Former KBR Manager Ronald Radcliff pleads guilty

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Ex-Army master sergeant pleads guilty to
HONOLULU (AP) — A retired army master sergeant on Friday pleaded guilty to bribery and money laundering charges stemming from his tour of duty in Iraq.

Ronald Joseph Radcliffe, 43, first entered a not guilty plea in May. But on Friday, he changed his plea to guilty as part of an agreement with prosecutors.

Radcliff was in Iraq from January 2004 to February 2005 as a member of the 2nd Brigade, 25th Infantry Division.

While stationed in Kirkuk as a supply official, Radcliffe accepted money from Metin Subasi, a Turkish national, according to the indictment. He then steered Army contracts to several of Subasi’s companies.

He later mailed cash to his girlfriend in Hawaii, telling her to deposit it in the bank in small increments so as not to tip off the Internal Revenue Service, according to the indictment. He also carried cash with him when he visited Hawaii in September 2004.

On Friday, in U.S. District Court in Honolulu Radcliffe admitted receiving at least $37,600 in return for influencing the contracting process.

The money laundering charge arose from transactions involving the proceeds of the bribery.

He faces maximum prison terms of 15 years on one bribery charge and 20 years on one money laundering charge.

At the time of his initial plea in May, Radcliffe was a civilian employee of defense contractor KBR in Afghanistan.

Radcliffe was also initially charged with mail and wire , but those charges will be dropped as part of his plea agreement.

He is free on bail secured by property, the U.S. Attorney’s office in Honolulu said. Sentencing was set for February 8.

The prosecution stemmed from an investigation by the Army and FBI officials. (click HERE for the original article)

Former KBR employee David Breda pleads guilty

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Fri Oct 16, 2009

PEARLAND RESIDENT PLEADS GUILTY TO ABUSIVE SEXUAL CONTACT OF FELLOW EMPLOYEE IN IRAQ

(HOUSTON) – Jr., of Pearland, has pleaded guilty to abusive sexual contact with a co-worker while at an airbase in Iraq, United States Attorney Tim Johnson announced today.

Breda pleaded guilty before United States District to the sole count in a criminal information filed on Oct. 14, 2009, this afternoon. Breda faces a maximum sentence of two years imprisonment and a maximum fine of $250,000 at sentencing which Judge Miller has set for Jan. 15, 2010. In addition to any prison term, Breda also faces a maximum of life on supervised release and could be required to register as a sex offender pursuant to the Sex Offender and Registration Notification Act. (Read the rest of the story here…)

Franken’s Anti-Rape Amendment-The Nation

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Franken’s Anti- Amendment

The Nation by Emily Douglas on 10/16/2009 @ 2:08pm

In April of 2008, went public. A few months earlier, she had been raped and sexually assaulted by co-workers while deployed at Camp Harper, in Iraq, and after weeks of being pressured not to report the incident, forced to work alongside her attackers, and medically neglected, Leamon brought the story to a Houston attorney and to The Nation. Leamon joined a slowly building chorus of female defense contractor employees who’d been raped or sexually assaulted by co-workers while in Iraq, to utter impunity on the part of their assailants. In response, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee called a hearing to investigate why the Justice Department had not prosecuted any sexual assault allegations in Iraq since the going to war in the country.

When it turned out that defense contractors often required employees, as a condition of employment, to submit to binding private arbitration in disputes with the contractors (including allegations of sexual assault), instead of bringing complaints to public courts, and that the Department of Defense claimed they couldn’t prosecute for this very reason (even though these clauses only prevented civil suits), Senator Ben Nelson, who called the hearing, offered a simple solution: “This might be something you want to require and include in your contracts–before you award them,” Karen Houppert reported in The Nation.

Freshman Sen. Al Franken took Nelson’s suggestion seriously, and has pushed through an amendment to a Defense Appropriations bill that would prevent the Pentagon from doing business with contractors who force employees into binding arbitration over rape and sexual assault charges. (As John Stewart put it, “How is that a loophole that needs closing?”)

