|
WASHINGTON,
DC – The final version of the $87 billion spending bill for
Iraq and Afghanistan is missing provisions the Senate had passed
to penalize war profiteers who defraud American taxpayers.
House negotiators on the package refused to accept the Senate provisions.
The
Senate provision was authored by Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), Sen.
Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), and Sen. Richard Durbin (D-Ill.).
It was one of the last major sticking points this week as negotiators
worked through the compromise appropriations bill. The conferees
narrowly defeated the amendment after lengthy debate, with House
negotiators offering no substitute and no willingness to compromise,
despite repeated offers from Senate conferees to negotiate the language.
Republican and Democratic Senate conferees consistently supported
the provision, which had been unanimously accepted during Senate
Appropriations Committee markup of the bill. Leahy, Feinstein
and Durbin are members of the Appropriations Committee and also
of the Judiciary Committee, which has jurisdiction over the criminal
justice system.
“Congress
is about to send billions and billions of dollars to a place where
there is no functioning government, under a plan with too little
accountability and too few financial controls,” said Leahy. “That’s
a formula for mischief. We need strong disincentives for those
who would defraud taxpayers, and removing this protection is another
major blot on this bill.”
“We
are about to spend a lot of money in Iraq, quickly and with few
real controls on how it is spent,” said Feinstein. “The least we
can do is prevent private companies from taking advantage of the
American Government, its people, and the men and women who are risking
their lives every day to make Iraq,
and the world, a better, safer place to live. It was a mistake
to strip the anti-profiteering provision from the conference report,
and restoring it through this bill would send a clear signal that
this kind of activity will not be tolerated.”
“When
the Senate Appropriations Committee considered this supplemental
request, Senators Leahy, Feinstein, and I joined together to criminalize
war profiteering – price gouging and fraud – with the same law
that was passed during World War II. Yet this amendment, was stripped
out of the final bill,” said Durbin. “I fail to understand how anyone
can be opposed to prosecuting those who want to defraud and overcharge
the United States government and the American taxpayers.”
U.S.
fraud statutes protect against waste of tax dollars at home, but
none expressly prohibit war profiteering and none expressly confer
extraterritorial jurisdiction overseas. The Leahy-Feinstein-Durbin
amendment would criminalize “war profiteering” – overcharging taxpayers
for any good or service with the specific intent to excessively
profit from the war or reconstruction efforts in Iraq.
The bill also prohibits fraud and false statements in any matter
involving a contract or the provision of goods or services in Iraq.
These new crimes would be felonies, subject to criminal penalties
of up to 20 years in prison and fines of up to $1 million or twice
the illegal gross profits of the crime. Leahy described it
as “strong and focused sanctions” that are narrowly tailored to
criminalize and create tough criminal penalties for fraud or excessive
profiteering in contracts, here and abroad, related to the war or
reconstruction efforts in Iraq.
Leahy,
Feinstein and Durbin will re-introduce the legislation again as
a separate bill and will work to win its passage. But because
criminal penalties cannot be made retroactive, the absence of penalties
in this supplemental appropriations bill will hamper efforts to
crack down on war profiteering that involves funds from this bill.
#
# #
|