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Old October 28th, 2004, 04:56 PM   #1
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FBI Investigating Halliburton Contracts; Escalating issue into a CRIMINAL matter


Another piece of bad news for the Bush Cheney reelection bid, from Philly.com


FBI Investigating Halliburton Contracts

JOHN SOLOMON

Associated Press

WASHINGTON - The FBI has begun investigating whether the Pentagon improperly awarded no-bid contracts to Halliburton Co., seeking an interview with a top Army contracting officer and collecting documents from several government offices.

The line of inquiry expands an earlier FBI investigation into whether Halliburton overcharged taxpayers for fuel in Iraq, and it elevates to a criminal matter the election-year question of whether the Bush administration showed favoritism to Vice President Dick Cheney's former company.

FBI agents this week sought permission to interview Bunnatine Greenhouse, the Army Corps of Engineers' chief contracting officer who went public last weekend with allegations that her agency unfairly awarded KBR, a Halliburton subsidiary, no-bid contracts worth billions of dollars for work in Iraq, according to documents obtained by The Associated Press.

Asked about the documents, Greenhouse's lawyers said Thursday their client will cooperate but that she wants whistle-blower protection from Pentagon retaliation.

"I think it (the FBI interview request) underscores the seriousness of the misconduct, and it also demonstrates how courageous Ms. Greenhouse was for stepping forward," said Stephen Kohn, one of her attorneys.

"The initiation of an FBI investigation into criminal misconduct will help restore public confidence," Kohn said. "The Army must aggressively protect Ms. Greenhouse from the retaliation she will encounter as a result of blowing the whistle on this misconduct."

FBI agents also recently began collecting documents from Army offices in Texas and elsewhere to examine how and why Halliburton, a Houston-based oil services conglomerate, got the no-bid work.

"The Corps is absolutely cooperating with the FBI, and it has been an ongoing effort," said Army Corps spokeswoman Carol Sanders. "Our role is to cooperate. It's a public contract and public funds. We've been providing them information for quite a while."

The FBI declined to comment Thursday, but a law enforcement official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the investigation does not involve anyone in the White House - including Cheney's office.

Wendy Hall, a Halliburton spokeswoman, said the company is cooperating with various investigations, but she dismissed the latest revelation as election politics. She noted Congress' auditing arm, the Government Accountability Office, found the company's no-bid work in Iraq was legal.

"The old allegations have once again been recycled, this time one week before the election," Hall said. "The GAO said earlier this year that the contract was properly awarded because Halliburton was the only contractor that could do the work.

"We look forward to the end of the election, because no matter who is elected president, Halliburton is proud to serve the troops just as we have for the past 60 years for both Democrat and Republican administrations," she said.

Cheney spokesman Kevin Kellems, asked if investigators had contacted the vice president or his office about the contracts, said they had not.

Democrats have tried to make Halliburton an election-year issue, and vice presidential candidate John Edwards quickly seized upon the latest development. In a CBS interview, Edwards said there was a "long pattern of favoritism" between the Bush administration and its well-connected friends.

Sen. Frank Lautenberg, a Democrat on the Senate Governmental Affairs Committee who has been investigating Halliburton's contracts, said his office was told the FBI recently sought documents from various government offices. The requests focused on how and why Halliburton got the Iraq contracts.

"This multibillion dollar no-bid contract to Halliburton was suspicious from day one, and now our worst suspicions are confirmed," Lautenberg said. "The FBI doesn't get involved unless there are possible criminal violations."

In a formal whistle-blower complaint filed last week, Greenhouse alleged the award of contracts without competition to KBR puts at risk "the integrity of the federal contracting program as it relates to a major defense contractor." The contracts were to restore Iraq's oil industry.

Among the evidence cited in the complaint was an internal 2003 Pentagon e-mail that says the Iraq contract "has been coordinated" with Cheney's White House office.

The vice president, who continues to receive deferred compensation from when he was Halliburton's chief executive in the late 1990s, has steadfastly maintained he has played no role in the selection of his former company for federal business.

The Army last week referred Greenhouse's allegations to the Defense Department's inspector general. Documents show FBI agents from Quad Cities, Ill., asked Tuesday to interview Greenhouse. Her lawyers declined to discuss the contacts.

Greenhouse alleged in her complaint that after her superiors signed off on the Iraq business in February 2003, a month before the war began, and returned it for her necessary approval, she specifically asked why the work was being extended for several years.

