Democratic congressman calls for subpoena of Halliburton profits

http://rawstory.com/news/2006/Democr...a_of_0227.html

Published: February 27, 2006

Washington, D.C. -- In a letter to Chairman Davis, advanced to RAW STORY, Rep. Waxman (D-CA) outlines over $250 million in Halliburton charges refuted by Defense Department auditors.

A New York Times cover story today revealed that a disputed no-bid contract in Iraq, which Pentagon auditors determined contained "excessive" charges, will be paid for almost in full by the Army. Rep. Waxman is asking the Committee on Government Reform to subpoena documents relating to the charges.

The letter, in full, follows:

February 27, 2006

The Honorable Tom Davis Chairman Committee on Government Reform U.S. House of Representatives Washington, DC 20515

Dear Mr. Chairman:

Today, the New York Times revealed that the Army Corps of Engineers has awarded Halliburton over $250 million in cost reimbursements, profits, and bonuses for billings that Defense Department auditors determined to be unreasonable and unsupported. The Defense Department provided no adequate explanation for this irresponsible action, and it has been withholding relevant documents about its compensation determinations from the Committee for almost a year.

The payments were made under the no-bid Restore Iraqi Oil (RIO) contract, which the Bush Administration awarded Halliburton in March 2003. Under the contract, the Defense Department issued ten task orders to Halliburton for oil-related work in Iraq, including the importation of fuel and the repair of oil facilities. Halliburton charged over $2.4 billion for this work, which is now complete. Because RIO is a cost-plus contract, Halliburton is reimbursed for its costs and then receives additional profits and bonuses. Under the RIO contract, Halliburton receives 2% of its costs as an automatic base fee and up to an additional 5% of the costs as an award fee bonus. Based on cost control and performance, the Pentagon determines what percentage bonus, if any, Halliburton should receive under each task order.

The New York Times has learned the amount of Halliburton's reimbursements. Additional information about base and award fees for each of the RIO task orders is posted on the website of the Army Corps of Engineers. This information shows that the Corps of Engineers ignored auditor findings in three ways: by reimbursing Halliburton for costs determined to be unreasonable or unsupported, by permitting Halliburton to collect profits on challenged costs, and by giving Halliburton unwarranted bonuses.

Pentagon auditors identified $263 million in excessive and unsubstantiated costs under the ten task orders. In reports provided to the National Security Subcommittee, the auditors found Halliburton's fuel importation and other costs to be unreasonably high and determined that Halliburton's cost proposals were "not acceptable for negotiation of a fair and reasonable price." As a result, the auditors recommended that Halliburton not be reimbursed for these costs and not receive profits on them. This recommendation was supported by the views of independent experts, who characterized Halliburton's fuel prices as "highway robbery."

As the New York Times reported, however, the Corps rejected the auditor findings and paid Halliburton for $253 million of the challenged costs. Although between 55% and 75% of costs challenged by Pentagon auditors are typically sustained, the Corps sustained only 3.8% of the challenged costs in this case. According to Halliburton Chairman and CEO David Lesar, "After all the government-audit processes, we received compensation for every penny we spent to buy fuel for Iraq."

The Corps also allowed Halliburton to collect profits and bonuses on challenged costs. The Corps included in the fee pool about half of the costs Pentagon auditors found to be unreasonably high or unsubstantiated. Because the pool of costs was larger, Halliburton was paid millions in base fee profits for billings that Pentagon auditors challenged. Compounding these egregious payments, the Corps also gave Halliburton an enormous bonus for overbilling the taxpayers. Given the magnitude of the excessive and unsupported costs identified by the auditors, the payment of any bonus would be questionable. But rather than withholding Halliburton's bonus, the Corps gave the company a total bonus under the RIO contract of more than $50 million. Included in this amount are large bonus awards on the challenged costs included in the fee pool. In total, the company received bonus payments worth millions for incurring charges challenged by auditors.

Nearly a year ago, in April 2005, we jointly requested documents from the Corps that would explain its compensation determinations under the RIO contract. But the Army has failed to fully respond to this request, providing just two summary documents. In fact, it appears that the Army gave the New York Times more information than the Committee.

