Pentagon Poster Child For Waste, Fraud and Abuse

The Pentagon, as you may have heard, has a line item in its budget called “waste, fraud and abuse.” OK. Not really. But it should have. It’s all the powers-that-be talk about when it comes to cutting defense, as if eliminating this trio of lard, larceny and laziness would let us cut the nation’s $1 trillion defense budget — when you include homeland security and vets — in half. Last month, you may recall, Sen. Bernie Saunders, I-Vermont, released a Pentagon report detailing rampant WFA in Pentagon contracts.

Luckily, the Pentagon has figured out how to curb such malfeasance, and detailed its plan last Friday in the Federal Register, the government’s compendium of pending rules and regs. Bottom line: defense contractors’ fraud hotline programs are lame. The posters they put up encouraging workers to rat out their colleagues aren’t good enough. In the past, if contractors had their own hotline posters, they didn’t need to put up posters from the Pentagon inspector general advertising the Pentagon IG’s own hotline. But no more.

“The DoD IG finds that this exemption has the potential to make the DoD hotline program less effective by ultimately reducing contractor exposure to DoD IG fraud hotline posters and diminishing the means by which fraud, waste, and abuse can be reported under the protection of Federal whistleblower protection laws,” the announcement reads. “Some contractor’s [doesn't the government hire proof-readers anymore? -- mt] posters may not be as effective as the DoD poster in advertising the hotline number, which is integral to the fraud program.”

So the Pentagon plans to require all companies with contracts of $5 million or more display the Pentagon’s own hotline posters. That’ll stop ‘em (the number’s in the poster at the top of this item, if you want to make a quick call during your lunch break).

Related Topics: Fraud, pentagon, National Security
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  • michaelfury

    “[doesn't the government hire proof-readers anymore? -- mt]”

    Evidently not.

    “We asked about persistent press reports that a certain damaged hard-drives had been recovered from the WTC site and sent to Germany, where a company was working to restore them. These press reports contend that large volumes of suspicious transactions flowed through computers housed in the WTC on the morning of 9/11 as part of some illicit but ill-defined effort to profit from the attacks. The assembled agents expressed no knowledge of the reported hard-drive recovery effort or the alleged scheme. Moreover, one of the New York agents pointed out, from personal experience, that everything at the WTC was pulverized to near power, making it extremely unlikely that any hard-drives survived to the extent they data be recovered.”

    - 9/11 Commission memorandum

    http://michaelfury.wordpress.com/2011/01/26/an-affront-to-the-memory/

  • nflfoghorn

    Too early in the morning for conspiracy theories.

  • freeinpa

    Mark T.:

    “So the Pentagon plans to require all companies with contracts of $5 million or more display the Pentagon’s own hotline posters. That’ll stop ‘em (the number’s in the poster at the top of this item, if you want to make a quick call during your lunch break).”
    .

    Check out any lunch or break room in any company and see the government posters that are mandated to be displayed. The best way to keep down fraud from any government spending of course to reduce spending. The odds are higher that posting a fraud hotline would work better than Democrats cutting spending.

  • m0mentom0ri

    “rampant WFA in Pentagon contracts”
    .
    That’s a feature, not a bug; as far as the defense industry, and the politicians they purchase, are concerned.

  • libssd

    In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist.
    – Dwight D. Eisenhower, Farewell Address, January 17, 1961

  • sacredh

    “So the Pentagon plans to require all companies with contracts of $5 million or more display the Pentagon’s own hotline posters. That’ll stop ‘em (the number’s in the poster at the top of this item, if you want to make a quick call during your lunch break).”

    I wonder how many companies will have a video camera trained on the posters to see who looks at it?

  • theotherjimmyolson

    Shouldn’t there be a comma after the word pentagon?

  • sacredh

    LOL.

  • sacredh

    Ftw.

  • http://tisias.wordpress.com tisias

    You know, I’ve heard that if we cut the DoD, we are going to hurt our troops and decrease the quality of their protection, and how the benefits and other things are going to play out.

    That’s what the contractors want you to think.

    The fraud and inefficiencies with these contractors in the DoD are massive. I’m not going to cite anything, because I have to look for more physical information, but I’m hoping the people who agree or disagree with me in reply have some information.

    But, (and I really really really hate to quote this man) as Glenn Beck said, “we are tired of the number games.”

  • kbanginmotown

    I think a colon would work better.

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