Air Force arranged no-work contract
While waiting to be confirmed by the White House for a top civilian post at the Air Force last year, Charles D. Riechers was out of work and wanted a paycheck. So the Air Force helped arrange a job through an intelligence contractor that required him to do no work for the company, according to documents and interviews.
For two months, Riechers held the title of senior technical adviser and received about $13,400 a month at Commonwealth Research Institute, or CRI, a nonprofit firm in Johnstown, Pa., according to his resume. But during that time he actually worked for Sue C. Payton, assistant Air Force secretary for acquisition, on projects that had nothing to do with CRI, he said.
Riechers said in an interview that his interactions with Commonwealth Research were limited largely to a Christmas party, where he said he met company officials for the first time.
“I really didn’t do anything for CRI,” said Riechers, now principal deputy assistant secretary for acquisition. “I got a paycheck from them.”
Riechers’s job highlights the Pentagon’s ties with Commonwealth Research and its corporate parent, which has in recent years received hundreds of millions of dollars worth of grants and contracts from the military, and more than $100 million in earmarks from lawmakers. [complete article]
Related Posts...
- The secret program empowering Obama to kill anyone, anywhere, without any explanation
- The we-are-at-war! mentality
- Hank Paulson’s inside jobs
- Visions of slaughter: Jennifer Rubin, Rachel Abrams and the Washington Post
- World history at warp speed
- The war on terror is corrupting all it touches
- Blair Inc’s ‘baffling’ increase in earnings
- U.S. no longer able to disregard Pakistan’s sovereignty
- The nationally coordinated crackdown on the Occupy movement
- Socialism for the rich, capitalism for the poor
- In ‘total war’ on Islam, Mecca becomes another Hiroshima, U.S. military officers taught
- The jet that ate the Pentagon
- U.S. military mutilating live goats in training exercises
- U.S. Navy program to study how troops use intuition
- Death of Private Danny Chen: Military admits Chen was target of race-based hazing on daily basis