The Committee needs to exercise its oversight authority to obtain the documents that are being improperly withheld and to investigate the special treatment that Halliburton continually receives. I therefore urge you to subpoena the RIO compensation documents without further delay.

Background

On March 8, 2003, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers awarded Halliburton subsidiary KBR a no-bid monopoly contract to restore and operate Iraq's oil infrastructure. The contract was awarded in secret, and other qualified companies, like Bechtel, which did most of the oilfield work after the first Gulf War, were precluded from bidding.[1] Halliburton received the contract because it previously received a task order to prepare a contingency plan for Iraq's oil sector. The Government Accountability Office later investigated this contingency contract and concluded that it was not awarded "in accordance with legal requirements" because "preparation of the contingency support plan for this mission was beyond the scope of the contract."[2] GAO added that the work "should have been awarded using competitive procedures."[3]

Halliburton charged approximately $2.4 billion under the RIO contract, which had a potential value of $7 billion.[4] The Corps of Engineers issued ten different task orders under the RIO contract. Work has now concluded on all ten task orders.

Halliburton's work was split generally between oil infrastructure projects and fuel importation tasks: Task Orders 1, 2, 3, 4, and 6 related to various oil infrastructure projects, while Task Orders 5, 7, 8, 9, and 10 involved the importation of fuel from Kuwait, Turkey, and Jordan. The majority of Halliburton's charges under this contract were for fuel importation and distribution. Halliburton charged nearly $1.5 billion for fuel work and almost $1 billion for infrastructure work.[5] There were two sources of funding for this work: approximately $800 million came from U.S. taxpayer funds and $1.6 billion came from Iraqi oil proceeds and other funds in the U.S.-controlled Development Fund for Iraq.[6]

RIO is a "cost-plus" contract, meaning that Halliburton is reimbursed for its costs and then receives additional profits and bonuses. The profits are based on the contract costs. Under the RIO contract, Halliburton receives 2% of its costs as an automatic base fee and up to an additional 5% of the costs as an optional award fee bonus. Government officials consider factors such as cost control and performance to determine what bonus percentage between 0% and 5% Halliburton should receive under each task order.[7]

Rep. John Dingell and I began to raise questions about Halliburton's RIO contract immediately after the contract was awarded in March 2003.[8] In a series of letters, we expressed concern about the exorbitant prices of Halliburton's fuel imports from Kuwait. We reported that Halliburton appeared to be charging twice as much as it should have for fuel imports,[9] and we cited independent experts who characterized Halliburton's charges as "highway robbery" and "outrageously high."[10]

Our concerns about Halliburton's inflated costs were validated by Pentagon auditors. In December 2003, the Defense Contract Audit Agency (DCAA) announced at a press conference that it had completed a preliminary draft audit of Halliburton's fuel importation work. DCAA auditors found that Halliburton had overcharged the U.S. government by as much as $61 million for gasoline imported from Kuwait into Iraq.[11] This audit was preliminary, however, and covered only the period until September 30, 2003.

In 2004 and 2005, DCAA completed audits of each of the ten task orders. In this series of audits, DCAA identified $219 million in "questioned" costs under the entire RIO contract.[12] DCAA determined that all of these costs were unreasonably high. DCAA also identified $60 million in "unsupported" charges under the RIO contract.[13] Revised audits lowered the total amount of questioned and unsupported costs to $263 million.[14]

DCAA auditors found unreasonable costs for Kuwaiti fuel under all of Halliburton's fuel importation task orders. The auditors criticized Halliburton for failing to negotiate better pricing for the fuel and transportation costs, concluding that Halliburton failed to provide "adequate documentation to demonstrate the reasonableness of the Kuwait fuel prices over the life of the purchase orders."[15]

The auditors also repeatedly criticized Halliburton for making unnecessary retroactive payments to its Turkish fuel subcontractors. DCAA noted that Halliburton had negotiated "fixed-unit-rate" and "firm-fixed-price" subcontracts with various Turkish subcontractors to import fuel into Iraq. During the term of these subcontracts, the market price of the fuel increased. DCAA reported that the Turkish companies asked Halliburton "to increase the unit price of the fuel to compensate for losses due to market increases."[16] According to DCAA, Halliburton "agreed to pay the higher prices retroactively."[17] DCAA concluded: "We do not believe it was appropriate to retroactively adjust the fuel unit prices of KBR's fixed-unit-rate and firm-fixed-price subcontracts when there are no provisions in the subcontracts to do so."[18]

