DOJ Names Dozens of IT Vendors in Kickback Scheme 174
grantus writes "Today, the U.S. Department of Justice joined three whistleblower lawsuits against Hewlett-Packard, Sun Microsystems and Accenture alleging a massive kickback scheme on government contracts. Among the IT vendors listed in the lawsuit as Accenture partners are Microsoft, Cisco, IBM, Dell and Oracle."
A show of hands if you are surprised (Score:4, Funny)
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Re:A show of hands if you are surprised (Score:5, Insightful)
A list of those who don't would be shorter (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:A list of those who don't would be shorter (Score:5, Funny)
In Other News, Steve Ballmer once bragged (under an NDA'd room that included Margaret Thatcher and Celine Dion) that he'd just spent the night with three monkeys in a sleazy motel. (They were typing the windows source code on a couple of typewriters for him...)
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And it's pretty certain Maggie and Celine wouldn't do it for washers (op.cit).
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Re:A show of hands if you are surprised (Score:5, Insightful)
A democracy that is allowed direct contact with special interest groups and lobbyism will drift towards an oligarchy, unless both (goverment and buisness) have a strong morale and/or rules (law) that are upheld. An oligarchy can, of course, only happend if the people let it, but I will let that be up to you (plural) to judge if that will happen.
Note to self: Don't try to write political posts at 5AM when you haven't been to bed yet. XD
Re:A show of hands if you are surprised (Score:5, Funny)
On the contrary, since you are commenting on slashdot, that is the ideal time.
Not only that, but you make no direct reference to the article, hinting that you haven't read it, which again, is spot on.
However, using words like Oligarchy at 5am can be dangerous, and you used it twice...
No democracy here... (Score:2)
Democracy is 'two wolves and a sheep voting on what to eat for dinner'. Or more realistically, democracy is the majority voting to outlaw the speech and opinion of minorities. And even more realistically, democracy is 10 of your neighbors voting to take your land and divide it up among themselves. Majority rule is a
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Re:A show of hands if you are surprised (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:A show of hands if you are surprised (Score:5, Funny)
Hmm...looks like the same number of hands...3...oh wait, little timmy's got both hands up. Balmer...put your other hand down...that won't work anymore.
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Please excuse me while I retreat to the washroom and express amusement at a funny story I just remembered.
we shall see. (Score:2)
the corruption wasn't with the govt. but with other companies. The other companies received money from Microsoft, Cisco, IBM, Dell and Oracle, among others for preferential treatment when it came to govt contracts.
The claims are that discounts and rebates are offered to the contractor - Accenture (slime warning) [wikipedia.org], so that they would recommend Dell, M$ and all that as just what the government needs. The rebates would not be passed onto the government, so they are simply bribes.
When you talk about bribe
Re:A show of hands if you are surprised (Score:5, Insightful)
Effectively with government contracts all the companies would agree to estimate far higher then it would ever take to fill the order. Step two, the contract winner would take the amount of money for the contract, subtract how much it really would have taken(this being raw "bonus" profit) and split that amongst the group since it involved the entire group to go along with it for it to work. Wait for the next contract and do it all over again, scamming millions if not billions from the US government who thought that it was getting a good deal off of each company fighting for the deal when really it was getting scammed by a pseudo-monopoly.
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Inaccurate Anecdote (Score:5, Interesting)
It's popular to suggest government bureaucrats (employees) are getting cash kickbacks, but that rarely pans out as true. Sometimes is does workout to a favorable job after the bureaucrats time in government is over, but before that, cash rarely changes hands. It's almost an "urban legend".
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CEO of Big Firm Inc., his immediate family, and a few friends/board members all donate the legal limit, $2300, to a Congressman's campaign. Say it totals $25k in donations. Then, when Congressman wins his campaign, a lobbyist calls to talk about the next contract coming out of the Congressman's committee. Congressman listens intently, and says that he will "do what he can" to assure a "fair bidding process." Congressman then makes a call to mid/upper level bureaucrat a
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"The office suite selected shall be 100% compatible with all documents produced with Microsoft Office 2007", etc.
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Re:A show of hands if you are surprised (Score:5, Informative)
Term is "oligopoly". Means a collusion of a number of companies to act like a single monopolist.
Re:A show of hands if you are surprised (Score:5, Informative)
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Not immediately, perhaps, but even governments cannot waste resources with immunity without having to face consequences down the line.
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HP might be a decent company but for its management.
