best Regards,

(Manager’s Name Removed…For Now)
Procurement Manager
KBRS
XX FOB XXXXXX
APO AE 093XX
Office: 713-XXX-XXXX

I’m sure KBR will have some pat answer for this Manager’s response. But this is how I witnessed KBR deal with the atrocities of their “slave brokers”….I mean labor contractors!

Please comment and tell me your Sub Contract Worker SCW/TCN horror stories. I will pass them on if you want.

Ms Sparky

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KBR Didn’t Know About Human Trafficking?? That’s BS

You just can’t tell me that KBR didn’t have any idea this was going on. Too bad the media can’t get into the FOB’s and Camps to see how KBR’s subcontract employees (TCN’s) live.

Iraqi guards open fire as migrants riot about deportation

Times Online
December 3, 2008
Deborah Haynes, Baghdad

Iraqi guards opened fire above the heads of 1,000 migrant workers who staged a mini-riot today in protest at their poor treatment in Baghdad and the prospect of being sent home without pay.

The men, from Bangladesh, Nepal, India and Sri Lanka, will be flown to Dubai after the Kuwaiti company that hired them failed to secure enough contract work at dining facilities inside a number of US military bases across Iraq. Their passports have also been taken.

“People are getting shot at,” said Manoj Kodithuwakku, a 28-year-old from Sri Lanka, speaking to The Times by mobile phone. The crack of bullets could be heard in the background. “It is pandemonium in here,” he said.

The men were flown to Baghdad over the past three months to work for Najlaa International Catering Services, which is a subcontractor to Kellogg Brown and Root (KBR), a major service provider to the US Department of Defence. (To Continue Reading Click HERE)

KBR subcontractor denies confining workers in Iraq

BAGHDAD (AP) — A Kuwaiti subcontractor doing work for the U.S. military in Iraq denied a report Wednesday that it confined as many as 1,000 workers without money for up to three months in warehouses at the Baghdad airport.

Najlaa International Catering Services said the workers, from South Asia, were being well cared for at airport housing facilities while awaiting assignments at work sites.

“They are living in a decent environment, provided three meals a day, showers and latrine facilities,” Marwan Rezk, the general manager of Najlaa International Catering Services, said of the laborers.

Najlaa is a subcontractor to KBR Inc., the Texas firm that split off last year from Halliburton Co. (To Continue Reading Click HERE)

Where are the human rights organizations of the world?

Ms Sparky

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KBR And Human Trafficking In Iraq

KBR is well aware of these situations. For them to say any different is a bold face lie!

Baghdad’s forgotten migrants who pay for jobs end up lost in hangar ‘hotel’

Deborah Haynes in Baghdad
From The Times
December 3, 2008

He had dreams of coming to Iraq, making his fortune and migrating to Australia. Instead Manoj Kodithuwakku, 28, a Sri Lankan, is stranded in an overcrowded hangar near a US military base with no money, no job and no way out.

Poorly dressed and desperate, he and hundreds of other men from developing countries who came looking for work are living in pitiful conditions. Yesterday The Times entered one of three pale blue hangars that house foreign workers near Baghdad airport. They are full of men who paid a small fortune to come here and have ended up forgotten and trapped.

In the hangars as many as 400 people cram into the lines of bunk beds. Only a few lavatories are still working. There are regular meals but the men say that the food is not good and they receive only one and a half litres of water a day. Health in the camp is poor, they say, and there is nothing for them to do.

The migrant workers burst angrily on to the street yesterday morning to protest against a Kuwaiti-based catering company that they said had promised them work. They accused Najlaa International Catering Services – a subcontractor to Kellogg Brown and Root (KBR), a main service provider to the US Defence Department – of failing to pay their salaries and keeping them in inhumane conditions. (Read the rest of the story here…)

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