I released a report in July 2004 with additional information about Halliburton's inflated gasoline charges. This report compared the price charged by Halliburton to import gasoline from Kuwait to Iraq with the costs incurred by the Pentagon's fuel importation office, the Defense Energy Support Center (DESC), to perform the same task. Because DESC assumed Halliburton's fuel importation responsibilities on April 1, 2004, a direct "apples-to-apples" price comparison could be made. The report found that Halliburton charged more to purchase fuel than DESC, three times as much to transport the fuel into Iraq, and 40 times as much to cover its fees and markups.[19]

Halliburton's Reimbursements, Profits, and Bonuses

The Corps of Engineers has made final decisions on how much to reimburse Halliburton for all ten RIO task orders and how much to pay Halliburton in base and award fees under each of these task orders.[20] All of these payments have now been made to Halliburton.

As the New York Times reported today, the Corps of Engineers ignored the findings of the Defense Department's own auditors in making these reimbursement decisions. The agency reimbursed Halliburton for unreasonably high costs challenged by auditors, allowed Halliburton to collect profits on challenged costs, and even gave Halliburton substantial bonuses.

For the ten RIO task orders, DCAA identified $263 million in questioned and unsupported costs.[21] The auditors recommended that Halliburton not be reimbursed for or receive profits on these costs. Instead of disallowing the costs challenged by DCAA, the Corps reimbursed Halliburton for $253 million in questioned and unsupported costs.[22] This represents over 96% of the $263 million in costs challenged by the auditors.

Historically, between 55% and 75% of DCAA's challenged costs have been sustained.[23] But in this case, the Corps sustained only 3.8% of the challenged costs. On the fuel importation task orders, the Corps upheld just 1.8% of the costs challenged by auditors.

In addition to reimbursing Halliburton for challenged costs, the Corps also allowed Halliburton to profit from challenged costs. According to the New York Times, the Corps included in the fee pool used to determine Halliburton's profits about half of the $263 million in challenged costs. As a result, Halliburton received profits on millions in costs Pentagon auditors found to be unreasonably high or unsubstantiated. Halliburton's base is 2%. When the Corps applied this fee to the challenged costs included in the fee pool, the company automatically received millions in profits for challenged costs.

Incredibly, the Corps also gave Halliburton an enormous bonus. As shown in Table A, Halliburton's total bonus for the ten task orders is $56.5 million. Under the RIO contract, Halliburton can receive a bonus fee of up to 5% of the value of a task order. When these bonus payments are combined with the base fee payments, the total profit for Halliburton is nearly $100 million for the RIO contract.

Table A: Halliburton Fees for All Ten RIO Task Orders

Task Order Base Fee (2%) Award Fee Bonus (0-5%)

Total Profit (2-7%) 1 $159,430 $175,378 $334,808 2 $21,764 $39,175 $60,939 3 $12,933,077 $11,639,770 $24,572,847 4 $882,677 $794,430 $1,677,107 5 $15,683,246 $26,661,519 $42,344,765 6 $3,880,000 $388,000 $4,268,000 7 $5,741,741 $9,760,959 $15,502,700 8 $3,071,573 $5,221,673 $8,293,246 9 $758,285 $1,289,086 $2,047,371 10 $320,952 $545,618 $866,570 Totals $43,452,745 $56,515,608 $99,968,353 Sources: U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Frequently Asked Questions: Engineer Support to Operation Iraqi Freedom (Jan. 26, 2006) (online at http://www.hq.usace.army.mil/CEPA/Ir...ch03-table.htm).

Ironically, Halliburton received some of its highest bonuses for projects with the most inflated costs. Although Halliburton's fuel costs were deemed unreasonable by DCAA and have been the subject of widespread criticism, over $43 million of the $56.5 million bonus awarded to Halliburton are for the fuel task orders.

Compounding the insult to the taxpayer, the Corps actually paid Halliburton millions of dollars in bonuses for incurring the very charges that the DCAA determined to be excessive or unsupported. In total, Halliburton received reimbursements worth $253 million and profits and bonuses worth several million dollars more for the specific charges challenged by DCAA.