Up to their asses in alligators!

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Stock chartKBR Inc. has been downgraded to Neutral at Broadpoint AmTech Research . Broadpoint AmTech Research downgrades KBR to Neutral from Buy until they get closer to more visible catalysts. More visible catalysts? I think that’s “broker speak” for contract awards? The firm says the award opportunities they anticipated when they upgraded the stock in May have been determined and award tracker suggests sluggish awards prospects for KBR until mid-2010. Would that mean the potential for future contracts is slim? They believe KBR shares provide attractive valuation for investors looking 6 months + out, but absent any near-term award catalysts, they prefer other Buy rates names.

KBR saw little change in price throughout September and most of October. Then on October 22nd KBR started consistently trending down. This was just a  week before KBR’s announced it’s 3Q profits were down %14.

Since October 22, KBR has lost almost 25% of it’s value. That means all those Board Members and executives that we can’t seem to indict are now worth that much less. For the other shareholders who have lost money…. I’m sorry that’s what happens when you sleep with the devil!

Yesterday an announcement was made that a criminal indictment had been filed against PWC aka Agility Logistics for, among other things,  over charging for food for our soldiers. The US Government is seeking to recover $3-9 Billion. I have to ask…..just how involved is KBR in that? They managed the dining facilities that prepared the food. They ordered the food!!

Alligator

I’ll bet KBR can feel those gators nipping at their asses about now….and rightfully so!

Ms Sparky

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Tax dollars for Terrorists – The DoD’s New Charity

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Top Food Supplier to (US)Military Indicted

Convoy

By MIKE ESTERL
ATLANTA — The U.S. government filed a criminal indictment against a Kuwaiti company that is the leading food supplier to the American military in Iraq, in what prosecutors described as the first step in a broader investigation.

The Department of Justice on Monday declined to estimate the scope of the alleged fraud by Kuwait-based Public Warehousing Co. K.S.C., but it said in a statement that it believed the amount to be massive. PWC has received more than $8.5 billion in food-supply contracts for U.S. military personnel in Iraq, Kuwait and Jordan dating back to 2003, the DOJ said.

PWC, which rebranded itself as Agility in 2006 and continues to supply food to U.S. troops, said in a statement that it was confident the U.S. government allegations “will be found to be without merit.” PWC is “surprised and disappointed” by the indictment, it said.

Barbara Nelan, assistant U.S. attorney for the Northern District of Georgia, told reporters that the indictment against PWC was “the first step” in a broader investigation of individuals and other companies that may have participated in the alleged fraud.

The criminal indictment by a federal grand jury was filed under seal last week in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia. Prosecutors on Monday said it was triggered in part by a whistle-blower civil suit filed with the same court by in November 2005.

Mr. Mustafa Al-Sultan, a former business partner of PWC, alleged in an amended civil suit against PWC in U.S. District Court in Atlanta last month that the Kuwaiti logistics company has defrauded the U.S. government of more than $1 billion by marking up prices by 30% or more.

The DOJ alleges that Sulaibiya, Kuwait-based PWC provided “false invoices and statements” to the Defense Supply Center Philadelphia, a branch of the Department of Defense that gives logistical support to U.S. troops. It says PWC used various tactics to artificially inflate bills and retain “product rebates, allowances and discounts” that should have gone to the U.S. government.

Among other allegations, prosecutors say PWC conspired with Kuwaiti subcontractor The Sultan Center Food Products Co. KSC — known as T.S.C. — to charge the U.S. above-retail prices for fresh fruit and vegetables. It alleges that T.S.C. then paid kickbacks to PWC in the form of a 10% rebate.

PWC received $62.3 million in such rebates from T.S.C. during the first 41 months of food-supply contracts with the U.S. military, the DOJ alleges. That figure doesn’t include an undisclosed amount of rebates spanning another 35 months of supply contracts between the parties, prosecutors said in the indictment, which was made public on Monday. T.S.C. didn’t return calls seeking comment.

In another case, prosecutors allege that PWC overcharged for food by persuading an unnamed Georgia-based supplier to reduce the pack sizes of products it sold by half so that PWC could bill the U.S. military twice as much.

