Home » Archive for category 'GOV. CONTRACTORS' (Page 2)

Archive for the GOV. CONTRACTORS Category

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Computer Sciences Corporation, according to , organised a flight that took Khaled ­al-Masri, a German mistakenly imprisoned by the , from a secret detention centre in Afghanistan to Albania in 2004. Photograph: Thomas Kienzle/AP

Banking group, which has £8.5m slice of CSC, is under pressure along with other City investors from human rights charity
Rupert Neate – (Guardian UK) – May 6, 2012 – has become embroiled in a row over its investment in a company accused of involvement in the rendition of terror suspects on behalf of the CIA.

Lloyds, which is just under 40% owned by the taxpayer, is one of a number of leading City institutions under fire for investing in US giant Computer Sciences Corporation (CSC), which is accused of helping to organise covert US government flights of terror suspects to Guantánamo Bay and other clandestine “black sites” around the world.

Reprieve, the legal human rights charity run by the British lawyer , alleges that during the flights, suspects – some of whom were later proved innocent – were “stripped, dressed in a diaper and tracksuit, goggles and earphones, and had their hands and feet shackled”. Once delivered to the clandestine locations, they were subjected to beatings and sleep deprivation and forced into stress positions, a report from the International Committee of the Red Cross says.

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Mike Francis – (The Oregonian) – May 4, 2012 – Lawyers in the lawsuit filed by a set of soldiers against Inc., the Houston-based military contractor, have filed dueling briefs following the soldiers’ assertion that knowingly concealed a key document from the soldiers.

In a 41-page filing in U.S. District Court in Portland last week, KBR’s lawyers called the charge “completely, utterly and demonstrably false.”

The filing went on to cite multiple occasions when KBR, the plaintiffs’ lawyers, witnesses and the Army discussed contingency planning for restoring Iraq’s oil flow in the months leading up to the 2003 U.S.-led invasion.

Further, according to the response, the contingency planning documents do not discuss the possibility of contamination.

KBR is calling for U.S. District to deny the soldiers’ motion and to impose sanctions on their lawyers for filing the motion in the first place.

In reply, the soldiers’ lawyers Thursday filed a reply insisting that KBR did indeed conceal or fail to disclose some key information during the lawyers’ discovery process.

They said key witnesses gave misleading answers to questions about the water treatment plant at , in southern Iraq. They also repeated their call for sanctions against KBR.

The lawsuit’s roots lie in the spring and summer of 2003, when Oregon National Guard soldiers and other U.S. and British troops provided security for KBR contractors who were trying to restore a damaged water treatment plant used to help produce Iraqi oil.

Among the substances at the plant was a carcinogenic compound called sodium dichromate, which contains and is used to prevent corrosion. (Click HERE for original article)

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Alan Fram – (Associated Press) – WASHINGTON – May 3, 2012 – It was a curious offer to contractors from a government agency: We’ll give you a tax deduction for making federal buildings more energy efficient if you qualify and if you’ll write us a check for 19 percent of the tax break’s value.

The General Services Administration, already under a cloud for a lavish Las Vegas employee conference, says that after seven months, it dropped its demand for the giveback requirement because there were no takers.

But the policy is now raising new questions about whether GSA was trying to raise money for its own budget without congressional authorization, whether that effort was legal and whether other agencies have tried anything similar.

“It was brought to our attention that certain people at agencies were asking for what looked like kickbacks in order to get allocations of a tax deduction,” , R-La., chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee’s oversight panel, said Thursday. “This is a major concern and I’m certainly going to investigate this.”

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These people thought they had a job that provided a good wage, food and housing. They found out they had none of that. (2008 LOGCAP Scandal)

David Isenberg – (Huffington Post) – May 3, 2012 – I confess: I have an interest in an unseemly topic. Last year I coauthored a report on the subject and testified before Congress about it. The subject is labor trafficking.

So let’s give credit where it is due. On May 1, the International Stability Operations Association, a leading private military and security contracting trade association and the American Bar Association hosted a Combating Labor Trafficking: Legal and Compliance Mechanisms in the Fight Against Forced Labor conference. The coordinating partners for the event were such major companies as DynCorp International, , , and .

This is not, of course, a problem exclusive to the PMSCO sector but neither is it something that has happened only now and then either. Suffice it to say that it enough of a problem that this is the second conference ISOA organized on the issue, the first being seven years ago. The conference program guide minced no words in stating why a conference is necessary:

Labor trafficking is a disgraceful practice that plagues many country as well as international peacekeeping and stability operations. Poverty creates pools of desperate labor at high risk of of all kinds, including forced labor. The problem is morally reprehensible but of such enormous complexity it cannot be solved by a single sector and must be addressed by stakeholders working in partnership from all sides — private, governmental, nongovernmental and humanitarians sectors; clients and employers

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The Department of Defense (DoD) is taking a major step in stopping the waste of taxpayer dollars. recently learned that DoD sent a legislative proposal to Congress to narrow the definition of a “commercial item” to mean goods or services that are actually sold to the general public in “like quantities.” This proposal is a huge improvement over the current definition, a broadly worded definition open to abuse because it includes good or services “of a type” that are “offered” for sale or lease

…Not surprisingly, the contracting industry is opposing DoD’s proposal, claiming that competition will suffer as certain companies won’t do business with the federal government because of stricter contracting rules… ~Scott Amey, General Counsel, POGO

Walter Pincus – (Washington Post) – May 2, 2012 – In June 1986, after a year-long investigation, then-President Ronald Reagan’s Blue Ribbon Commission on Defense Management — later known as the — filed a final report.

It was established to investigate procurement after an enormous increase in defense spending and the discovery of the infamous $435 hammer and $600 toilet seat. The panel was chaired by , co-founder of Co., and deputy defense secretary in the Nixon administration.

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