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State
Department Misplaced $6B Under Hillary Clinton
IG
report reveals incomplete, lost contract files worth $6B
By
Adam Kredo
April
4, 2014 12:10 pm
The
State Department misplaced and lost some $6 billion due to the
improper filing of contracts during the past six years, mainly during
the tenure of former Secretary of State Hilary Clinton, according to
a newly released Inspector General report.
The
$6 billion in unaccounted funds poses a “significant financial risk
and demonstrates a lack of internal control over the Department’s
contract actions,” according to the report.
The
alert, originally sent on March 20 and just released this week, warns
that the missing contracting funds “could expose the department to
substantial financial losses.”
The
report centered on State Department contracts worth “more than $6
billion in which contract files were incomplete or could not be
located at all,” according to the alert.
“The
failure to maintain contract files adequately creates significant
financial risk and demonstrates a lack of internal control over the
Department’s contract actions,” the alert states.
The
situation “creates conditions conducive to fraud, as corrupt
individuals may attempt to conceal evidence of illicit behavior by
omitting key documents from the contract file,” the report
concluded.
The
State Department’s inability to properly file its paperwork is
causing most of the losses, according to the report.
The
IG “found repeated examples of poor contract file administration”
over the years, the report said.
Contracts
related to the U.S. war in Iraq, for instance, could not be produced
in 33 out of 115 instances, according to the report.
“A
recent OIG audit of the closeout process for contracts supporting the
U.S. Mission in Iraq revealed that contracting officials were unable
to provide 33 of 115 contract files requested in accordance with the
audit sampling plan,” the report states.
The
value of the 33 “missing files” totaled $2.1 billion, according
to the report.
Additionally,
48 of the 82 contract files that were produced “did not contain all
of the documentation required by” internal regulations, according
to the report.
The
48 “incomplete files” were worth another $2.1 billion, according
to the report.
A
further audit of the department’s Bureau of African Affairs found
that administrators “were unable to provide complete contract
administration files for any of the eight contracts that were
reviewed.”
These
contracts were worth $34.8 million.
The
investigation also found instances in which a company owned by the
spouse of a contractor employee was not properly documented.
“In
the case of work undertaken by OIG’s Office of Investigations, one
investigation revealed that a contract file did not contain
documentation reflecting that modifications and task orders were
awarded to the company owned by the spouse of a contractor employee
performing as a Contract Specialist for the contract,” the report
states.
The
contract in question was worth $52 million.
The
report outlines several other instances in which contracts worth
great values were mishandled.
“In
a number of recent OIG inspections, OIG identified contract file
management deficiencies. For example, COR files for a $2.5 million
contract lacked status reports and a tally of the funds expended and
remaining on the contract,” the report states.
The
State Department appeared to agree with the IG’s recommendations in
a March 28 response and said that it intends to ensure that contracts
are completed properly.
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