FBI agents get $45 thousand for Iraq overtime

  • December 18, 2008 5:53 pm

WASHINGTON – Taxpayers were billed an average of $45,000 in overtime and extra pay for each FBI agent temporarily posted to Iraq over the course of four years, according to a new Justice Department report. In some cases, agents were paid to watch movies, exercise and attend parties.

In all, the audit by Justice Department Inspector General Glenn A. Fine found the FBI racked up $7.8 million in improper wages between 2003 and 2007.

Thursday’s report blamed a faulty FBI policy that allowed agents to claim the extra time and money. An FBI spokesman said that policy — which initially sought to enlist volunteers to go to dangerous war zones — is no longer in place
“Several FBI employees noted that they periodically spent time during the work day washing clothes,” the report noted. Asked whether he should have been paid for the time spent in this activity, one employee defended the practice, saying, “‘When you’re in that environment, anything you do to survive is work for the FBI.’”

Other agents defended being paid to go to a regular Saturday night cocktail party, calling it an important “liaison” meeting. And in another case, one supervisor said he “had to laugh” when he saw how many agents were assigned to the office charged with preparing evidence for court trials of Saddam Hussein and his associates.

“Maybe they needed extra poker players,” said the unnamed supervisor.

16 hours a day?
The report concluded: “We found that, on the whole, few if any employees worked exactly 16 hours a day, every day, for 90 days straight, within the meaning of the term ‘work’ as it is used in applicable regulations and policies.”

Since March 2003, the FBI has temporarily deployed 1,150 agents and other employees to Iraq, usually for three-month periods. Fine’s investigators reviewed the time and attendance records for each.

Over the four-year period, the report found, the FBI spent $63 million in overtime and extra pay for employees in Iraq — $7.8 million of which was improperly billed.

In a statement, FBI Assistant Director John Miller said the now-defunct policy was only supposed to be a short-time pay solution in the early days of the war. He said managers at FBI headquarters “allowed a flawed system to develop and remain in place too long.”

“FBI employees lived with sniper attacks, mortar fire, and roadside bombs as part of their daily work environment,” Miller said. He said FBI managers “attempted to adapt a long established, domestic pay system for domestic law enforcement to unprecedented wartime assignments for FBI personnel.”

Fine’s investigation found that agents claimed at least eight hours of overtime a day, every day, for the three months they were stationed in Iraq. Until this year, FBI supervisors in the United States routinely approved the hours billed, despite having no personal knowledge of the time the agents were working.

Oh come on! I would love to get paid for washing my clothes but the FBI should know better. However, will they be paying this money back? Honestly, they should not get to keep these fraudulent funds!

Iceland tops list of peaceful countries

  • May 20, 2008 11:16 pm

Iceland

Iceland tops the list of most peaceful countries in the world.  The U.S. does not do so well on the list however.  The U.S. scored 97th out of 140, placing it in the bottom third of the world’s most peaceful countries on the list.  The list was based on 121 economic and other factors that listed all the countries on  how well they preformed to keep the world a peaceful place.

It is unfortunate how the U.S. sucks at keeping the world a peaceful place.  However, if we did not act more on global issues we would not keep the world safe.  How can you blame us when we have to break peace?  Oh well, there is always Luxembourg to help us out.  They must be near the top of this list, personally us editors don’t care too much!

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October first month without execution

  • November 4, 2007 11:01 pm

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Pictured Above: Terre Haute, IN execution chamber

October was the first month in three years that an execution was not held in the United States.  The latest inmate to win a reprieve was Earl Wesley Berry of Mississippi, whose execution was stayed on Tuesday by the U.S. Supreme Court just 19 minutes before he was scheduled to die. He had already eaten his “last meal.”  While the Supreme Court has not declared an official end to all death penalty executions, it seems to be the way the court is ruling recently.

The death penalty is still holding surprisingly strong in the United States.  We will have to see what happens when the Supreme Court rules on the death penalty in the middle of next year.

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Navy to alter swastika building

  • September 29, 2007 9:00 am

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The United States navy is planning on spending up to $600,000 to reconstruct this building in Coronado, CA after it realized that it looked like a giant Swastika from the air.  The building has been standing in the same location but the advent of Google Earth has helped the Navy unearth this horrible image. “We don’t want to be associated with something as symbolic and hateful as a swastika,” Scott Sutherland, deputy public affairs officer told the Los Angeles Times.

Thank you for finally deciding to change your building Navy!  It only took 40 years to remove a horrible symbol that was more offensive then than it is now!  You know it is the traditional government procrastination, no big deal hope they get Google to change the image as soon as they complete the renovations

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