October 27, 2009 11:02 AM
- Text
Suspended Contractors Got Stimulus Work
(ProPublica)
This story originally appeared at ProPublica.org. It was written by Michael Grabell
Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., has sent a letter (PDF) to Defense Secretary Robert Gates asking why contractors under criminal investigation were able to obtain millions of dollars in work from the $787 billion federal stimulus program.
In a story co-published this morning in USA Today, we reported that six companies suspected of defrauding a small-business program have been awarded 112 stimulus projects, worth nearly $30 million, at Air Force and Army bases across the country.
The government investigation began more than a year ago, but the companies weren't suspended from receiving new government contracts until Sept. 23, after they'd already begun working on the stimulus projects.
Coburn, who sits on the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, told Gates that he wanted to work with his office "to ensure that contractors in the midst of federal suspension and debarment proceedings are not rewarded with continued stimulus funding simply because their malfeasance was not discovered until the contract was under way."
In an interview Monday, Coburn said the projects point to concerns he raised early on about the potential for fraud and abuse in the stimulus package.
"Where's the notification so you don't give additional contracts to folks who are under investigation?" he said. "If somebody fixed your garage door and they defrauded you-or, rather, you thought they defrauded you-would you give them more business? Nobody else in the country would do that."
According to the Air Force suspension order, which was first reported by the Dayton Daily News, the six companies claimed to be small minority-owned businesses, but in reality they were all controlled by Craig Jackson, a Southern California businessman known for mentoring minority contractors.
Jackson had already benefited from the Small Business Administration's minority contractor program, and his firm, Sanders Engineering, had grown too large to compete for government contracts set aside for "socially and economically disadvantaged individuals." But the arrangement with the other businesses allowed him to continue to profit from the special contracts, the Air Force alleged.
Over the years, 19 companies controlled by Jackson-including the six that won stimulus contracts-"received more than $700 million in government contracts to which they may not have been legally entitled," according to the suspension order.
In a formal response to the suspension filed Friday, Tony Franco, an attorney for Sanders Engineering, said the Air Force had misconstrued technical SBA rules. The SBA was well aware of the relationships and had even recommended that Sanders Engineering share its accounting expertise with other small businesses, he said.
Franco added that the criminal investigation was prompted by pressure from Congress and politically-connected contractors to go after Alaska Native Corporations, which have special rules to help them win government contracts. One of the firms allegedly controlled by Jackson, APM LLC, is owned by the Cape Fox Corporation, whose shareholders are Tlingit natives living in a village near Ketchikan, Alaska.
Franco wrote that Sanders Engineering and other Jackson companies unknowingly walked "into a political firestorm, in which their successes would be used against them in an effort to make someone-no matter how unfairly-pay a steep price for the growing political unpopularity of the unique legal provisions governing ANCs."
by Michael Grabell
©
Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., has sent a letter (PDF) to Defense Secretary Robert Gates asking why contractors under criminal investigation were able to obtain millions of dollars in work from the $787 billion federal stimulus program.
In a story co-published this morning in USA Today, we reported that six companies suspected of defrauding a small-business program have been awarded 112 stimulus projects, worth nearly $30 million, at Air Force and Army bases across the country.
The government investigation began more than a year ago, but the companies weren't suspended from receiving new government contracts until Sept. 23, after they'd already begun working on the stimulus projects.
Coburn, who sits on the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, told Gates that he wanted to work with his office "to ensure that contractors in the midst of federal suspension and debarment proceedings are not rewarded with continued stimulus funding simply because their malfeasance was not discovered until the contract was under way."
In an interview Monday, Coburn said the projects point to concerns he raised early on about the potential for fraud and abuse in the stimulus package.
"Where's the notification so you don't give additional contracts to folks who are under investigation?" he said. "If somebody fixed your garage door and they defrauded you-or, rather, you thought they defrauded you-would you give them more business? Nobody else in the country would do that."
According to the Air Force suspension order, which was first reported by the Dayton Daily News, the six companies claimed to be small minority-owned businesses, but in reality they were all controlled by Craig Jackson, a Southern California businessman known for mentoring minority contractors.
Jackson had already benefited from the Small Business Administration's minority contractor program, and his firm, Sanders Engineering, had grown too large to compete for government contracts set aside for "socially and economically disadvantaged individuals." But the arrangement with the other businesses allowed him to continue to profit from the special contracts, the Air Force alleged.
Over the years, 19 companies controlled by Jackson-including the six that won stimulus contracts-"received more than $700 million in government contracts to which they may not have been legally entitled," according to the suspension order.
In a formal response to the suspension filed Friday, Tony Franco, an attorney for Sanders Engineering, said the Air Force had misconstrued technical SBA rules. The SBA was well aware of the relationships and had even recommended that Sanders Engineering share its accounting expertise with other small businesses, he said.
Franco added that the criminal investigation was prompted by pressure from Congress and politically-connected contractors to go after Alaska Native Corporations, which have special rules to help them win government contracts. One of the firms allegedly controlled by Jackson, APM LLC, is owned by the Cape Fox Corporation, whose shareholders are Tlingit natives living in a village near Ketchikan, Alaska.
Franco wrote that Sanders Engineering and other Jackson companies unknowingly walked "into a political firestorm, in which their successes would be used against them in an effort to make someone-no matter how unfairly-pay a steep price for the growing political unpopularity of the unique legal provisions governing ANCs."
by Michael Grabell
©
Popular Now in Politics
- CPAC: Will Sarah Palin spring a surprise?
- Timothy Dolan: Birth control tweak a "first step"
- CPAC: Santorum rips Romney, rouses conservatives
- Ann Coulter riles up the CPAC crowd
- After uproar, Obama tweaks birth control rule
- Santorum: Women could bring "emotions" to combat
- Romney takes on hecklers at Maine town hall
- Mitt Romney wins Maine GOP caucuses
- Sarah Palin revs up CPAC faithful
- Obama to announce revamp of birth control policy
- CPAC: Anti-Obama beats pro-Romney
- Occupy protestors kicked out of CPAC
- CPAC: Huckabee "thanks" Obama for birth control firestorm
- Report: Chicago cardinal joins contraceptives fight
- Romney on Obama: I will "knock him on his heels"
- Is Rick Santorum conservatives' last, best hope?
- Santorum's big benefactor
Latest CBS News Headlines
on Facebook
on CBS News
- Al-Qaida chief urges outside help for Syria rebels
- Saudi Mobily secures $2.7B Islamic loan
- Militants decry attacks against Pakistani military
- Boeing says it's frustrated with Dreamliner glitch
on Facebook
- Whitney Houston 1963-2012
- Adele sings a cappella for Anderson Cooper
- "Phantom" star sings on "CBS This Morning: Saturday"
on CBS News






