http://ph.groups.yahoo.com/group/cia-drugs/photos/view/8cda?b=3
Illustration: Dick Cheney's impeachable one-bid treasure under Big Dubya
in a MadMadMadMad Milton Friedmanic World.

--- In cia-drugs@yahoogroups.com, "muckblit" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/cia-drugs/message/44040

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/cia-drugs/message/43955 Cheney treasonous
no-wmd  impeachable one-bid:


Case 3: The White House Conspiracy to Cook the Books - Halliburton,
Carlyle and CIA

In 2002, Arrigo tried a new tact - ingratiating herself with
"Halliburton's Man" and using it to her advantage. She offered
cooperation for access to his space and make him think she was on his
side. It worked, went on for four and one-half months through late May,
and it paid off - with plenty of insider knowledge "about Halliburton
and how it works." Enough to fill a book, she says, but her account
sticks to highlights.

First off, it's pure myth that Dick Cheney stopped running the company.
"He called in orders to the man I worked for almost every day and
sometimes two or more times a day. He remained (Halliburton's) 
functional head in all but name. No one....had the power to override his
orders." Second, Cheney never divested himself of Halliburton profits.
"He merely hid how (he got them) through a series of shell companies."

One of Arrigo's jobs was to liaison between Halliburton and CIA's
"creative accounting departments." In other words, their
co-conspiratorial treasury looting efforts, and Arrigo got insider
access to it. Her advanced math and computer software training qualified
her. In a few months, she became expert in how CIA and Halliburton  hid
their "financial illegalities."

She explained - "Computers are good ways to fool most people because
(they don't) look inside of them." They can be programmed "to print out
one set of books for regulators, another for Defense Contractors,
another for the Pentagon, another for the taxpayer," and so forth. It's
simple. Decide what you want, and machines will create it in any desired
form. The trick is doing it expertly, most criminals can't, so they need
professionals to do it for them. It means crimes are never secret, and
many computer experts know about them. CIA has always been tainted, kept
it secret since inception, so far has been untouchable, but remains
vulnerable to exposure by people of conscience like Arrigo.

She explained: Halliburton has eight software programmers at CIA. Its
home office has many more. She was on conference calls with 60 of them
on ways to conceal illegalities and assure none of it leaks out. The
company has less expertise than CIA so the Agency took charge to make
the two systems compatible. It took several years and over 100
programmers. They came, left for other jobs, and took insider knowledge
with them. It risks more leaks about Halliburton, other contractors,
CIA, the Pentagon, high-ups in government, and the Basel-based Bank of
International Settlements for its part in corruption.

Many investigations are ongoing, but huge pressure is exerted to quash
them. It's feared leaks may unravel the whole scheme - a vast corruption
web involving countless numbers of contractors, related companies, and
many high level government and Pentagon insiders. Cover-up software
hides it. Taxpayers fund it. Amounts keep getting greater, and they're
up to unimaginable levels.

Arrigo explained the system. Suppose Halliburton sold product A in 100
Lot Sizes, in Quantity X at Price Y to the Pentagon on a given date.
Most civilian invoices disclose this. Pentagon ones don't so contractors
can cheat and Pentagon brass profit. Missing information conceals
whether all merchandise was delivered as nothing indicates quantities
shipped. Further, repackaging also hides proper amounts. Omitting the
price alone conceals whether a shipment was shorted, but CIA is more
clever than that. It experimented with "tested receivers at some of its
front companies" to learn how best to deceive them. What works best is
"shifting prices around like random noise" - one day this cost, another
a different one, and so forth.

One company used a "gross overcharge method" that looked suspicious. It
got receivers to discover the real price, and that defeated CIA's
scheme. When it works, it cooks the books, and no one's the wiser.
Ledger entries are inflated, undercut, omitted, added, or varied in
amounts of similar transactions. Like a "professional crime
institution," CIA is expert at falsifying books so no one catches on.
How? By random price variations to keep auditors off balance and unable
to discover corruption patterns.

Another example:

CIA varies its front company prices monthly. Suppose Halliburton made a
purchase "when it (used) a cost inflation idea of cheating. Halliburton
(has) an incentive to inflate the cost of its purchases (to) justify
(its) high (price) to the military." So as standard practice it uses
CIA's highest price and claims that amount for its cost.

But comparing two sets of books reveals the scheme. So methodology
became more sophisticated to conceal it. Halliburton takes CIA prices
and doubles them on its books. It then claims the Agency recorded half
the charge "accidently," says its front company promised a 50% discount,
but never delivered. CIA looks bad, and it balked. No matter.
Halliburton still does it, but CIA has "lots of fronts with lots of
customers and worse problems (to hide) than merely jacking up prices.
Some fronts (are) fictitious and (make) no products." Others have real
customers plus fake ones to launder money. CIA tries to "make (their)
crimes 'undetectable.' " Halliburton hopes to "sneak by" until caught,
then find a way to weasel out of it with minimal damage or cost.

Case 4: Halliburton's Rigged Back Door Accounting Computer at the
Pentagon

In early 2002, GAO got damning evidence: that Halliburton overbills and
short-ships - deliberate fraudulent acts as standard company practice,
confident it can get away with it, and most often it does.

GAO has the goods to expose it from Halliburton and Pentagon invoices.
They reveal a problem. They don't match, are grossly inflated, and
payments exceed amounts billed - by about 35%. Arrigo met with GAO and
compared notes. Halliburton has similar Pentagon and CIA-paid staff, and
George Bush approved it in a secret Executive Order Arrigo has for
proof. She gave it to GAO plus other documents showing national security
is compromised and taxpayers cheated - hugely.

One document lists Halliburton's CIA and Pentagon staff, what little
official records discloses about them, their secret office locations,
and information on their private security staff. Arrigo discovered that
Halliburton's top CIA man served time for felony fraud. Another at
Pentagon was convicted as well - for stealing Army vehicles, then
profiteering by transshipping them overseas.

Dick Cheney knew, blocked background checks to conceal it, but Arrigo
found out and about the Pentagon fraud that followed. She has a
handwritten Cheney memo instructing his man "to make sure that the
Pentagon pays us all that it owes us and then some." CIA's forgery
department verified the writing is Cheney's.

Arrigo also has a letter from Halliburton's Pentagon man to his CIA
counterpart, and it's damning. He brags how he's "getting more than we
bargained for (from) the Pentagon" and suggested they get together to
compare notes. They did and Arrigo taped it. The evidence once more is
damning - about how easy it is to scam the system; befriend accounting
personnel; install company programmers; check bills supposedly behind in
payments; install a special software code for higher amounts; and do all
of the above at Pentagon and CIA.

Arrigo informed George Tenet so he'd stop "Halliburton from ripping off
the American taxpayer via the CIA and Pentagon." Tenet hardly blinked
and responded casually: "Well, you certainly have done a thorough job as
usual." He then offered to inform the White House to "correct the
problem." Arrigo did herself, GAO as well, and later learned that the
Bush administration (likely Dick Cheney) blocked an investigation.

This article covers four of Arrigo's 12 cases. Their evidence is damning
and shows systemic contractor, government, CIA and Pentagon fraud
involving enormous amounts of money. One or more articles will follow if
more material can be obtained. It's not what Pentagon and CIA want outed
so getting it is never simple and revealing it not without risks.



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