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Obama Justice System

By: killthecat in FFFT | Recommend this post (0)
Sat, 23 Apr 11 1:35 AM | 102 view(s)
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You get caught screwing America during wartime, you get a little fine, admit no guilt, and get another $2 billion contract from Obama. Besides, Dynacorp says they have stopped pimping young boys (8 to 15-year-olds) to the Afghan police they were supposed to be training. (See Wikileaks) No wonder Obama is all-out to imprison, silence and prosecute those Wikileaks guys. Can't let truth come out.
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DynCorp International Inc., the largest U.S. contractor in Afghanistan, will pay $7.7 million to settle allegations it submitted inflated claims for construction work in Iraq, the U.S. said.

The Justice Department said today that DynCorp and its subcontractor, The Sandi Group, agreed to resolve a whistleblower case filed in federal court inWashington. The Sandi Group, accused of submitting false claims on a police-training contract in Iraq, will pay more than $1 million.

“The hard work of stabilizing Iraq is challenging enough without contractors and subcontractors inflating the cost of rebuilding by making false claims at taxpayers’ expense,” Assistant Attorney General Tony West, who oversees the department’s civil division, said in an e-mailed statement.

DynCorp inflated the costs of building camps at various locations in Iraq, the U.S. said. The Sandi Group sought reimbursement for “danger pay” that it falsely claimed was paid to employees.

The lawsuit, which couldn’t be verified on the court’s docket, was filed by two former employees of The Sandi Group. Those former employees, Drew Halldorson and Brian Evancho, will receive as much as $481,710, according to the Justice Department.

DynCorp “cooperated fully with the review of the issues and is pleased to have reached a resolution,” said Ashley Burke, a spokeswoman for the Falls Church, Virginia-based company, in an e-mailed statement.

“The settlement agreement expressly states that DI does not admit any wrongdoing,” Burke said. “While the company believes that its actions were appropriate and allowable under the contract, we are committed to resolving this issue to the satisfaction of the U.S. government.”


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