The Department of Defense said that it has suspended PWC from bidding for contracts during the legal proceedings. The suspension doesn’t preclude PWC from completing its current contracts.

Prosecutors said they hoped to claim as much as two times the money that PWC gained from the food-supply contracts or two times the estimated loss to the U.S.

—Brent Kendall and Yochi Dreazen in Washington contributed to this article. (click HERE for original article)

According to yesterdays article (click HERE) it stated:

“The largest shareholder of its parent company – named Khalid Sultan – has been linked to the terrorist organization Revival of the Islamic Heritage Society known as RIHS; he also acts as the leader of the Islamic Salaf Alliance, the political arm of RIHS. RIHS has been designated by US Treasury as a terrorist organization,” CBS News’ Investigative Team reports.

PWC/Agility’s Response to the allegations

Gosh it sounds as though a certain “Spokeswoman” (Heather Browne) has been cloned, doesn’t it? Maybe she is moon lighting.

Statement by Public Warehousing Co. (PWC) Concerning Indictment Announcement

WASHINGTON, Nov. 16 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — PWC has for some time worked with the government to seek a mutually agreeable resolution to this contract dispute and is surprised and disappointed that the government has decided to take this action.

The company has been the principal food supplier for the U.S. military in Kuwait and Iraq since 2003. The prices it charges have been negotiated with, agreed to, and continually approved as by the U.S. government since then. The government has consistently found PWC’s prices to be fair and reasonable.

Since 2006, the company’s “fill rates” – the number of cases of food accepted compared with the number ordered – were consistently more than 99 percent, a number that exceeds the fill rates of U.S. domestic service providers. That means that PWC was more successful in delivering food and other items to the military in a hostile war zone than other vendors have been within the safe environs of the continental U.S.

The company has long cooperated with government reviews, inspections, audits and inquiries necessary to ensure taxpayer dollars are being spent appropriately.

More than 30 PWC employees have been killed and 200 injured carrying out the extremely dangerous work of providing food for U.S. troops in a war zone, primarily in attacks on convoys that have destroyed more than 300 trucks and damaged another 700.

An indictment is merely an allegation. PWC is confident that once these allegations are examined in court, they will be found to be without merit.

Catering + Collusion = Indictment

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Company Charged in $8B Troop Food Fraud

DFAC
(CBS/ AP)  A Kuwaiti company has been charged with conspiring to defraud the U.S. in connection with multibillion-dollar contracts to feed American troops in Iraq, Kuwait and Jordan.

Federal prosecutors said Monday that Public Warehousing Co. made false statements and submitted false claims to manipulate prices and overcharge for food for troops.

The company is registered in Kuwait and has received more than $8.5 billion in food supply contracts.

“The largest shareholder of its parent company – named Khalid Sultan – has been linked to the terrorist organization Revival of the Islamic Heritage Society known as RIHS; he also acts as the leader of the Islamic Salaf Alliance, the political arm of RIHS. RIHS has been designated by US Treasury as a terrorist organization,” CBS News’ Investigative Team reports.

Read CBS’ Investigative Team’s 2007 report on food fraud allegations (excerpt below)

  • Whether companies such as Perdue Farm, Sara Lee, and ConAgra set unusually high prices when they sold their goods to the Army’s prime food contractor for the war zone.
  • Whether or not that contractor, Public Warehousing Co., improperly pocketed so-called, “refunds” money it got back from its suppliers after these goods were sold.
  • And what role, if any, current and former Army officials played in a possible kickback scheme involving Public Warehousing, known as PWC, and some of its vendors.
  • Acting U.S. Attorney Gentry Shelnutt says the fraud investigation is ongoing.

    “This indictment is the result of a multi-year probe into abuses in vendor contracts in the Middle East involving the illegal inflation of prices in contracts to feed our troops,” said Criminal Chief F. Gentry Shelnutt, the current Acting U.S. Attorney for the case.

