December31, 2006:
During the last year, U.S. Department of Defense auditors recovered
$1.9 billion from companies that had defrauded the government on military
contracts. Defense spending is over $400 billion a year, so that recovery
amounts to less than one half of one percent of spending. Nearly half (47
percent) of the money recovered was from one case, that of a health care
company that filed false claims for care given to military dependents and
retirees. The Department of Defense spends nearly $40 billion a year on such
care, although the money recovered in this case was for fraud that occurred
over several years. Another 32 percent of the money recovered was from Boeing,
for cheating while bidding on a satellite launching contract. The remaining 21
percent of the money recovered was for work on hundreds of smaller cases. Auditors
are taking a close look at spending in Iraq, because, under combat conditions,
controls are not as tight, and there's more opportunity for stealing, or just
making the kinds of errors auditors and journalists love to find.