MARIN COUNTY'S NEWS
MONTHLY - FREE PRESS
September, 2004 Halliburton Contracts Should Be
Suspended By Feds The government should consider suspending or
debarring Halliburton from receiving future government contracts given their
inability to account for $1.8 billion and numerous cases of corporate
misconduct. Vice President Cheney headed Halliburton before he was elected Vice
President. (see Center for Public Integrity
http://www.publicintegrity.org/wow/report.aspx?aid=366&sid=100 ).
(415)868-1600 -
(415)868-0502(fax) - P.O. Box 31, Bolinas, CA, 94924
"By law, the federal government is prohibited from doing
future business with risky companies. Halliburton's accounting fiasco is the
clearest example we have seen in years that merits suspension or debarment by
the government. Halliburton is treating our nation's taxpayer dollars like
Monopoly money," said Danielle Brian, Executive Director of the Project On
Government Oversight (POGO).
Many of the US government's largest contractors were found to have
repeatedly broken the law or engaged in misconduct, according to investigations
by POGO in 2001 and 2002. However, they were, at that time, never even
temporarily suspended or debarred from gaining additional government contracts,
contrary to Reagan/Bush era laws.
Since POGO's investigation, federal officials have more closely
followed laws that require the government to bar unethical companies from
government contracts. As a result, for the first time in more than a decade,
major contractors involved in misconduct were recently suspended from
government contracts including Enron, MCI/Worldcom, and defense contractor
Boeing.
Halliburton has been one of the fastest-growing defense
contractors, seeing increases of government revenues go from $483 million in FY
2002 to $3.92 billion in FY 2003, according to the Department of Defense. As a
result their ranking went from 37th largest to 7th largest defense contractor.
For more background information, see:
¥ Testimony of POGO's Danielle Brian before the George
Washington School of Law Regarding "Suspension & Debarment: Emerging
Issues in Law and Policy" http://www.pogo.org/p/contracts/ct-031101-debarment.html
¥ POGO's 2002 report and database "Federal Contractor
Misconduct: Failures of the Suspension