After another KBR employee, , began speaking out about her own gang rape in December 2005, she met other women with similar stories, and in response formed a non-profit to support women who experienced sexual assault at the hands of co-workers while employed by a defense contractor. When Houppert reported on Jones’s organization in The Nation, by then supporting forty women, Houppert observed, “Most of these complaints will never see the light of day.”

Adding insult to injury, the Department of Defense could prosecute these crimes under the Military Extraterritorial Jurisdiction Act and the Patriot Act’s special maritime and territorial jurisdiction provisions, but has opted not to. In the face of DoD inaction, survivors, meanwhile, had signed away their right to sue civilly and were left only with arbitration.

Predictably, Sen. Jeff Sessions, ranking Republican member of the , opposed Franken’s bill. “Congress should not be involved in writing or rewriting private contracts,” he argued. The bill was, he maintained, a “political amendment at bottom, representing a political attack on Halliburton.” In fact, the amendment only goes so far as to require contractors doing business with the government to permit employees to sue civilly in the “most egregious violations,” Franken emphasized in a statement. (For less egregious matters, contractors can still require employees to waive their right to sue and submit to arbitration.)

No thanks to Sessions or most Republican members of the Senate, the bill passed, 68-30. And the next time you hear the Chamber of Commerce come out swinging against healthcare reform, remind yourself that they opposed this bill, too.

Upon hearing the amendment passed, Jamie Leigh Jones told the Minnesota Post: “It means the world to me…It means that every tear shed to go public and repeat my story over and over again to make a difference for other women was worth it.” It’s a reminder that rape survivors go public with their stories at a serious emotional cost, and the onus is on political leaders and advocates to make it worth what could be only in the most euphemistic sense be referred to as their while.

At the end of his segment on the bill, John Stewart tied it all up with a bow. Now we get it! Comparing this move to regulate government contractors to ACORN’s frozen funding, he says, “You don’t want to waste taxpayer money on someone who advises fake prostitute how to make imaginary crimes. You want to give it to Halliburton, because they’re committing real gang rape. You cut out the middleman! And they say government doesn’t work.”  (click HERE for the original article)

No Conractor Left Behind Part IV: Congress’s Powerless Probe

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No Contractor Left Behind is a series by DC Bureau.org chronicling how a toxic time bomb followed three Army National Guard units home from Iraq. It reveals how a notorious military contractor (KBR) exposed American soldiers to a cancer-causing carcinogen on the battlefield and how the Pentagon tried to downplay the consequences. And it describes how Congress has relegated its investigation to a toothless forum that lacks the political clout and oversight powers to ensure effective accountability.

Click HERE to read No Contractor Left Behind Part I: KBR, the Pentagon and the Soldiers Who Paid – October 5, 2009
The first of a multi-part account of how KBR management knowingly exposed not only their own employees but hundreds of US Army National Guard troops, British Soldiers and local Iraqi citizens to to the toxic carcinogen known as at in southern Iraq.

Click HERE to read No Contractor Left Behind Part II: KBR’s Negligence - October 7, 2009

In 2003, as part of project RIO, U.S. soldiers would accompany contractors into Iraq from Kuwait as they assessed southern oil sites, including Qarmat Ali. Their orders forbade them from leaving KBR personnel alone at any time. Even when they were working, soldiers had to remain an arm’s length away—which not only exposed them to whatever chemical elements the contractors uncovered during their work, it allowed KBR managers ample time to notify them of any potential health risks.

Click HERE to read No Contractor Left Behind Part III: “Just Suck It Up and Move On” – October 9, 2009

Military Exposure Guidelines permissible exposure limit for chromium: 5,700 parts per million.

Chromium soil concentrations found by KBR samples at Qarmat Ali on August 7, 2003: 16,459 parts per million.

