Home » GOV. CONTRACTORS » L-3 Faces Criminal Probe Over E-Mail, Air Force Says – Updated
Home 

L-3 Faces Criminal Probe Over E-Mail, Air Force Says – Updated

FacebookStumbleUponRedditDiggLinkedInShare

By Anthony Capaccio and Susanna Ray

June 10 (Bloomberg) — An Holdings Inc. unit is facing a criminal probe into use of a military computer network to conduct e-mail surveillance of its workers and those of the government and other contractors, the Air Force said.

The unit, which managed the network, copied and stored e- mail traffic without the knowledge of the government or the workers, helping the company collect information relevant to competitions on which it wanted to bid, according to a June 3 memo by the Air Force deputy general counsel’s office.

L-3 “admitted to conducting the surveillance,” according to the memo, which was provided today by an Air Force spokeswoman, Lieutenant Colonel Karen Platt. The company checked e-mails “willfully and deliberately in an attempt to discover whether its employees had shared its information with another contractor,” the memo said.

The memo detailed why the Air Force acted last week to temporarily bar L-3’s Special Support Programs Division from new federal contracts or orders. New York-based L-3 disclosed the suspension yesterday in a filing that cited “inappropriate use” of an e-mail system without mentioning the criminal probe.

L-3 “is cooperating fully with the government and has no other comment at this time,” Jennifer Barton, a spokeswoman, said in an e-mail.

L-3 rose 72 cents to $79.88 at 4:15 p.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. The shares have gained 7.9 percent over the past year.

‘Penny or Two’

The suspension of new contracts means “a penny or two” of 2010 earnings per share may be at risk at the maker of airport scanners and military-aircraft surveillance cameras, wrote Joseph Nadol, a JPMorgan Chase & Co. analyst in New York who has a “neutral” rating on the stock.

The Special Support Programs Division will have revenue of about $400 million this year, and the suspension doesn’t hurt the company’s ability to conduct — and be paid for — business that’s already under way, Nadol wrote.

L-3’s ability to compete in new bidding in January on a contract for the unit is a “concern,” Nadol wrote. There’s also a risk that the inquiry may expand to cover the unit’s parent, Integrated Systems, which is “a significant business” for L-3, according to Nadol.

Secret Audit

Evidence of the surveillance was uncovered by a secret audit by the U.S. Special Operations Command, which was working with L-3, the Air Force said.

L-3’s actions weren’t “appropriate under the terms of its contract or the standards of ethical business conduct” and are under an “ongoing federal criminal investigation,” the Air Force said.

The surveillance by the Special Support Programs Division was to assist the unit’s “own private, commercial interests,” the Air Force said. The L-3 division is based in Lexington, Kentucky.

Unauthorized access of electronic communications is a crime under the federal Electronic Communications Privacy Act and the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, said Matt Zimmerman, senior staff attorney at San Francisco-based Electronic Frontier Foundation, an online privacy advocacy group.

L-3’s other businesses include making video-surveillance systems used in police vehicles, and it’s the largest supplier of translators to the U.S. Army. Chief Executive Officer Michael Strianese told analysts at a conference in December he is seeking to add sales in commercial avionics as well as defense. (click HERE for the original article)

Here’s interesting additional information.

Remo Butler was KBR’s LOGCAP III KBR Deputy General Program Manager from 2004-2007 then went to work for L-3 Communications.

was KBR’s VP and Program Manager for LOGCAP III from Jul 2004-July 2005; in May 2006 Cerjan was appointed president of L-3′s Government Services; in July 2008 Cerjan became president of Agility’s DGS group.

Notice how these Managers just go from one company to another? And all these companies are in trouble!! Coincidence?

Other Related Posts From Ms Sparky

  1. Probe Finds Dover Supervisors Targeted Whistleblowers
  2. BG Scott D. Chambers – DLA & Air Force decline to state allegations (updated 12/15)
  3. US military investigates contractor work force (with docs-updated)
  4. US Air Force intends to offer sole source award to suspended company(updated)
  5. Abuse Probe May Have Pushed Navy Sailor To Suicide

One Comment


The comments posted on this site are the sole opinion of the comment poster and do not necessarily reflect the opinion of MsSparky.com™

  1. Comment by Sturm Law:

    Email was one of the last sacred places on earth. But I guess whatever is on the internet is technically public record. Scary.

  1. Ping from L-3 Faces Criminal Probe Over E-mail « Overseas Civilian Contractors

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

Subscribe without commenting

© 2008-2012 Ms Sparky - MsSparky.com All Rights Reserved -- Copyright notice by Blog Copyright