Beside her signature, Greenhouse wrote: "I caution that extending this sole-source effort beyond a one-year period could convey an invalid perception that there is not strong intent for a limited competition," the complaint said.

The oil restoration work was given to KBR without competitive bidding through 10 separate work assignments called "task orders." The orders were issued under an existing contract between Halliburton and the U.S. military that was awarded competitively in December 2001.

While the Corps was authorized to spend up to $7 billion for the oil restoration work, the actual cost so far has been $2.5 billion. Halliburton is still working on the oil facilities, but it is now operating under a new, competitively awarded contract.
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Old October 28th, 2004, 05:00 PM   #2
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How much money has been spent investigating Haliburton?
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Old October 28th, 2004, 05:12 PM   #3
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Another piece of bad news for the Bush Cheney reelection bid, from Philly.com
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Old October 28th, 2004, 05:22 PM   #4
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you think this is good news? No wonder you're confused.
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Old October 28th, 2004, 05:24 PM   #5
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you think this is good news? No wonder you're confused.

I don't know what it has to do with the Bush/Cheney re-election campaign. Part of this investigation includes work done under the Clinton Adminstration.
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Old October 28th, 2004, 05:37 PM   #6
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I don't know what it has to do with the Bush/Cheney re-election campaign. Part of this investigation includes work done under the Clinton Adminstration.
Right - part of the investigation has to do with what was going on WHILE THE VP was in charge and then another part of the investigation has to do with the giving of a no-bid contract to the VP's former company - but you're right - it would be foolish to think there's any link here between Bush/CHENEY - 40 - there's stirring the pot - and then there's just outright ostrich-naivete.
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Old October 28th, 2004, 06:34 PM   #7
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Right - part of the investigation has to do with what was going on WHILE THE VP was in charge and then another part of the investigation has to do with the giving of a no-bid contract to the VP's former company - but you're right - it would be foolish to think there's any link here between Bush/CHENEY - 40 - there's stirring the pot - and then there's just outright ostrich-naivete.
C'mon Cheesy. You know this is just election day politics, just like I and a lot of other Americans know. Funny how this gal decides to ask for protection just a few days before the election for something that happened back in 2003. She didn't need this protection for almost a year and a half and now it's suddenly necessary? And this is over extending a no-bid contact? Give me a break.
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Old October 28th, 2004, 06:43 PM   #8
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C'mon Cheesy. You know this is just election day politics, just like I and a lot of other Americans know. Funny how this gal decides to ask for protection just a few days before the election for something that happened back in 2003. She didn't need this protection for almost a year and a half and now it's suddenly necessary? And this is over extending a no-bid contact? Give me a break.
40 - you know what you remind me of in the last couple weeks - my friends out here in LA who were Laker fans and were down 3-1 - they were sure they were gonna win still and couldn't believe that the Pistons were even in the siers. They were also blaming the refs for everything (the press) that was going wrong instead of looking at the problems on their own team anwhich we're actually the root of the destruction of the team. Hopefully - just as the Pistons did, John Kerry can complete the Boston Euphoria Sweep that started last night and rise up against the Bush Dynasty and destroy it just like the Laker Dynasty was destroyed. But - this 7 game series is a hell of a lot closer than the Laker series was - we'll see how it plays out, but I am starting to think there is some change in the air (but then again - I thought Pedro was gonna get shelled two nights ago).

I dub you - 40YearLakerFAN FROM HERE ON OUT!
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Old October 28th, 2004, 06:46 PM   #9
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40 - you know what you remind me of in the last couple weeks - my friends out here in LA who were Laker fans and were down 3-1 - they were sure they were gonna win still and couldn't believe that the Pistons were even in the siers. They were also blaming the refs for everything (the press) that was going wrong instead of looking at the problems on their own team anwhich we're actually the root of the destruction of the team. Hopefully - just as the Pistons did, John Kerry can complete the Boston Euphoria Sweep that started last night and rise up against the Bush Dynasty and destroy it just like the Laker Dynasty was destroyed. But - this 7 game series is a hell of a lot closer than the Laker series was - we'll see how it plays out, but I am starting to think there is some change in the air (but then again - I thought Pedro was gonna get shelled two nights ago).