Like KBR, the military failed to look after its own at Qarmat Ali.

“Unfortunately,” Sgt. Russell Powell said in Congressional testimony, “many of the soldiers who served at Qarmat Ali are paying the consequences for the Army’s failure to warn and protect the troops.”

At the treatment plant, as soldiers expressed concerns about sodium dichromate, the military brass remained taciturn and downplayed the danger posed by the chemical. Once the toxic conditions at Qarmat Ali were revealed, the Army relied on a questionable and surreptitiously administered medical test to fend off claims of a hazard, and used the results to deny health care for exposed veterans.

Click HERE to read No Contractor Left Behind Part IV: Congress’s Powerless Probe – October 13, 2009

“When you have contractors that have demonstrated that they have fleeced the government agency or the taxpayer, I don’t think there should be a slap on the wrist or a pat on the back. They should be debarred. …This is the most significant waste and in the history of our country. It’s not even close.”  Sen. Byron Dorgan (D-ND)

Thank God for Senator Dorgan and the Senate Democratic Policy Committee. If they had not investigated this and brought it to the attention of the DoD and media, how many soldiers would be dying and not know why?

Ms Sparky


Investigators find flaws in Army body armor tests

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Investigators find flaws in Army tests

By RICHARD LARDNER
Associated Press Writer
Oct 16, 12:57 PM EDT

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Army made critical mistakes in tests of a new body armor design, according to congressional investigators who recommend an independent review of the trials before the gear is issued to troops in Iraq and Afghanistan.

The Government Accountability Office report says the Army deviated from established testing standards and concludes that several of the designs that passed would have failed had the tests been done properly.

The Army has ordered about 240,000 of the new type of bullet-blocking plate to be used in ballistic vests, but doesn’t plan to rush the armor into combat. The Army says the plates will be stored until needed to meet future demands.

In a lengthy response to the report, Defense Department officials reject the call for an outside look. The officials acknowledge there were a few problems during testing of the bullet-blocking plates. But these were minor miscues, they said, that don’t shake their confidence in the overall results.

Given the military’s opposition to an external review by ballistics experts, the GAO says Congress should decide whether such a step is necessary.

The report, requested last year by senior members of the House Armed Services Committee, is the latest study to call into question the Army’s ability to oversee the production of a key piece of battlefield equipment.

In January, the Pentagon’s inspector general faulted the Army for not properly overseeing a series of tests on an earlier model of the protective plates at a private ballistics laboratory.

The inspector general’s audit recommended that nearly 33,000 plates be pulled from the Army’s inventory of nearly 2 million because the inserts might not provide troops with adequate protection against armor-piercing bullets. The Army disputed the findings, but withdrew the plates as a precautionary step.

Stung by the inspector general’s conclusions, Army officials dismissed the private laboratories they’d long relied upon for the tests and said they would do the vital job themselves at a military testing facility in Aberdeen, Md.

That proved to be a contentious decision, however. The testing companies and manufacturers of the plates insisted the private sector could do the trials better, faster and for much less money.

With the GAO report, which is to be issued publicly on Friday, that argument is sure to get new traction.

The testing at issue took place last year. Companies that passed were awarded contracts potentially worth $8 billion to manufacture an improved plate design.

The body armor used by most American forces consists of a ballistic vest with two large, specially hardened ceramic plates that protect most of the upper body from enemy bullets and shrapnel.

The plates and vests go through demanding tests during the design phase. Later, after production begins, sample plates are shot at on ranges to ensure there has been no deviation from the specifications. These so-called “lot acceptance tests” require a quick turnaround so manufacturers can keep their production lines moving.

The GAO says the Army’s most significant departure from testing standards was the incorrect measuring of the amount of force a plate can withstand. Correctly calculating this is important because the depth of the indentation on the plate shows the amount of blunt force trauma to the soldier.