Re:A show of hands if you are surprised (Score:5, Interesting)
As someone else pointed out the corruption is not in the US government but with the companies supplying IT services to them. Practically every large company in IT seems to be involved, from Microsoft to HP, IBM and Sun. Which is annoying for those of us who love a good Microsoft bash, it seems they are not the worst offenders in this case.
As I read it the /. economic model for these scams goes something like this:
There seem to be other variations on the theme, such as giving share options instead of discounts. Either way the US government have been overcharged it seems. Hope I'm right about this as it's a complex issue and the article is a little vague on the details, that's why I thought this summary would be useful. :)
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I RTFA, and although TFA wasn't extremely clear it doesn't seem that's all there is to it. If that's the entire hanging point, that a vendor saved some money by outsourcing and didn't pass the savings on, then I think the government has a pretty
Re:A show of hands if you are surprised (Score:4, Insightful)
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The lawsuits, originally filed by Accenture employee Norman Rille and another whistleblower, accuse the companies of creating alliance relationships with dozens of other vendors, giving each other discounts or rebates on products or work for government contracts. The companies did not pass the rebates on to their government clients, according to a DOJ court filing.
So that's "creating alliances between the companies", "giving each other discounts and rebates", and "not passing on rebates to the government".
Any rebates vendors receive as part of a U.S. government contract belong to the government, the DOJ said.
If that's part of the contract, that the vendor has to pass on rebates to the government, then it looks like the vendors have been pulling a scam. It might seem fair that they could keep the rebates for themselves, unless the rules specifically say they have to give them to the governme
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The "creating alliances between the companies" could very well mean that they know who they like to outsource to because they've had reliable service from them in the past. "... giving each other discounts and rebates" is common practice for large-volume purchases
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Even if it's all true exactly as you say, the vendor still bid on the contract at a particular rate. The government accepted that rate as the lowest (or the lowest cost/benefit reasonable proposal if it was an RFP instead of RFB). The vendor subcontracted some work out at list. A discount is applied due to volume. This is sand-on-a-beach standard business practice.
The only thing that causes anything wrong is if there's a contractual
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It's also possible (and more likely) that because of their partner
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5. lobby to have overseas (eg lenovo) banned from getting US govt contracts.
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I'm not sure they need to bribe that much. Given their current market position, all they need to do is spread a few seeds of FUD in the minds of people who are wondering if it's necessary to stick with a Microsoft-based solution and they've got the contract. If that doesn't work, plan B is to publicly agree to a special price "because you're such a large customer/because you're the gove
Things are a little more complex than that... (Score:2, Insightful)
The installation & software writing is often do by consultants/systems integrators - I work for one of the
Re:A show of hands if you are surprised (Score:5, Funny)
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*to the point of being just as corrupt if the politician brings home a sufficient amount of bacon. Dan Rostenkowski has always been my favorite example since he also exemplified Chicago politics as well. Monkey see, monkey do. Can't blame the politicians when they have full public approval.
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(Since you probably still haven't read TFA, here's a hint: the corruption is in the companies, not the government. The government--that is, you and me--are getting defrauded.)
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The DOJ is filing he lawsuit, because they didn't get their share of the kickback.
kickbacka (Score:1)
Re:kickbacka (Score:5, Insightful)
Reminds me of that Far Side cartoon "What a dog hears"
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Don't expect much ... (Score:4, Funny)
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Are you saying that Democrats don't take "kickbacks"? [boycottliberalism.com] Do bribes count? [cnn.com]
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Re:Don't expect much ... (Score:4, Insightful)
We like the 2 Party system because it make us believe that there is a good and evil party. If one side agrees and the other disagrees then you figure that one side needs to be right and the other needs to be wrong. While the truth can be both are right or both are wrong or right about some parts and wrong about others. Stop following party lines and think for yourself.
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We like the 2 Party system because it make us believe that there is a good and evil party.
No, we like the 2 party system because when one gets all up about themselves and starts thinking they crap marble we can toss them out and enjoy a couple years when the new guys are actually concerned about doing a good job, before the entitlement mentality sets in and we have to start all over again.
Re:Don't expect much ... (Score:5, Insightful)
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That actually sounds about right.
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When half of the Republican Congress gets hauled off to jail, evidenced by regular indictments and scandals, Conservative voters are happy to shout, "hey, the other side does it too."
When a Democratic member of Congress is found to engage in criminal behavior, their base is shouting with the rest to have them put in prison.
So ye
So (Score:2)
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I waver between "old habits die hard" and "never change a running system".
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Because they're all greedy as fuck and "... everybody else was doing it!"
That's exactly the reason (Score:3, Insightful)
High profile business is a dog eat dog world. Playing fair is no option. You either participate in the corruption and bribe the right people or you go under.