    The case was filed in federal court in Atlanta, and the company is scheduled for a first court appearance on Friday. A phone listing for the company could not immediately be found. (Link to original)

    ————————————————————————————-

    Affiliations & Connections:

    Public Warehousing Co. (PWC), is part of Agility Logistics and the following list of names may be familiar to some of you:

    U.S. Army Lieutenant General Paul Cerjan (Ret.)
    21 July 2008
    Paul Cerjan Joins Agility Defense & Government Services

    U.S. Army Lieutenant General Joseph Cosumano (Ret.)
    2 September 2008
    Agility DGS Names Cosumano To Head Taos Industries

    Subsidiaries include:

    Gulf Catering Company for General Trade and Contracting (GCC SERVICES)
    Taos Industries, Inc.
    Threat Management Group
    Impeva Labs

    According to ’s testimony ”Then KBR switched to a new supplier, PWC.  PWC prices were almost triple from what Tamimi’s were. For example, tomatoes cost $5 a box locally, but PWC prices was $13 to $15 per box.” “When I had the military check some of the food shipments, they would turn the food items away. But there wasn’t any marking of the record, so KBR just sent the food to another base for use. The problem with expired food was actually worsened with the switch to PWC because it took longer for the food items to get to the base as they were shipped from the U.S. to a warehouse in Kuwait.”

    Taos Industries, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Agility Defense & Government Services, is a partner in the DCP Team, a Joint Venture with DynCorp International and CH2M Hill.  DCP Team is a contract holder of this U.S. Army contract, which provides global, multi-functional contingency logistics support to the U.S. Army and other U.S. Government agencies as required.  As a strategic partner in the DynCorp International team, Agility DGS and Taos Industries will provide supply chain and logistics capabilities to rapidly support the logistical requirements of deployed forces.

    Do we have reason to hope there will be more indictments to follow?

    –Forseti

    Iraqi woman fired after refusing sex with her KBR boss

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    Iraqi cleaner takes UK to court over alleged sexual harassment

    Iraqi WomenThe Times
    November 16, 2009
    Deborah Haynes

    An Iraqi cleaner who claims that she was sexually harassed at the British Embassy and at the ambassador’s residence in Baghdad is taking the Government to court over its alleged failure to investigate her complaints.

    The case will challenge a decision by the Foreign and Commonwealth Office to allow KBR, the American company contracted to maintain the two premises, to conduct its own investigation into the allegations, rather than carry out an independent inquiry. It will also examine whether the FCO failed to protect the cleaner’s human rights after she allegedly became the victim of sexual harassment by several British KBR managers in 2006 and early 2007.

    The cleaner, who is married with five children, said she wants the Government to “give me back my rights and let me regain my dignity”.

    Her allegations came as the Ministry of Defence confirmed that it was investigating 33 cases of alleged abuse of Iraqi civilians by British soldiers in southern Iraq from 2003. Phil Shiner, of Public Interest Lawyers, who is representing the alleged victims, has said that there are hundreds more abuse claims that have not been investigated. Public Interest Lawyers is also representing the cleaner. Tessa Gregory, a solicitor at the law firm, said the embassy case highlighted the impunity with which contractors in Iraq had been allowed to act.

    Two Iraqi cooks who worked at the embassy and support the cleaner’s allegations say that there was a culture of sexual harassment by certain KBR managers. No embassy staff are implicated. KBR, a global engineering and services company, denies the allegations. The Times broke the story of the abuse claims and the KBR investigation last year.

    The cleaner said a British contractor with KBR offered to double her daily pay if she would stay the night with him. When she refused, she said, her pay was cut and she was later dismissed. She and the two male cooks who also lost their jobs after backing up her story said some KBR managers groped Iraqi staff regularly, paid or otherwise rewarded them for sex and dismissed those who refused or spoke out.

    Ms Gregory travelled to Beirut in August to interview the three Iraqis, who were flown to the Lebanese capital from Baghdad. They each made a signed statement documenting their allegations. In her statement, the cleaner describes how she was also allegedly assaulted by a second KBR contractor in a bedroom inside the ambassador’s mansion-style residence in Baghdad’s green zone as she was working. He “came from behind and pushed me violently on to the bed,” the cleaner said. “I struggled and managed to get up off the bed. I pushed him away. As I ran he grabbed me by my shirt but I managed to free myself and I locked myself in the ensuite bathroom.”

