processes, the pressures on the figures involved, the facts uncovered, and their consequences. |
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This Week at POGO
Our reporting sparks legislation to curb ICE's use of solitary
Citing our reporting, Senators Dick Durbin (D-IL), Cory Booker (D-NJ), and Kamala Harris (D-CA) today introduced legislation to combat the rampant and unnecessary overuse of solitary confinement in U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) operated and ICE contract facilities.
Read our investigation or read the press release
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POGO in the News
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Foreign Policy
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When Warren pressed him, Esper commented that he thought the exchange was “a good debate.” Warren cut him off: “I’m not trying to have a debate,” she snapped. For the analysts Mandy Smithberger and William D. Hartung, the Esper appointment was more of the same: “During the Trump administration,” they wrote during the confirmation process, “the post of secretary of defense has been passed from one former defense industry figure to another, as if it were literally reserved only for key officials from major weapons makers.” Esper did ultimately recuse himself from the Pentagon’s cloud computing contract because his son is employed by IBM, which was one of the initial bidders. “It was a good decision,” Smithberger told me. “It shows that the secretary knows the rules.”
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Politico
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But the agency’s heavy reliance on contractors — spanning nearly two years and drawing on multiple political operatives — alarmed current and former CMS officials and government ethics experts, who questioned the appearance and justification for outsourcing a substantial portion of the agency's communications duties. By early 2019, CMS also had hired multiple political appointees to help manage Verma’s communications.
“It's the classic revolving door,” said Scott Amey, who leads investigations into government contracts for the Project on Government Oversight. Amey added that the number of consultants with ties to the White House or the Trump campaign raises further concerns. “If there's pressure from the top of the agency to hire these people, you worry about whether this is payoff for old friends.” [...] Government ethics experts said that the consultants’ work still deserved additional scrutiny. “There are real questions about the need for these services and are these services duplicative of what PR people inside the agency are already doing,” said POGO’s Amey. “There are quite a few red flags that go up here, in terms of the services that are being outsourced, the rates that are being paid and the connections of the people being hired that are worth an HHS inspector general investigation.” |
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The National Interest
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Significantly, while the text of the research solicitation doesn't mention the F-35, the acquisition program that the project is intended is listed as the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter. In addition, the F-22 is included in the list of keywords at the bottom of the solicitation.
"I'm sure it isn't a coincidence," says Dan Grazier at defense watchdog Project on Government Oversight. "The F-35 is quite vulnerable to ground fire, especially since the designers decided not to include self-sealing fuel tanks." [...] Some experts question whether the Air Force should even be putting its aircraft in harm's way. "The interesting thing to me is they still think in terms of sending the delivery vehicle, whether manned or unmanned, into contested air space," Grazier says. "With all the discussion of standoff weapons, AAA shouldn't be that much of a concern anymore." |
National Journal (login required)
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White House spokesman Hogan Gidley told reporters earlier this month that Wolf would replace McAleenan as acting secretary as soon as this week. But the Trump administration will likely once again have to change the succession order to install Wolf as the department s acting head. Three Senate-confirmed officials Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency Director Christopher Krebs, Undersecretary for Intelligence and Analysis David Glawe, and Transportation Security Administration Administrator David Pekoske rank above the undersecretary for strategy, policy, and plans.
That change would be implemented by McAleenan, who, unlike Nielsen, leads the agency in an acting capacity. Legal scholars were split over whether that wrinkle could provoke a successful legal challenge. "For me, in order for them to now designate Chad Wolf s position ... as acting [secretary], then there would have to be a confirmed secretary to make that switch," said Rebecca Jones, policy counsel at the Project on Government Oversight. |
The National Interest
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“The Littoral Combat Ship program has been unnecessarily complicated from the beginning,” the Project on Government Oversight explained in 2016. “Initially the Navy aimed for each ship to cost $220 million, but the Government Accountability Office estimates procurement costs for the first 32 ships is currently about $21 billion, or about $655 million per ship—nearly triple what they were supposed to cost.”
“The program’s three mission packages, according to the latest select acquisition report, add about $7.6 billion.” In the decade and a half since the program was first sold to Congress, the LCS has already been forced into multiple major program changes, initially driven by large cost overruns, the lack of combat survivability and lethality discovered during operational testing and deployments, the almost crippling technical failures and schedule delays in each of the three mission modules. Now the Navy has announced it is abandoning the two fundamental concepts behind the program: a multi-mission ship with swappable mission modules and a radically new way of manning it. Instead, each LCS hull will have a single mission and a significantly larger crew assigned a single primary skill set. |
The Daily Beast
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“Ending the [Call Data Records] authority is absolutely necessary, but Congress needs to do much more than ending a dysfunctional system that the NSA can’t provide any justification for,” said Jake Laperruque of the Project on Government Oversight. “Any reauthorization bill has to include a broad set of serious reforms. You don't get a five star restaurant review just by taking arsenic off the menu.”
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Washington Examiner
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“Despite the confirmation that the program achieved initial operational capability, the F-35 basic design still remains a prototype,” Dan Grazier, a military fellow at the Project for Government Oversight, told the Washington Examiner. “It’s very concerning to me that the services have prematurely pressed these into a combat role when the basic design hasn’t been proven yet.”
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Reason
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The Project on Government Oversight is suing for the release of records related to Immigration and Customs Enforcement data collection, facial recognition programs, and other surveillance.
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Project On Government Oversight (POGO) 1100 G Street NW Suite 500, Washington, DC |
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