Yes, that's sad. Yes, that's business.
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same crooks, new name (Score:3, Informative)
It gets better (Score:2, Informative)
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Just so that they're right behind "Aasshole bail bonds and towing" in the phone book.
I mean really, what else matters?
Re:same crooks, new name (Score:5, Informative)
Re:same crooks, new name (Score:5, Informative)
Re:same crooks, new name- indeed (Score:2)
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But if so, ethics aligned with financial incentives: in particular, the differences in revenue generated by the consulting partners (in Accenture) versus that generated by the audit partners (in Arthur). While they were a single firm, revenue was pooled (well, partially), so Accenture was essentially subsidizing Arthur. Going independent enabled the Accenture partners to keep a bigger piece of the
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Nothing wrong with charging $350/hr for consultants just out of college.
However there is something wrong with a company that signs a contract and is willing to pay $350/hr for consultants just out of college.
Anecdote (Score:1, Interesting)
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Practically every software vendor with some money in the bank does the same thing. I assure you the former employee is not the only one.
Judging by the comments posted so far, many of you need to buy a clue and cash in.
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ah yes...the modpoints... (Score:2)
It's sometimes frustrating, I
Name and Shame (Score:2)
Let's wait for the laws ... or not (Score:4, Insightful)
Right. New laws that should increase "transparency". Read: Make you more transparent for the powers that be, and any complaints from the ACLU would be shot down with reference to those crooks that dared to cheat Uncle Sam and his poor children (i.e. the citizens of the USA), how dare you be against laws protecting them?
So... I'm now waiting for the corresponding laws, or at least suggestions, to make corporations more transparent and make them better manageable and taxable.
Though... I think I better not hold my breath. Suffocating is one of the worst ways to die.
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As in many "zomg this is a big deal" legal issues that get talked about, the laws are already in place to deal with it.
The problem was that the companies didn't make the legally required disclosures.
(Because they probably knew what they were doing was illegal)
They hid the kickbacks behind creative accounting.
The IRS has the power to tweak GAAP, somethin
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Never noticed it? There are laws concerning violence in games and ratings, and still with every school shooting some backbencher bursts into the front row with the demand for tighter legislation. There are pretty tight and rigid copyright laws by now (beyond anything their creators wanted them to be), but with every year the mafiaa's profits don't shine the cry for more burden on the back of the courts gets louder. The laws fo
Definitly shades of grey (Score:3, Insightful)
It ain't that easy (Score:5, Insightful)
Also, as the government you can't only take price and quality into consideration. There is a reason why the feds drive around in US built cars and not in BMWs. Simply 'cause one of their goals is to increase the own infrastructure and business power and rely as far as possible on goods built in the country.
Military hardware is even more complicated, since you have to trust the companies far further than with some ordinary civilian stuff.
So your choices become very, very narrow. You usually only have a handful of companies to pick from, if that. So it's easy for them to form a cartel, if only a "secret" one, by fixing prices and splitting the revenue. And that, in turn, is illegal.
So you can't simply assume there is someone "outside" the cartel. The company would have to be in your country, it would have to be large enough to be able to offer the service requested. And if it isn't part of the cartel, they would quickly find a way to acquire and split that competitor.
Business is a shark's world. Don't think they would accept a competitor without fighting him with claws and teeth.
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Re:It ain't that easy (Score:5, Interesting)
Government cannot and does not dictate what a company may charge. What they can and do dictate is, the price fixing doesn't happen.
What allegedly happened here is this: Company A is a contractor for the government. Company B gives company A money so they are their "prefered partner". There may be companies that offer the same service offered by company B cheaper, but company A still sticks with company B because of the money they gave them. So the product itself gets more expensive than it has to be, since company A has to forward those increased costs to the government.
In a nutshell, the benefit lies with the companies, at the expense of the government.
Imagine this: Company A is one of the few, maybe the only one, who can offer a certain product. I.e. the government HAS to buy with them. Company B (the one paying to be prefered partner) paid company A to be in the deal as well. They might have competitors, but they paid to be in. Technically, they bought themselves a monopoly position.
Whether it's illegal or not should be determined by a court. I'm no lawyer, I earn my money honestly. At the very least it is dishonest and looks very bad, as a taxpayer I would like to see my tax money spent on quality products not bribes.
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Now, that might be construed as a "kickback", perhaps, but it isn't much of a kickback, really. What is likely to have happened here is that either the "whistleblow
Can someone explain this to a non-business grad? (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm not encouraging this or claiming it should go unpunished, but I know if I'd been in a management position along the line I don't know how/why I could/should be stopping such things (defensibly).