    The FCO says that this is a new allegation that was not raised initially. Public Interest Lawyers, however, argues that the cleaner has maintained the same set of complaints. The extent of the alleged abuse was not recognised because her allegations were never properly investigated, Ms Gregory added.

    KBR said it was “surprised that fresh allegations have arisen relating to this same 2007 incident which KBR considers to have been thoroughly investigated and closed”.

    Several days after the alleged incident at the ambassador’s residence, the cleaner was sacked. She subsequently reported the harassment allegations to embassy staff, backed up by testimony from the two cooks.

    KBR was called in to investigate, but the three Iraqis said they were never interviewed. The managers, who denied the charges, were reinstated after month-long suspensions with pay. The FCO maintains that it was satisfied with the KBR inquiry and insists that it was correct to allow the Houston-based company to investigate the allegations because they were an internal matter involving KBR employees.

    Public Interest Lawyers, which filed an application for judicial review in September, is waiting for a High Court judge to set a hearing date. (click HERE for the original article)

    I blogged about this when it initially came up in June (click HERE). The Iraqi women in the Green Zone were very seriously exploited. They were hired for cleaning and administrative jobs. Many had no money and no homes for their children. Their husbands had been killed or just left. They were so desperate for work and safety. Many many took advantage of that. BASTARDS!

    Ms Sparky

    Unwavering commitment to profit

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    dumpster-2Please Dispose Of Injured and Abused Employees Properly

    We honored our veterans and soldiers this week for their service to our country.  The following article was published on Veterans Day with the focus on civilian contractors and the contributions they have made and the struggles they face.

    Honoring Veterans of the Disposable Army

    by T. Christian Miller, ProPublica – November 11, 2009

    Today we honor the veterans who have served in the country’s armed forces. Nobody seriously questions whether they deserve such recognition. The men and women who defended this country and fought its wars made immeasurable sacrifices.

    I have spent much of the last year writing about another group of people who suffered losses on behalf of U.S. interests abroad: the civilian contractors injured or killed while doing their jobs in Iraq and Afghanistan.

    They are not, of course, soldiers. They could quit their jobs and go home any time they wanted. Many were paid far higher wages than their military counterparts. They knew they were signing up to take a specific job in a dangerous part of the world.

    And yet, neither are the contractors working in Afghanistan and Iraq ordinary laborers. Civilians compose half the manpower  in Iraq and Afghanistan. They have seen and experienced the full horror of war. More than a thousand have been killed. Thousands more have suffered debilitating physical and mental injuries. And yet, the Pentagon does not even know how many have died, nor how many are actually working (PDF).

    I have come to see the civilian contractors as a new kind of class in the demography of war. They are quasi-veterans: civilians who have experienced war much as soldiers do. There are tens of thousands of them. And while it’s hard to argue that they deserve ticker tape parades and Medals of Honor, it’s also hard to believe that they should be sent home with little more than a pay stub and a patchy health care system that doesn’t even address basic medical needs.

    I received a letter from a former KBR contractor which crystallized the strange position of those who work in a war zone. D.A. Corson, who worked at a variety of companies in Iraq until 2008, wrote the following, which I thought worth sharing:

    Civilian contactors in combat zones will likely continue to be a staple of military engagements. They cook, clean, make ice, purify water, install housing, do laundry, install and maintain generators for lighting, air conditioning, truck the beans, bullets and bandages, install latrines, wastewater treatment facilities, and as many of the other logistical functions as the military can give them to do so the troops can do their job, i.e., go out and, God willing, win the peace.

    They too left their families, homes, and friends. They too labor 84-hour weeks, endure shellings, mortars, and RPG attacks, IEDS, and heat strokes. They too live on three meals a day of four different flavors of noodles or MREs when the convoys cannot get through and rations are running low. Some of them see to it that the bodies of your fallen sons, daughters, husbands, and wives are seen off from combat airfields with proper honors when no military personnel are available to do the honors themselves. They watch helplessly on Armed Forces media as our homes thousands of miles away are blown and washed away in hurricanes, floods and other disasters and wonder if their families are safe. Many die, are injured, captured and held as POWs; some have been beheaded. They too suffer high divorce rates and come home with their own cases of Combat Stress. Many serve for over a year and then came back 2 and 3 times for another year. Many are still there going on 5 and 6 years now. When they come home they have no Veteran’s benefits, indeed, no benefits at all in many instances, save perhaps a very pricey COBRA.

