The War Profiteering Prevention Act of 2007
http://www.digg.com/politics/The_War_Profiteering_Prevention_Act_of_2007
WASHINGTON (Thursday, January 4)
Sen. Leahy (D-VT) introduced a bill today, simply called The War
Profiteering
Prevention Act of 2007, targeting fraud by gov't contractors
supporting the
occupation of Iraq and the response to Hurricane Katrina. Such
profiteering
would be a felony under Leahy's legislation, punishable by up to
20 years in
prison and fines of $1 million...
The bill:
http://leahy.senate.gov/press/200701/010407b.html
U.S. SENATOR PATRICK LEAHY
CONTACT: Office of Senator Leahy, 202-224-4242
VERMONT
Incoming Judiciary Chairman Leahy Targets Corruption
In First Bills Of 110th Congress
Leahy Introduces Bills To Combat War Profiteering, Public
Corruption
WASHINGTON (Thursday, January 4) – Signaling a renewed emphasis
on combating corruption at home and abroad, incoming Senate
Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), introduced a
package of bills Thursday targeting corrupt officials and
private companies seeking to defraud American taxpayers and
troops.
“Americans want the culture of corruption to end. From war
profiteers and corrupt officials in Iraq, to convicted
Administration officials, to influence-peddling lobbyists and,
regrettably, even members of Congress, too many supposed public
servants have been serving their own interests, rather than the
public interest,” said Leahy.
Many Democratic Senators joined Leahy in reintroducing a bill
creating criminal penalties for war profiteers and cheats who
would exploit taxpayer-funded efforts in Iraq and elsewhere
around the world. The War Profiteering Prevention Act of 2007
builds on earlier efforts by Leahy, who is also a senior member
of the Appropriations Committee, to crack down on this type of
rampant fraud and abuse. It is similar to legislation Leahy
introduced in 2003, that was subsequently passed by the Senate
as part of an appropriations bill but later torpedoed by the
White House and the House Republican leadership, which stripped
out the Leahy provision.
Also on Thursday, Leahy joined with Senator Mark Pryor (D-Ark.),
on another anti-corruption measure aimed at strengthening the
tools available to federal prosecutors in combating public
corruption. This bill gives investigators and prosecutors the
statutory tools and the resources that they need to ensure that
serious and insidious public corruption is detected and
punished, including extending the statute of limitations on some
of the worst crimes.
“The American people staged an intervention during the November
elections and made it clear that they would not stand for it any
longer. They expect the Congress to take action, and these bills
are a good first step toward meeting that call,” Leahy said. “We
need to restore the people’s trust by acting to clean up the
people’s government.”
# # # # #
Below are Senator Leahy’s statements on the War Profiteering
Prevention Act of 2007 and the Effective Corruption Prosecutions
Act of 2007 and, as well as summaries of the two bills and
background information detailing a few examples of the fraud and
war profiteering that have already occurred in Iraq and
elsewhere.
Statement of Senator Patrick Leahy
On Introduction of the War Profiteering Prevention Act of 2007
January 4, 2007
Mr. LEAHY: Mr. President, today I am reintroducing a bill that
creates criminal penalties for war profiteers and cheats who
would exploit taxpayer-funded efforts in Iraq and elsewhere
around the world. Last year, despite the mounting evidence of
widespread contractor fraud and abuse in Iraq, the
Republican–controlled Senate would not act on it. Instead, the
Congress took a terrible misstep in seeking to end the work of
the Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction. I have
been proposing versions of this bill since 2003, when it did
pass the Senate. Unfortunately, this crucial provision was
stripped out of the final version of a bill by a
Republican-controlled conference committee.
There is growing evidence of widespread contractor fraud in
Iraq, yet prosecuting criminal cases against these war
profiteers is difficult under current law. We must crack down on
this rampant fraud and abuse that squanders American taxpayers’
dollars and jeopardizes the safety of our troops abroad. That is
why I renew my efforts for accountability and action with the
introduction of the War Profiteering Prevention Act of 2007. I
am pleased to join with Senators Bingaman, Kerry, Harkin,
Rockefeller, Dorgan, Wyden, Schumer, Cantwell, Bill Nelson,
Clinton, Lautenberg and Menendez to introduce this legislation.
Widespread Fraud and War Profiteering in Iraq
Congress has sent billions upon billions of dollars to Iraq with
too little accountability and too few financial controls. More
than $50 billion of this money has gone to private contractors
hired to guard bases, drive trucks, feed and shelter the troops
and rebuild the country. This is more than the annual budget of
the Department of Homeland Security.
Instead of results from these companies, we are seeing penalties
levied for allegations of fraud and abuse. At least 10 companies
with billions of dollars in U.S. contracts for Iraq
reconstruction have paid more than $300 million in penalties
since 2000, to resolve allegations of bid rigging, fraud,
delivery of faulty military parts and environmental damage.
