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June 8 (ABC7) — At a time when our schools and city services are straining
to stretch every tax dollar, we have found a story of government waste that
is simply staggering. Hundreds of millions of dollars a year are thrown away,
or given away, or simply lost.
The military buys billions of dollars in equipment every year -- everything
from planes and tanks to bicycles and bandages, and the government loses track
of a whole lot of this stuff. It winds up being sold on the Internet. You can
buy it. Heck, you've already bought it.
Greg Kutz, Government Accountability Office (GAO): "Okay, the first item
we have here is gauze."
Greg Kutz sounds like he's starting his own shopping channel as he shows us
some of the military gear he bought online.
Greg Kutz, GAO: "This is a power supply unit for the sea wolf nuclear
submarine."
Kutz bought all kinds of stuff as a government auditor checking on billions
spent by the Pentagon. He bought cold weather boots, circuit boards, uniforms,
medical cabinets, tires and even equipment that could be used to produce and
disseminate anthrax. Much of it brand new and unwrapped.
Greg Kutz, GAO: "Well it was a breakdown in their system to reutilize
property."
As Kutz explains, there are systems at the Pentagon to keep new equipment from
being thrown away or sold off cheap, but those systems don't work.
Out of $2.5 billion dollars worth, the Pentagon used only 12 percent. Another
10 percent was transferred to other government agencies. A full quarter of it
was thrown away, brand new stuff into the landfills. And the rest was sold to
the public, $1.3 billion dollars worth of new gear sold for what the report
terms pennies on the dollar, at the same time the military was paying top dollar
purchasing the same or similar items new.
Greg Kutz, GAO: "We identified at least $400 million dollars of items
that they were giving away selling for pennies on the dollar or destroying at
the same time they were in demand by the military forces."
So, the government is buying boots for $134 dollars a pair and at the same
time it's selling identical boots for $12 dollars, or whatever you want to bid.
Phil Montalbano of Daly City is scanning govliquidation.com, a Web site where
in one case GAO investigators paid $1,471 dollars to buy new equipment which
originally cost $68,000. Do you know who gets stuck with the $66,000 dollar
loss?
Phil Montalbano, Daly City: "Us right, taxpayers."
That's right. Greg Kutz says he documented $400 million dollars over two years,
but that's only a fraction and it's been going on for more than a decade.
Rep. Ellen Tauscher, (D) Walnut Creek: "Anything the Pentagon wants they
get."
Walnut Creek representative Ellen Tauscher sits on the Armed Services Committee.
Rep. Ellen Tauscher, (D) Walnut Creek: "This is the far right hand not
knowing what the right hand is doing."
Tauscher blames Republicans.
Christopher Shays is the Republican whose committee is conducting the investigation.
Rep. Christopher Shays, (R) Connecticut: "It's very disconcerting because
it's been around for a while and we've had hearings and we've wanted to see
changes."
But the changes aren't coming nearly fast enough says Congressman Shays. And
the people who are getting stuck with the bill expect it.
Click here to visit www.govliquidation.com.