
The Truth
Costs Skyrocket As DHS Runs Up No-Bid Contracts
The project started in 2003 with a $2 million contract to help the new Department of Homeland Security quickly get an intelligence operation up and running.
Over the next year, the cost of the no-bid arrangement with consultant Booz Allen Hamilton soared by millions of dollars per month, as the firm provided analysts, administrators and other contract employees to the department's Information Analysis and Infrastructure Protection offices.
By December 2004, payments to Booz Allen had exceeded $30 million -- 15 times the contract's original value. When department lawyers examined the deal, they found it was "grossly beyond the scope" of the original contract, and they said the arrangement violated government procurement rules. The lawyers advised the department to immediately stop making payments through the contract and allow other companies to compete for the work.
But the competition did not take place for more than a year. During that time, the payments to Booz Allen more than doubled again under a second no-bid arrangement, to $73 million, according to internal documents, e-mail and interviews.
More at the Washington Post
Pushing the Envelope on Presidential Power
The Washington Post has an excellent analysis of the leading role Vice President Dick Cheney played in developing the Bush administration's policy on using torture. It offers good insights into both how he operates and his total lack of regard for the Constitution of the United States.
BAE Systems bribed Saudi prince
A Saudi prince who negotiated a £40bn arms deal between Britain and Saudi Arabia received secret payments for over a decade, a BBC probe has found.The UK's biggest arms dealer, BAE Systems, paid hundreds of millions of pounds to the ex-Saudi ambassador to the US, Prince Bandar bin Sultan.
The payments were made with the full knowledge of the Ministry of Defence.
More at BBC News.
All other material Copyright © 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007 by Nathan David Teegarden. All rights reserved.
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