Gov't probes US defense contractor over payments

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Army criminal investigators are examining whether Combat Support Associates, a defense contractor that has earned more than $2 billion so far supporting U.S. troops in Iraq, overcharged the government. The company said it is cooperating in the case.

Combat Support Associates, based in Orange, Calif., performs vehicle maintenance, computer repairs and security work at Camp Doha, Camp Arifjan and other Army sites in Kuwait. Federal agents searched the company's offices in Kuwait in August.

Gary Lewi, a spokesman for Combat Support Associates, said the company provided the agents with documents. He would not provide details because the inquiry is ongoing.

"CSA has acted in accordance with its contract and no allegations have been conveyed by investigators," Lewi said in a statement.

It's not clear how much the company may have overcharged the government or for how long. The Army Criminal Investigation Command is leading the probe.

The investigation is among 168 by the Army Criminal Investigation Command related to contract fraud in Iraq, Kuwait and Afghanistan since 2005. The Army said 95 of those cases are pending. In some cases, investigations were closed because there was too little evidence to support charges or because a company was absolved. Other cases have resulted in criminal charges.

Combat Support Associates was awarded the base support contract almost a decade ago. It formed a Cayman Islands subsidiary to avoid paying taxes on its 2,000 American employees. That legal loophole, used by a number of U.S. companies, was closed in June when President Bush signed tax reform legislation.

Army Sustainment Command in Rock Island, Ill., oversees the Kuwait contract.

"The command is always concerned about any allegations of improprieties," said command spokeswoman Linda Theis. "We will work with appropriate investigation authorities as needed."

Under the terms of its so-called "cost plus" contract, Combat Support Associates is reimbursed for the work it does and gets a fixed fee on top as profit. Critics of these arrangements, including Republican presidential candidate John McCain, say companies have little incentive to control costs.

With too few government investigators and auditors to ensure every claimed expense is genuine, there is a heightened risk of waste, fraud and abuse. For the military, however, these open-ended contracts are useful in wartime situations when it can't precisely define all the work that needs to be done.

Combat Support Associates was formed in 1998 by AECOM Government Services of Fort Worth, Texas, and two other companies — Research and Analysis Maintenance of El Paso, Texas, and Space Mark Inc. of Alaska.

In July 1999, Combat Support Associates was selected for a Camp Doha support contract, a 10-year deal potentially worth $547 million. In March 2003, when U.S. forces invaded Iraq, demand for the company's maintenance and repair services increased dramatically as bases across Kuwait became hubs of activity for American troops.

The value of the contract ballooned as well: $2.2 billion has been spent between 1999 and 2008 on the Combat Support Associates contract.

There are scores of companies like Combat Support Associates being paid big money to perform unglamorous but essential chores for the military. But as reliance on the private sector for battlefield support has grown, the Pentagon's ability to watch over taxpayer dollars has not.

The Army's contracting budget alone jumped from $46 billion in 2002 to $112 billion last year. Yet the number of people who hunt down crooked companies and corrupt officials has stayed about the same.

___

On the Net:

Combat Support Associates: http://www.csakuwait.com/

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{"commentId":3419331,"authorDomain":"derick-thomas14"}

McCains ties to payoff, i bet ch'a wink wink

McCain's Ties to the Top 10 Defense Contractors

Contractor Rank* Contractor Name Number of McCain Lobbyists 2006 Defense Revenue* Names of Lobbyists Contractor Donations to McCain + 1 Lockheed Martin 8 $36.09 B Charlie Black - Senior Political Adviser Doug Davenport - Regional Campaign Manager** Randy Scheunemann - Top Nat'l Security Adviser Eric Burgeson - Fundraiser & Energy Adviser** Steve Phillips - Fundraiser James Courter - Fundraiser Alfonse D'Amato - Fundraiser Vicki Hart - Fundraiser $44,400 2 Boeing 3 $30.8 B Rob Chamberlin - Fundraiser Ashley Davis - Women for McCain Steering Cmt. Mary Kate Johnson - Women for McCain Steering Cmt. $42,519 3 BAE Systems -- $23.65 B N/A $16,075 4 Northrop Grumman 1 $23.65 B Rob Chamberlin - Fundraiser $28,465 5 Raytheon 3 $19.5 B Judy Black - Fundraiser Steve Phillips - Fundraiser Rob Chamberlin - Fundraiser $30,700 6 General Dynamics 2 $18.77 B Rob Chamberlin - Fundraiser Juleanna Glover-Weiss $18,850 7 EADS 7 $13.2 B Thomas Loeffler - National Co-Chairman** John Green - Congressional Liaison
Susan Nelson - National Finance Director Aleix Jarvis - Fundraiser Kirk Blalock - Fundraiser Kirsten Chadwick - Fundraiser William Ball III - National Security Adviser $14,500 8 L-3 Communications 1 $9.99 B Al D'Amato - Fundraiser $5,950 9 Finmeccanica -- $9.06 B N/A mce_marker 10 United Technologies 5 $7.65 B Charles Black - Senior Political Adviser Jeffrey Weiss - Fundraiser Peter Madigan - Fundraiser Rob Chamberlin - Fundraiser Alfonse D'Amato - Fundraiser $14,800

Total Campaign Contributions Taken From Top 10 Defense Contractors: $216,259

+ Contractor Donations according to Congressional Quarterly's MoneyLine **Lobbyist forced to resign from the McCain Campaign because of lobbyist ties. Note all three are also fundraisers, and *Contractor rank and revenue according to list of top DOD contractors in 2007 by DefenseNews, a publication of the Army Times. Charlie Black's Defense Clients Have Given Hundreds Of Thousands To McCain
An analysis of Charlie Black's lobbying clients in the defense industry over the past 10 years shows that they have funneled large campaign contributions to McCain. Ten of those clients, listed below, have contributed nearly $200,000 to McCain.

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