Army officials have maintained the criticism of their testing and oversight of body armor is overblown. They note that no U.S. troops have been killed in Iraq and Afghanistan because their body armor was flawed and failed to protect them.

In the 25-page response to the GAO report, the Pentagon says the Army has made a heavy investment to ensure body armor testing is done carefully and accurately. (click HERE for original article)

KBR contractor from Seabrook admits having child porn

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KBR contractor from Seabrook admits having

By MARY FLOOD Copyright 2009 HOUSTON CHRONICLE
Oct. 15, 2009, 5:09PM

A Seabrook forklift operator pleaded guilty today to possessing hundreds of child pornography images while on a U.S. base in Iraq.

() forensic specialists in the U.S. helped unravel the case of KBR contractor Michael Anthony Grabar, 44, who put his thumb drive into the laundry where it was found and passed to security at Camp Fallujah — a U.S. Marine base in Iraq.

Prosecutor Bob Stabe told U.S. District Judge Keith Ellison today that base security checked the thumb drive to see who owned it and found Grabar’s tax return and numerous child pornography images.

Stabe said the camp security checked Grabar’s quarters and took his computer as well. NCIS found approximately 500 images and 73 videos of child pornography on the thumb drive and on the laptop.

Grabar told the judge today that Stabe’s account of the facts was correct.

“This is such an unhappy outcome. You’ve otherwise had a productive life,” Judge Ellison said to Grabar in court today.

After finding the images, Grabar was fired and sent back to the United States to be prosecuted where he last lived, which is Seabrook. Grabar is scheduled to be sentenced in January. Stabe said Grabar could be sentenced to up to 10 years in prison and fined $250,000 and put on the sex offenders list. (click HERE for original article)

No Contractor Left Behind Part III: “Just Suck It Up and Move On”

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No Contractor Left Behind is a series by DC Bureau.org chronicling how a toxic time bomb followed three Army National Guard units home from Iraq. It reveals how a notorious military contractor (KBR) exposed American soldiers to a cancer-causing carcinogen on the battlefield and how the Pentagon tried to downplay the consequences. And it describes how Congress has relegated its investigation to a toothless forum that lacks the political clout and oversight powers to ensure effective accountability.

Click HERE to read No Contractor Left Behind Part I: KBR, the Pentagon and the Soldiers Who Paid – October 5, 2009
The first of a multi-part account of how KBR management knowingly exposed not only their own employees but hundreds of US Army National Guard troops, British Soldiers and local Iraqi citizens to to the toxic carcinogen known as at in southern Iraq.

Click HERE to read No Contractor Left Behind Part II: KBR’s Negligence - October 7, 2009

In 2003, as part of project RIO, U.S. soldiers would accompany contractors into Iraq from Kuwait as they assessed southern oil sites, including Qarmat Ali. Their orders forbade them from leaving KBR personnel alone at any time. Even when they were working, soldiers had to remain an arm’s length away—which not only exposed them to whatever chemical elements the contractors uncovered during their work, it allowed KBR managers ample time to notify them of any potential health risks.

Click HERE to read No Contractor Left Behind Part III: “Just Suck It Up and Move On” – October 9, 2009

Military Exposure Guidelines permissible exposure limit for chromium: 5,700 parts per million.

Chromium soil concentrations found by KBR samples at Qarmat Ali on August 7, 2003: 16,459 parts per million.

Like KBR, the military failed to look after its own at Qarmat Ali.

“Unfortunately,” Sgt. Russell Powell said in Congressional testimony, “many of the soldiers who served at Qarmat Ali are paying the consequences for the Army’s failure to warn and protect the troops.”

At the treatment plant, as soldiers expressed concerns about sodium dichromate, the military brass remained taciturn and downplayed the danger posed by the chemical. Once the toxic conditions at Qarmat Ali were revealed, the Army relied on a questionable and surreptitiously administered medical test to fend off claims of a hazard, and used the results to deny health care for exposed veterans.