    Yes, all go for the money. They too are doing what they think necessary for their families to get a little piece of the American Dream, but they are not all a bunch of money-grubbing, carpetbagging, war profiteers. We are your neighbors, friends, relatives, and fellow Americans. So many are there because they have to be. One young lady had just had a baby. Her husband had cancer, and she had to leave her newborn infant and other children, as well as her terribly ill husband to pay the bills and keep a roof over their head. But more than that, each wanted to serve our troops. They wanted to do their part. So many are Viet Nam veterans. They do their jobs; they serve our troops, proudly. They do it for them. They do it for freedom; they do it for our country. The American contractors all still take off their hats and get tears in their eyes when hearing the national anthem. When they go home their benefits end. Many are having to fight to get their medical insurance benefits for the injuries received and many families are fighting to get their life insurance benefits for their fallen loved ones.

    They knew going in that returning to bands playing, flags waving, and such were not part of their bargain. That’s not why they went. However, in your churches and other ceremonies, when you ask your veterans to stand, after you have given them their well-deserved honors, you might want to give a thought to then asking any civilian contractors who served the troops in combat zones to stand up beside the vets too. I’ll bet they’d be proud to do so, again. Maybe there won’t be many in your particular gathering, but they are there: one for every soldier according to the Congressional Budget Reports and one dying for each 3 soldiers killed.

    And by the way, you’re welcome. Maligned, appreciated, even counted or not, I am sure most would do it all again. It was an honor.

    D. A. Corson
    Camp Anaconda, Balad, Iraq –June 2004 through October 2006 B.I.A., Basrah, Iraq –July 2006 through May 2007 Ali Al-Saleem Air Base, Kuwait — September-October 2007

    God Bless America !  (Link to original)

    ————————————————

    There are countless former employees who went to the Middle East to provide support for our troops and did not expect a hero’s welcome when they returned home, and rightfully so.  They did however, expect to have the ability to go on with their lives. While most have, many who were injured or maimed are now facing financial ruin at the hands of the very companies who have received billions of US tax dollars in the form of government contracts or bailouts. To add insult to injury, many employees have been terminated by KBR and deemed “not eligible for rehire.”  Many have no idea this label has been attached to their file.   Because of the incestuous relationships between DoD LOGCAP contractors, I am of the understanding this makes them ineligible for rehire with other LOGCAP contractors as well.

    Is it an unreasonable expectation to assume the US Government contractor who employs you is obligated to follow the same US laws you do.  The absolute corruption of these companies astounds me.  It turns my stomach to think the DoD, DoJ and apparently the executive branch of our government are condoning and rewarding these thieves, crooks and liars!

    Another thing that really ticks me off  is when these corporate spokespeople spew their canned responses about their company’s unwavering commitment to their employees and their customer.  BS, the only unwavering commitment is to lining their pockets with more tax dollars!

    In closing…..to all our soldiers and civilians in Iraq and Afghanistan, thank you for your service, sacrifice and patriotism…..I salute you.  To those who are wallowing in their corporate greed fests; I have a salute for you too but this is a G Rated site…..for the most part!

    –Forseti

    Kahn has the guts to say what we’re all thinking!

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    free-passA Free Pass
    By ROBERT KAHN
    Service
    November 13, 2009

    While a religious pervert’s mass murder of GIs at dominated the news on Veterans Day, Courthouse News’ top story that day began like this:

    “A Florida defense contractor put soldiers at risk and defrauded the government by producing hundreds of ‘bunker buster’ bomb fuzes it knew could explode unpredictably, ‘often shortly after the fuze was armed,’ federal prosecutors say.  Kaman Precision Products knew it was using bad parts, and charged taxpayers $2 million for it, according to the False Claims Act complaint.”