Seven other companies with Iraq reconstruction contracts have
agreed to pay financial penalties without admitting wrongdoing.
In 2005, Halliburton took in approximately $3.6 billion from
contracts to serve U.S. troops and rebuild the oil industry in
Iraq. Halliburton executives say that the company received about
$1 billion a month for Iraq work in 2006. In addition, last
month, we learned of new plans to spend hundreds of millions
more to create jobs in Iraq.
Last year, the Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction
found that millions of U.S. taxpayer funds appropriated for Iraq
reconstruction have been lost and diverted. Yet we continue to
send more taxpayer funds to Iraq, without accountability.
Too much of this money is unaccounted for, and many of the
facilities and services that these funds were supposed to pay
for are still nonexistent. We in Congress must ask – where did
all the money go? We need to press for more accountability over
the use and abuse of billions of taxpayers’ dollars sent as
development aid to Iraq, not less.
Accountability is Long Overdue
A new law to combat war profiteering in Iraq and elsewhere is
sorely needed and long overdue. Although there are anti-fraud
laws to protect against the waste of U.S. tax dollars at home,
no law expressly prohibits war profiteering or expressly confers
jurisdiction on U.S. federal courts to hear fraud cases
involving war profiteering committed overseas.
The bill I introduced today would criminalize Awar profiteering@
– overcharging taxpayers in order to defraud and to profit
excessively from a war, military action, or reconstruction
efforts. It would also prohibit any fraud against the United
States involving a contract for the provision of goods or
services in connection with a war, military action, or for
relief or reconstruction activities. This new crime would be a
felony, subject to criminal penalties of up to 20 years in
prison and fines of up to $1 million, or twice the illegal gross
profits of the crime.
The bill also prohibits false statements connected with the
provision of goods or services in connection with a war or
reconstruction effort. This crime would also be a felony,
subject to criminal penalties of up to 10 years in prison and
fines of up to $1 million, or twice the illegal gross profits of
the crime.
The measure also addresses weakness in the existing laws used to
combat war profiteering, by providing clear authority for the
Government to seek criminal penalties and to recover excessive
profits for war profiteering overseas. These are strong and
focused sanctions that are narrowly tailored to punish and deter
fraud or excessive profiteering in contracts, both at home and
abroad.
The message sent by this bill is clear -- any act to exploit the
crisis situation in Iraq or elsewhere overseas for exorbitant
gain is unacceptable, reprehensible, and criminal. Such deceit
demeans and exploits the sacrifices that our military personnel
are making in Iraq and Afghanistan, and around the world. This
bill also builds on a strong legacy of historical efforts to
stem war profiteering. Congress implemented excessive-profits
taxes and contract renegotiation laws after both World Wars, and
again after the Korean War. Advocating exactly such an approach,
President Roosevelt once declared it our duty to ensure that “a
few do not gain from the sacrifices of the many.”
A Fresh Start
Our Government cannot in good faith ask its people to sacrifice
for reconstruction efforts that allow some to profit unfairly.
When U.S. taxpayers have been called upon to bear the burden of
reconstruction contracts – where contracts are awarded in a
system that offers little competition and even less
accountability – concerns about wartime profiteering are a grave
matter.
Combating war profiteering is not a Democratic issue, or a
Republican issue. Rather, it is a cause that all Americans can
support. When I first introduced this bill in 2003, it came to
be cosponsored by 21 Senators. The Senate Appropriations
Committee also unanimously accepted these provisions during a
Senate Appropriations Committee markup of the $87 billion
appropriations bill for Iraq and Afghanistan for Fiscal Year
2004, and this provision passed the Senate. Passing bipartisan
war profiteering prevention legislation was the right thing to
do then, and it is the right thing to do now.
I am hopeful that in a new year, and with a new Congress, we can
make a fresh start and forge a bipartisan partnership on this
important issue that will result in passage of this bill. I ask
unanimous consent that a copy of the bill be printed in the
Record.
# # # # #
War Profiteering Prevention Act of 2007
§ Criminalizes war profiteering, which is defined as materially
overvaluing any good or service with the specific intent to
excessively profit from the war and relief or reconstruction
activities
§ Statute would strengthen the tools available to federal
prosecutors to combat war profiteering by providing clear
authority for the Government to seek criminal penalties and to
recover excessive profits for war profiteering overseas.
§ Prohibits any fraud against the United States, Iraq, or any
other foreign country involving a contract for the provision of
any goods or services in connection with a war, military action,
or relief or reconstruction activities.
