Oh please. Give me a freaking break. You let the generals figure that out. I worked in the Pentagon for five years and I saw the waste, fraud and abuse first-hand. Everybody thinks so highly of our military and think it can do no wrong. But the Pentagon and private defense contractors are taking American taxpayers to the cleaners. To think otherwise is just plain naive.
Take a look at this link:
http://www.foxnews.com/printer_friendly_wires/2009Mar02/0,4675,GovernmentFraud,00.html
Contractor gets 6+ years in Pentagon fraud case
Monday, March 02, 2009
By MEG KINNARD, Associated Press Writer
COLUMBIA, S.C. —
The owner of a defunct South Carolina company was sentenced Monday to 6 1/2 years in prison for bilking the Pentagon out of $21 million she obtained by inflating military equipment shipping costs.
"Your Honor, I messed up. I messed up really bad," Charlene Corley told U.S. District Judge Margaret Seymour before she was sentenced. "I want to apologize and say I'm really sorry."
Seymour also ordered Corley, who pleaded guilty in 2007 to conspiracy to commit wire fraud and conspiracy to commit money laundering, to pay $15.5 million in restitution to the Defense Department.
"The money was taken at a time when our country was at war," Seymour said, in handing down Corley's sentence.
From 1997 to 2006, prosecutors say Corley and her twin sister Darlene Wooten used their plumbing and hardware equipment supply company to exploit an automated payment system designed to speed shipments bound for U.S. forces overseas, submitting huge bills to ship inexpensive items.
Prosecutors said fraudulent charges made through their West Columbia-based company, C&D Distributors, included ones for nearly $1 million to ship two 19-cent lock washers and almost $500,000 to ship an $11 threaded plug.
"This was all because they wanted to live large at the government's expense," Assistant U.S. Attorney Debbie Barbier told the judge. "Every U.S. taxpayer is going to pay for their fraud."
Among the sisters' extravagant purchases were matching $96,000 Mercedes-Benz luxury cars, a $250,000 box at Clemson University's football stadium, four beach houses and hundreds of thousands of dollars in jewelry, prosecutors said.
"Mrs. Corley put her obscene, personal pleasure well ahead of her responsibility to act professionally and honestly in contracting with the government," Assistant U.S. Attorney Kevin McDonald said.