I dub you - 40YearLakerFAN FROM HERE ON OUT!
Cheesy, calling me a Laker fan is fightin words.
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Old October 28th, 2004, 06:52 PM   #10
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Cheesy, calling me a Laker fan is fightin words.
Lakerfan - BushFan - To quote the Dice-man: WHAT'S THE DIFFERENCE? OOOHHH!
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Old October 29th, 2004, 05:28 AM   #11
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Maybe the FBI biggies think Kerry will win, since Ashcroft is their boss. If Kerry wins, they will look good. If Bush wins, they can just exonerate Haliburton by saying, we investigated and found nothing.

P.S. What is a Bunnatine Greenhouse?
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Old October 29th, 2004, 10:03 AM   #12
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Lakerfan - BushFan - To quote the Dice-man: WHAT'S THE DIFFERENCE? OOOHHH!
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Old November 11th, 2004, 06:18 AM   #13
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If it won't go away, maybe...........


Halliburton May Have Been Pressured by U.S. Diplomats to Disregard High Fuel Prices
By ERIK ECKHOLM

Published: November 11, 2004

American diplomats pressured the Halliburton Company in late 2003 to keep using a Kuwaiti subcontractor to truck fuel into Iraq, despite evidence that the company was charging exorbitant prices, newly released State Department documents show.

The documents - a handful of e-mail messages and memorandums to and from American diplomats - raise yet more questions about the post-invasion fuel imports to Iraq, which are already the subject of federal inquiries into possible overbilling and fraud.

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They indicate that the Kuwait government secretly demanded that only one company - a Kuwaiti company, Altanmia - be selected to handle fuel sales to Iraq. And they show behind-the-scenes efforts by the American-run Coalition Provisional Authority and the American Embassy in Kuwait to ensure that demand was met, both to speed delivery and foster Kuwaiti support in Iraq.

The documents, however, do not clarify the central questions about the imports: why the Americans went along with such high costs and which parties to the transactions may have benefited most. The documents were released Wednesday by Representative Henry A. Waxman, a California Democrat and ranking minority member of the House Committee on Government Reform, as he asked for new Congressional hearings on the matter. The committee has gathered hundreds of documents related to the issue.

Soon after the American invasion in March 2003, with gasoline lines lengthening in Iraq and public order crumbling, the Pentagon asked the Halliburton subsidiary Kellogg Brown & Root to import consumer fuels on an urgent basis.

KBR hired a Kuwaiti conglomerate, Altanmia Commercial Marketing Company, to secure the fuels from the Kuwait government and arrange for their delivery.

Critics in Congress and elsewhere soon questioned the prices KBR was paying and passing along - with a markup for itself - to the Army. On Dec. 11, 2003, Pentagon auditors concluded that the KBR-Altanmia fuel prices, including gasoline delivered at $2.64 per gallon, were more than double the cost of available alternatives. They said that through September of that year the Army had been overbilled by $61 million.

Executives of Halliburton and KBR have defended the fuel charges, saying they were reasonable under the demanding conditions of the time. The Pentagon is still debating whether to demand a refund from KBR, and the F.B.I. is examining the fuel transactions.

In December, as a new round of contracts were to be issued, the debate over whether to continue using Altanmia grew stronger. Some documents suggest Kuwaiti pressure. A letter sent to KBR by the contracting officer for the Army Corps of Engineers in Kuwait, Mary C. Robinson, on Dec. 6, 2003, states, "I will not succumb to the political pressures from the GoK or the US Embassy to go against my integrity and pay a higher price for fuel than necessary." GoK is the government of Kuwait.

Ms. Robinson was overruled, and just 13 days later, the Army Corps of Engineers headquarters in Washington issued an unusual waiver declaring that the KBR fuel prices had been "fair and reasonable," and that the company would not be required to provide detailed cost data to justify the expenditures.

The senior contracting official of the Corps, Bunnatine H. Greenhouse, said in a recent letter that the waiver was improperly adopted by Corps officers who went behind her back.

Another document, an e-mail message from the United States ambassador to Kuwait, shows the urgency American diplomats felt. On Dec. 2, 2003 - shortly before Pentagon auditors questioned the fuel prices but well after the issue had been raised in Washington - the ambassador, Richard H. Jones, who also served as deputy administrator of the coalition authority in Iraq, wrote to a colleague: "Please, tell KBR to get off their butts and conclude deals with Kuwait NOW! Tell them we want a deal done with Altanmia within 24 hours and don't take any excuses."
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