§ Subjects violators to up to 20 years imprisonment and a fine
not to exceed the greater of $1,000,000 or twice the amount of
any illegal gross profits, or both.
§ Prohibits making a false statement in any matter involving a
contract for the provision of any goods or services in
connection with a war, military action, or relief or
reconstruction activities.
§ Subjects violators of this provision to up to 10 years
imprisonment and a fine not to exceed the greater of $1,000,000,
or twice the amount of any illegal gross profits, or both.
§ Creates extraterritorial jurisdiction over offenses committed
overseas, and covers any person in the United States or abroad
who violates its provisions.
(Background Information)
Billions Of Taxpayer Dollars Lost
To Fraud And Waste In Iraq And Elsewhere
The United States has spent more than a quarter of a TRILLION
dollars during its four years in Iraq.
Over $50 BILLION -- more than the annual budget of the
Department of Homeland Security -- has been spent to hire
private contractors to guard bases, drive trucks, feed and
shelter the troops and rebuild the country.
BILLIONS of taxpayer dollars are unaccounted for, according to a
finding by the special inspector general examining the Iraq
reconstruction effort.
Since 2000, 10 companies with billions of dollars in U.S.
contracts for Iraq reconstruction have paid more than $300
MILLION IN PENALTIES to resolve allegations of bid rigging,
fraud, delivery of faulty military parts and environmental
damage in connection with other projects.
Examples of Fraud and Waste - Custer Battles, Halliburton and
Bechtel
CUSTER BATTLES is accused of bilking the government out of $50
MILLION
Custer Battles billed the government nearly $10 MILLION when its
actual costs were less than $4 MILLION, according to a
government investigation.
Custer Battles over billed electricity costs by $326,000 -
Actual electricity charges of $74,000 were billed at $400,000.
Custer Battles over billed for trucks that did not run by
$572,000 – Actual purchase price of $228,000 for faulty trucks
were billed to government for $800,000.
The two largest government contractors in Iraq -- Bechtel Corp.
and Halliburton Co. -- have been fined several times in the past
four years.
HALLIBURTON CO. averaged about $ 1 BILLION A MONTH from the
government for work in Iraq in 2006, according to executives.
The company took in $3.6 BILLION last year from contracts to
serve U.S. troops and rebuild the oil industry in Iraq.
A pattern of fraud, waste, and corruption by Halliburton in Iraq
emerged through news reports between December 2003 and May 2004.
In December, a Pentagon investigation found evidence that
Halliburton's Kellogg, Brown & Root (KBR) had overcharged the
U.S. government some $61 MILLION for fuel deliveries from Kuwait
to Iraq. In January, Halliburton admitted to the Pentagon that
two of its employees took up to $6 million in kickbacks for
awarding a Kuwaiti-based company with work in Iraq. Then in
early February it was reported that the company had agreed to
repay the U.S. government some $27 million for meals that were
never served to American troops.
Bills From Five-Star, Beachfront Hotel And Drivers Paid to Haul
Empty Trucks - In May 2006, the Coalition Provisional
Authority's inspector general started raising questions about
the bills that Halliburton had racked up at a five-star
beachfront hotel near Kuwait City. And 12 Halliburton truck
drivers claimed they risked their lives driving empty trucks in
Iraq while their employer billed the government for hauling
absolutely nothing.
Investigation of Overcharging And Potential Connection to
Nigeria Bribery Scheme - Federal authorities are also
investigating whether Halliburton broke the law by using a
subsidiary to do business in Iran, whether the company
overcharged for work done for the Pentagon in the Balkans and
whether it was involved in an alleged $180 million bribery
scheme in Nigeria. The company admitted in 2003 that it
improperly paid $2.4 million to a Nigerian tax official.
BECHTEL CORP. paid more than $110,000 to the Environmental
Protection Agency and the Energy Department in 2000 and 2001 to
settle alleged safety and environmental violations. Bechtel has
prime construction contracts in Iraq worth more than $2 billion.
Fines Exceeding $86 Million - Bechtel hired three subcontractors
in Iraq that have been fined more than $86 million in the past
four years, though none had been banned from getting new
contracts.
Others Punished For Waste, Fraud and Abuse Of Govt. Contracts
American International Contractors Inc., paid $4.7 million in
fines in 2000 after pleading guilty to bid rigging on a
U.S.-funded water project in Egypt, according to published
reports. AICI has part of a $325 million contract to rebuild
Iraq's transportation systems, has a share of a $500 million
contract for emergency construction needs in the Pentagon's
Central Command region, which includes Iraq and Afghanistan, and
is in a partnership that has a $70 million construction contract
at Al-Udeid air base in Qatar, used to support troops in Iraq.
Fluor Corp., paid $8.5 million to the Defense Department in 2001
to settle charges it improperly bil