A bit about the inner workings of "kickback" (Score:5, Interesting)
Some company has a contract with the US feds. That company didn't do anything wrong (yet), they got the contract fairly. Let's assume that for a moment, because TFA doesn't mention anything different.
Some other company now paid the company above a sizable sum to be their "prefered partner". I.e. to get them to buy the things they need to fulfill the contract from them. This, by itself, is not yet illegal, but at the very least a bit smelly.
The first company (and here comes the allegedly illegal practice) now did not forward this "discount" to the government but decided to keep it for themselves. Furthermore, if there wasn't that "prefered partner" deal, they might have gotten the items bought from the second company cheaper with another company.
Why is this illegal.
Governments usually have a very narrow selection of companies to choose from when they hand out contracts. Said companies usually have to adhere to very specific standards, are closely monitored, they do have to have specific features (varies from type of contract to another, but usually includes things like transparency clauses, being in the country the government is and so on). In other words, there aren't many.
If now another company "buys their way" into being the supplyer of such a company, they can expect to be part of government contracts without going through the same ordeals and strict standards. Furthermore, they have the liberty to choose their price freely (in other words, make their products more expensive than they "should" be), because there is no competitor. In other words, they "buy" a monopoly position.
Re:A bit about the inner workings of "kickback" (Score:5, Informative)
The winning vendor (the contract holder), is still responsible for the all the terms of the contract, even if the work is outsourced. Besides, there was no mention in the TFA of the contract terms being broken and all the players involved are large vendors to the government on their own, even without these alliances. IBM, Oracle, etc don't need a proxy to work for the government. They are already there. If this was some po-dunk ma'n'pa or some firm from Outer Offshoristan, you may well have a point here, but that's not the case here.
Also, nearly all federal government contracts are fixed price. If a subcontractor raises the price after the bid is won, it's the winning vendor who gets hurt, not the government, since they get paid the same no matter how much it actually costs.
However, you are absolutely RIGHT when we slightly rearrange the order of events as you presented them. Let's say the subcontractor contracted with the (soon-to-be) winning vendor DURING the bidding process. The supplier says "it'll cost us $X to do this" and the vendor puts that down on the contract as part of the overall cost, THEN the contract is signed, and THEN the rebate occurs. _That's_ a kickback and quite illegal. The bid was _artificially_ inflated before the contract was signed.
The legality of this all boils down to where in the process the subcontractor was engaged and when this "rebate" occurred. That's what the DOJ wants to find out. It's a shame that the article was not more clear on this all-important detail.
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Woohoo, I have a stalker!
God, I feel important. My ego needed that!
Thank you! It certainly brightened my day.
Sounds like it's time... (Score:3, Funny)
Don't convict them yet... (Score:2, Interesting)
If th
How to win a tender (Score:5, Funny)
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All too real.
In this case, it's why KBR (Durban) is going broke, and Halliburton (JHB) is moving to Dubai.
Bonus Question: Who pays the cost of a war, when a "used car salesman" convinces folks that one is needed, whether or not it actually is needed?
Answer: 3000 US troops, the taxpayers, and hundreds of thousands of innocent Iraqis who were in the wrong place at the wrong time.
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Won't you feel silly if it turns out this was the sort of thing they wanted prosecuted and couldn't get to happen until they started firing prosecutors?
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Most of the crimes I've heard Bush and Gonzales wanted prosecuted by the fired U.S. attorneys were illegal immigration and voter fraud, not corruption by big contractors. The exception is Iglesias in New Mexico. They did want him to pursue a corruption case against a Democrat, for some courthouse contracts. Senator Domenici was pressuring him to do it before the 2006 election so the Republicans could use it as a campaign issue. When
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If I'm buying a widget for a dollar and sell it to customers for 2 dollars, and the I find a different manufacturer who can sell me the widget for fifty cents, why would I be required to pass along the savings to anyone?
That's fine in a "free" market where the many competitors would do the same thing BUT sell the widget cheaper to various consumers and put you out of business or drive your prices down.
Government contracts aren't a free market. Since there is ONE consumer and a very small pool of vendors.
In this case, a company can pay to be a preferred supplier even though they are more expensive and perhaps of less quality or equal quality to other suppliers.
The big factor is the lack of competition that these paid and p
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70% Flamebait
30% Underrated
Even just posting the Republicy mottos sets TrollMods into a frenzy, now that their favorite party stands for only lies, incompetence and disaster.