Gov't
Credit Cards Used At Casino
Tuesday April 9, 2002 11:00 PM
WASHINGTON (AP) - Interior Department employees used government-issued credit
cards to pay their rent, withdraw money at casinos and buy jewelry and
furniture, an audit found.
Almost three-quarters of the department's 79,000 workers have government credit
cards, and the agency's inspector general found myriad problems with use and
oversight. Some 1,116 former Interior employees still had active charge card
accounts, but the report found no evidence of activity on them.
``The department and its bureaus do not have sufficient controls in place to
minimize abuse of the charge card,'' the report said. Some reviews of purchases
``were done inadequately or in a perfunctory matter, some were not done on a
regular basis, and some were not done at all.''
Interior spokesman John Wright said Tuesday the department is working to solve
the problems identified in the audit, which was completed in late December.
Training has begun to help managers spot abuse, and those who fail to recognize
it could face disciplinary action.
``We take these credit card issues very seriously and are working aggressively
to improve our guidelines to address this matter,'' Wright said.
The audit was completed a year after the Clinton administration gave the
Interior Department a ``Hammer Award'' for good management of its credit card
system. The award was part of then-Vice President Al Gore's ``reinventing
government'' savings campaign.
Governmentwide, 398,000 employees have permission to make business purchases on
credit cards. Those transactions totaled $13.7 billion last year, according to
the General Services Administration. GSA manages the government's credit card
program, although direct oversight is up to individual departments.
Another $4.7 billion was spent by 2.1 million federal employees with
government-issued credit cards that can be used only for travel expenses, said
Sue McIver, the GSA's director of services acquisition.
McIver said the government has become better at identifying credit card abuse.
``I believe that any system out there has weaknesses to it,'' McIver said. ``But
because so much of this is electronic now, we are able to identify (misuse)
quickly and take appropriate action.''
Interior Department employees with government-issued cards made more than 2
million purchases for $675 million in fiscal years 1999 and 2000. In most cases,
employees have credit lines of $2,500 for purchases.
The inspector general looked at cardholders at specific locations within the
Bureau of Land Management, National Park Service, Bureau of Reclamation and
Bureau of Indian Affairs. It also analyzed control measures and policies
designed to prevent abuse.
Auditors found cases where employees used cards to pay telephone bills and rent,
to have their cars repaired and to buy household furnishings and jewelry. They
also found instances where charge cards were used to get cash advances,
sometimes thousands of dollars from casino ATMs.
The investigation did not identify individual employees, nor did it say whether
the employees repaid the government or were disciplined.
In response, the agency plans departmentwide training for cardholders, starting
this month. The aim is to make sure they know what purchases are proper.
The agency now prohibits employees from receiving cash advances through wire
transfers on their credit cards. It is reviewing whether fewer employees should
have cards and if their credit lines should be lowered. That analysis is
expected to be completed in August.
Congressional investigators found this year that more than 46,000 Defense
Department employees had defaulted on $62 million in travel expenses through
last November. The employees had charged the travel and were to have paid the
bills after the department reimbursed them but did not.
A Pentagon task force is studying how to tighten control over its 1.6 million
card users.
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On the Net: Interior Department: http://www.doi.gov
Interior Department Inspector General:
http://www.oig.doi.gov
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uslatest/story/0,1282,-1648676,00.html
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Coleen Rowley's Memo to FBI Director
Robert Mueller
http://www.apfn.org/apfn/WTC_whistleblower1.htm
USA Spy Forsaken by US Government

Former
Naval Intelligence Officer Delmart Edward "Mike"
Vreeland warned of impending terrorist attacks
a month before 9-11.
http://www.apfn.org/apfn/WTC_whistleblower.htm
Whistleblower Complains of FBI Obstruction

http://www.apfn.org/apfn/WTC_whistleblower3.htm
Interior Dept. employees misused government credit cards
Source: Fox News/AP
Country: United StatesAn audit found that Interior Department employees used government credit cards to pay their rent, withdraw money at casinos and buy jewelry and furniture. Almost three-quarters of the department's 79,000 workers have government credit cards. (04/10/02)
FBI fails to require money disclosures by agents
Source: Fox News/AP
Country: United StatesA security study reveals that the FBI has failed to comply with a presidential order that requires agents who work with closely guarded secrets to disclose details of their finances. The lapse helped spy Robert Hanssen elude capture. (04/05/02) Paychecks continue for IRS employees charged in crimes
Source: Washington Times
Country: United StatesAn Internal Revenue Service employee indicted for bribery and disclosing tax information is still on the IRS payroll. Sen. Charles E. Grassley charges that many tax employees who have been indicted on or even convicted of criminal charges remain on the payroll. (04/01/02) FBI-Mob Cooperation Case Wraps Up
John Connolly was a decorated Federal Bureau of Investigation agent, but he was actually corrupted into being a prized informant for Boston mobsters, "functioning as a member of a criminal enterprise," a federal prosecutor said yesterday in closing arguments at Connolly's trial for racketeering and obstruction of justice, according to The New York Times.
"John Connolly knew what his obligations were" in limiting his personal ties to his organized crime informants, said the prosecutor, John Durham, an assistant United States Attorney. "But he was on somebody else's team."
Connolly, 61, is accused of leaking information to his own informants that resulted in the killing of three witnesses, of taking bribes and of tipping off James (Whitey) Bulger, the head of a powerful crime family in Boston, about a secret 1994 federal indictment against him that enabled him to flee. The accusations were spelled out in 10 days of testimony by a parade of convicted organized-crime figures, an extortion victim, federal judges and Connolly's secretaries. The jury is to begin deliberations today.
Last year, the Cato Institute hosted a forum for Boston Globe reporter Ralph Ranalli's new book, "Deadly Alliance: The FBI's Secret Partnership with the Mob." Panelists discussed how the FBI's unorthodox informant program went awry and its policy implications. Video of the event is available online.