KBR

KBR

This is a wikizine for news and information about KBR, the Defense Department's LOGCAP (Logistics Civil Augmentation Program) contractor. KBR or Kellogg, Brown and Root, is an engineering company and long-time government contractor... [more]

This is a wikizine for news and information about KBR, the Defense Department's LOGCAP (Logistics Civil Augmentation Program) contractor.

KBR or Kellogg, Brown and Root, is an engineering company and long-time government contractor, formerly part of Halliburton. The nearly 100 year-old company, which built the first off-shore drilling platform has also received contracts from presidents, supported congressional candidates (Lyndon B. Johnson), and been under investigation by the IRS. Currently responsible for providing all government food and services in Afghanistan, Iraq, and Kuwait (a $4 billion dollar a year enterprise paid by US tax dollars), KBR has now been under investigation for fraud and abuse, especially in Iraq: "Nearly $2 billion in overpricing on the contract has been identified by Pentagon auditors and government investigators, lawmakers said." (AP April 19, 07)

With links to the Bush administration (for example, KBR spokeswoman and Bush campaign aid Heather Browne), the company will probably continue popping up in the news as long as Iraq spending is an issue. Look for news stories, post discovered news items, and exchange opinions about KBR at this wikizine.

Troops sue KBR over toxic waste in Iraq, Afghanistan

Dozens of US military personnel have filed 34 lawsuits against US defense contractor KBR for allegedly incinerating toxic waste and releasing it into the atmosphere in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Susan Burke, one of the lawyers bringing the suits, said they have been filed over the past year, 18 of them in recent days.

"All the cases are being put together before a federal judge in Greenbelt, Maryland," she told AFP Tuesday.

Each of the lawsuits represent several soldiers but were filed on behalf of at least 100,000 others who are alleged to suffer from health problems resulting from exposure to emissions released by the incineration of waste at military bases.

Kellogg Brown and Root and its former parent company Halliburton, which at one time was led by former vice president Dick Cheney, had a government contract to destroy waste at US bases and camps in Iraq and Afghanistan.

One lawsuit filed in federal court in Nashville, Tennessee charged that they "ignored their contractual obligations and burned vast quantities of unsorted waste in enormous open air burn pits with no safety controls."

"This misconduct began in 2003 and continues unabated to date," it alleges.

"Every type of waste imaginable was and is burned on these pits, including trucks, tires, lithium battery, Styrofoam, paper, rubber, petroleum-oil-lubricant products, metals, hydraulic fluids, munitions boxes, medical waste, biohazard materials (including human corpses), medical supplies (including those used during smallpox inoculations), paints, solvents, asbestos insulation, items containing pesticides, polyvinyl chloride pipes, animal carcasses, dangerous chemicals and hundreds of thousands of plastic water bottles," the lawsuit claims.

In a statement posted on its website, KBR said the company posted lists compiled by the US Army of items that could not be disposed of in burn pits.

"If KBR observes a waste generator delivering a prohibited item, its practice is to refuse or remove such items," the company said.

Sponsors
Comments
Be the first to leave a comment!
Add a Comment:
Already a member? Log In
Sponsors
Top Money Articles
The 10 Best and 10 Worst Celebrity Tippers
We've combed the Internet to find the stories of celebs who tip a hefty chunk of change, and those who barely tip pocket change at all.
Richard Branson is Awesome
If there were a magazine called "Eccentric Billionaire Playboy", Sir Richard Branson would be on every cover.
Celebs Ring the Bell at the New York Stock Exchange
See stars promote themselves by ringing the NYSE opening bell.
More From Zimbio
Copyright © 2009 - Zimbio, Inc. Some rights reserved.