    Here is how our story ended: “The military discovered the substitution and has spent $3 million in an ‘attempt to rework the defective fuzes to create usable ones,’ prosecutors say. The government wants a refund.”

    Military prosecutors said they will seek the death penalty for Nidal Hasan, the religious pervert who killed 13 soldiers.

    Good. I hope they kill him.

    But why is no one facing jail time for selling dangerous bomb fuses to the U.S. Army?

    The government spent $5 million on bomb fuses that could have blown dozens of aircraft out of the sky, and killed dozens of GIs, and the government wants a refund?

    Is the government out of its mind?

    Or is it – and by it I mean we – just so thoroughly corrupt and cowardly that war profiteers get a free pass?

    There was not a word about Kaman Precision Products in The New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, the Wall Street Journal, or even the Orlando Sentinel, where the company is based. I checked.

    Why is that?

    Every one of those newspapers had enough reporters to beat us to death with coverage of a family of morons who claimed their little boy had flown away in a balloon. But not a word on a war profiteer. Excuse me: an alleged war profiteer.

    People who remember history – which seems to be me and a couple of other guys – may recall that Harry S Truman became famous when he led a Senate investigation of war profiteering during World War II.

    This was during a war against enemies who were as powerful as we were.

    Truman turned up corruption all over the country. It was small change compared to what goes unpunished today – a few thousand dollars here, a few lousy parts there.

    But people were prosecuted. People went to jail.

    In the past two weeks, three dozen class actions in three dozen states have accused Halliburton and KBR of exposing more than 100,000 GIs to poison in Iraq and Afghanistan. Not to mention all the GIs Halliburton and KBR electrocuted from their cheap and incompetent wiring in Iraq. Or the women that Halliburton and its subcontractors drugged and gang raped in Iraq.

    Why is no one in Halliburton facing the prospect of going to jail?

    Why is Blackwater founder Erik Prince, the biggest bastard on Planet Earth, not being prosecuted? His mercenaries committed dozens of pointless murders in Iraq, occasionally when drunk or high, after which the company spirited them out of Iraq to avoid prosecution, according to at least a dozen civil lawsuits filed in U.S. courts.

    After Blackwater’s mass murder of 17 Iraqis in 2007, Prince tried to bribe Iraqi officials with $1 million to let his gang of bastards stay in Iraq, The New York Times reported – on Veteran’s Day.

    Why isn’t Prince facing jail time?

    Why do private attorneys have to bring civil actions against these war profiteers? Why is the government not trying to put them in jail? What the hell are government prosecutors doing?

    Well, here’s the top of another story Courthouse News printed on Veteran’s Day:

    “Northwestern journalism students whose investigative work reignited a nationwide debate on the death penalty are being forced to defend themselves. Cook County prosecutors subpoenaed journalism professor David Protess, seeking his students’ grades, his syllabus and their private e-mails.”

    That’s right; prosecutors are going after journalism students. Government prosecutors fear – fear? – that students in Professor Protess’ class might try to get good grades by claiming that people in prison are innocent. So the prosecutors subpoenaed the professor’s lesson plans and his grade book.

    Maybe Professor Protess should change his students’ assignments. He should have them get drunk and kill strangers, and rip off the government, and make stuff that explodes when it’s not supposed to, and could kill GIs by the dozen.

    Prosecutors would give the class a free pass. (click HERE for the original article)

    I really love some of the stuff that The Courthouse News puts out. WELL DONE!!!

    Ms Sparky

    KBR and prostitution in Iraq

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    human traffickingI’ve written about in Iraq and the involvement of KBR employees many times. It just never seems to go away.

    I recently received a comment on another post from a former KBR employee about their personal experience with KBR and prostitution in Iraq.  In talking with another KBR employee on the phone I asked them about this specific camp and was told he had heard a KBR guy from Camp Prosperity (D-2) in the International (Green) Zone had been fired for running prostitutes. Below is the original comment. (It has been  edited slightly for clarity).

