Det danske Fredsakademi
Kronologi over fredssagen og international politik 19. december
2004 / Time Line December 19, 2004
Version 3.5
18. December 2004, 20. December 2004
12/19/2004
Contractor Argues U.S. Fraud Law Does Not Cover Iraqi Funds
: Outcome of suit against a security firm may set a precedent for
cases that involve other legislation.
By T. Christian Miller
Times Staff Writer
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-contractor19dec19,1,7979749,print.story?coll=la-headlines-world
ALEXANDRIA, Va. - Attorneys for a U.S.-based security company
accused of setting up sham companies in a multimillion-dollar fraud
scheme in Iraq are contending in court that the firm cannot be sued
under a key federal anti-corruption law because the allegedly
stolen money belonged to Iraqis, not Americans.
The potentially precedent-setting case could undercut fraud claims
involving billions of dollars in reconstruction contracts that were
issued by the U.S.-led Coalition Provisional Authority and paid for
with money belonging to the Iraqi people.
Arguments broke out in federal court Friday over two fundamental
questions: whether the CPA, which had ruled occupied Iraq, can be
considered a U.S. agency, and whether fraud involving Iraqi money
can be subject to suits under the False Claims Act, considered one
of the federal government's most important tools against fraud.
John Boese, an attorney for the security firm, Custer Battles,
asked a judge to dismiss the case as "fatally defective."
Boese argued that the act did not apply to his clients because the
CPA, not the U.S. government, was the alleged victim.
"The funds that were used were Iraqi funds, not U.S. funds," said
Boese, adding later, "If there was any false claims here, the
entity that was cheated was the Coalition Provisional
Authority."
Custer Battles has denied any fraud, attributing the allegations to
disgruntled former employees who have since emerged as competitors
to the firm.
Those employees are now suing Custer Battles under the False Claims
Act, which allows citizens to sue U.S. contractors on behalf of the
federal government to seek damages for fraud.
If successful, the citizens get a share of the money that the
contractor is forced to pay back to the U.S. government. In effect,
the act creates a potential army of informants among contractor
employees with the incentive to report fraud.
In 2003, the act led to $2.1 billion in fraud recovery - with $319
million going to the whistle-blowers, according to Department of
Justice statistics.
12/19/2004
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