    To all who don’t believe, well listen to this. I left the army in 2008 after the surge and was asked to join the staff at USMI as an electrician. On the few nights we could call our own we hitched a ride down to Prosperity (across form the NECK) for a little R&R and just hang out with some old bros from the unit I was with. We were sitting at the picnic tables out by the vollyball net when couple of young ladies walked by us . Well right after that this one guy who was with KBR came up and acted like he was our best friend asking all of us if there was something the girls could do for us, like clean our rooms or heat up our mattress. At that moment to his surprise the DPM (Deputy Project Manager) was walking buy and like the idiot this guy was he made him the same offer. I’m not sure what every one else has witnessed but the way the Iraqi nationals and the FN’s are forced to work and live is wrong. As soon as I reported this to my electrical super.( Sam Garcia), I was shipped out and re-assigned to Anaconda where I was warned and wrathed. I was a soldier who fought and was wounded for all people and witnessed first hand the wrong that is inflicted on the people of other countries not just the Iraqis. The Russian ladies are so beautiful as well as the Filipino women, but as married men and women when are they going to learn that they should think with there head and, and not with their crotch. This goes for KBR management for sure . They are the biggest supporter of prostitution in the area of USMI Central. Believe or not!!!

    Although I can not confirm this alleged incident, the detail of the comment combined with the confirmation from another camp and the fact that prostitution is very prevalent in Iraq I have no reason to believe this didn’t happen. I want to know, what happened to the KBR employee who was pimping out these women? Most likely Filipino women. Was he transferred? Was he fired? WAS HE ARRESTED? Was this reported to the Army Criminal Investigations Command (CID)? Who was that DPM?

    Here is an email I received from a former American KBR supervisor from FOB Marez in Mosul, Iraq. Again, this is all alleged but there are just too many specifics for me to believe it’s not the truth.  (email has been edited for clarity)

    I was in Mosul when they (KBR Subcontractor) brought all of those girls  (over a 100) in from Manila to work in the Marez DFAC and to be secretaries (and more than 90% of them did not have any administrative skills).  I was there when the allegations of rape, and prostitution arose and the military launched a big investigation. I was there when they (KBR) manhandled and dragged a KBR employee out of the DFAC because a girl from Manila said she was forced to have sex with him.  Then the (DFAC) Subcontractor made me interview every single girl that worked for the subcontractor, KBR was aware of this, they made me conduct interviews and ask if any one was raped or forced to do things they did not want to sexually and physically.  I was not skilled or had any training to do this.  If I look I bet I can find the notes because I kept them.

    Do you know how long I have held this in, because we are told we can not talk to anyone or we will get fired.  I remember that girls would disappear, sometimes for 2-3 weeks or longer.  I was really close with this particular (Filipino) girl named (name removed) and she disappeared for about 6 weeks I kept asking for her and no one would answer.  Then she came back to camp and she was never the same, when I say the same her lively hood had been taken out of her.  I kept asking her what was wrong.  She finally told me that when they disappear it is because they are pregnant and they want to go home and have their babies (a baby with American blood) instead they are taken into the city Mosul or Turkey to a house and held or guarded by men that live in the house, kept locked in a room and then forced to have an abortion and held there until cleared by the doctor or person that performed the abortion.

    Prostitution is illegal in Iraq, is a violation of General Order 1 and Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) 52.222-50  Combating Trafficking in Persons .

    So I ask again…”Were there any arrests?” Helloooooo out there. Is anybody listening? I can just about guarantee that there are active prostitution rings at every camp that has foreign national females. Also many foreign national men are being “pimped out” as well. And the majority of the pimps are going to be their KBR supervisors and the supervisors for the labor subcontractors  (slave brokers) who brought them into the country.

    I have been hearing rumblings of prostitution issues at Camp Taji and Camp Victory as well. I have a suggestion for KBR. When they discover a KBR employee is running a prostitution business exploiting foreign national workers, that employee needs to be fired and turned over to the MP’s and hopefully the CID will initiate a criminal investigation. Then fire the the “pimps”  managers for the next two levels up. If they did know about the prostitution business and did nothing they are accomplices and should be turned over the the MP’s as well. If they knew nothing about the business they are ineffective idiots and should be asked “window or isle….chicken or pasta?” and take them to the airport.

    For my other post of Prostitution and  in Iraq click HERE

    Ms Sparky