Author Topic: Your Federal Tax dollars at work - utterly insane that people want tax hikes.  (Read 4281 times)

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House panel tells GSA, ‘Party’s over’

By Joe Davidson, Tuesday, April 17, 7:25 PM

From the start of the House committee hearing into an excessive General Services Administration conference, it was clear that the members of Congress had a take-no-prisoners attitude.

Representatives on the Transportation and Infrastructure subcommittee on public buildings say they had been repeatedly stonewalled in their attempt to get budget figures for the agency’s Public Buildings Service.

Now that section of GSA is at the center of a scandal, revealed in an inspector general’s report, over the 2010 conference that cost almost $823,000 for 300 people at a luxury hotel in a Las Vegas suburb. As a result of the conference, three top administrators are out of their jobs, and the acting GSA administrator told the panel that 10 career employees are on administrative leave.

All of the subcommittee’s built-up anger over the budget was vented through outrage over the spending on the Western Regions Conference.

“Let me just issue a warning,” said subcommittee Chairman Jeff Denham (R-Calif.), his voice booming across the Rayburn House Office Building meeting room. “If this [spending and lack of information] continues to go on . . . I am prepared to systematically pull apart GSA to the point where we will make it a question to the American public on whether GSA is needed at all. But the wasteful spending is going to stop and the transparency is going to begin.”

Any other time, a threat to essentially decimate an agency would be partisan fighting words. But the minimal response from Democrats to Denham’s warning shows how far out of favor GSA has fallen.

Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-D.C.), the ranking Democrat on the panel, was more low-key than Denham, but clearly upset that “the expensive partying at a four-star casino resort occurred . . . as millions of Americans were living hand to mouth, struggling under debts and the worst recession since the Great Depression.”

Before the grilling of past and present GSA officials got very far, Denham unexpectedly excused Lisa Daniels, a GSA event planner, not long after she swore, along with other witnesses, to tell the truth.

When it was her turn to offer an opening statement, Denham asked if she had a lawyer. Speaking hesitantly, appearing nervous and uncomfortable, she said she did not. Daniels, a 26-year GSA employee, was placed on administrative leave last Wednesday and had no prepared testimony.

“I would just issue you a word of caution,” Denham said, adding that the GSA’s inspector general (IG) had provided “a great deal of troubling information” related to Daniels.

The IG report said that during the Vegas conference “a GSA event planner contacted the M Resort’s catering and conference services manager and said that she ‘cannot live without’ a $98 purse from the hotel’s gift shop, asking whether the manager received a discount and ‘if so, will you help me?’ The manager responded, ‘I can give you a $30 comp,’ which was promptly accepted.”

Out of concern for her constitutional rights, Denham, in consultation with Democrats, excused Daniels without any questions directed to her. “You ought to seek legal counsel,” he told her.

After the more than five-hour hearing, he added: “The e-mails we received last night were alarming, the things she admitted to.”

Denham and other members also were alarmed at an agency that appeared to be so poorly managed. Former administrator Martha Johnson, who along with two other top officials were gone shortly before the IG report was released April 2, said when she took office in February 2010 “a quarter of the executive positions were empty, strategy was non-existent, major customers viewed our partnership askance, labor relations were acrimonious, the information technology infrastructure was inadequate” and on and on and on.

But testimony revealed that two years later, organizational problems remained at the agency. No one could say if the problems of Region 9, which hosted the conference, were an aberration or part of the agency’s culture.

Daniel Tangherlini, acting administrator, said that since he took over April 3, he has consolidated conference oversight in a new Office of Administrative Services.

“To strengthen internal controls, we are bringing in all Public Buildings Service regional budgets under the direct authority of GSA’s chief financial officer,” he added. “The autonomy of regional budget allocations is, in part, what led to this gross misuse of taxpayer funds on both the regional conference and the employee rewards program known as ‘Hats Off.’ ”

These moves will no doubt make a difference. But it will take much more than that to rebuild the image and taxpayer trust in an agency that was out of control.


Previous columns by Joe Davidson are available at wapo.st/JoeDavidson. Follow the Federal Diary on Twitter: @JoeDavidsonWP

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GSA Testimony Becomes Tense on 2nd Day
http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,2112284,00.html#ixzz1sLNJ0zHt ^
Posted on April 17, 2012 7:38:40 PM EDT by kcvl

Inspector General Brian Miller, whose report on the Las Vegas conference touched off congressional investigations, almost seemed overwhelmed by the scope of wrongdoing. "Every time we turned over a stone we found 50 more with all kinds of things crawling out," Miller said.

Family members often were taken along, and in an email exchange between GSA regional executive Jeffrey Neely and his wife last November, they wrote of a planned trip turning into a birthday celebration.

The 17-day trip took place last February to Hawaii, Guam and Saipan. Neely — who was placed on administrative leave — wrote his wife: "Rough schedule per our conversation. Guess this'll be your birthday present?"

She responded, "Its yo birthday....We gonna pawty like iz yo birthday!"

(Excerpt) Read more at time.com ...

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GSA official’s wife accompanied him on trips at taxpayer expense
Washington Post ^ | April 17, 2010 | Lisa Rein




The senior government executive who organized the lavish Las Vegas conference at the center of a General Services Administration spending scandal took dozens of trips for the agency. The boss's wife accompanied him on some of them — and taxpayers picked up the tab.

Deborah Neely wasn't always just sharing husband Jeffrey E. Neely's hotel rooms at resorts from Las Vegas to the Pacific islands. She handled party arrangements, directed event planners to spend government money and arranged lodging for relatives on the GSA trip to Las Vegas in 2010, an unusual role revealed in transcripts of interviews that the agency's inspector general's office conducted with Jeffrey Neely, as well as in congressional hearings.

Her role as the "first lady of Region 9" — as an investigator called her — shows a management culture in GSA's Pacific Rim region that not only allowed the $823,000 Las Vegas gathering for 300 people and overspending on other conferences but also openly condoned perks for managers and their family members.

"Mr. Neely and his wife believe they were some sort of agency royalty who used taxpayer funds to bankroll their lavish lifestyle," Rep. Elijah E. Cummings (Md.), the ranking Democrat on the oversight panel, said Monday.


(Excerpt) Read more at washingtonpost.com ...

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Warning sign? GSA deputy pleaded guilty to embezzlement months before Vegas bash
Foxnews.com ^ | 4/23/2012 | Staff at foxnews.com
Posted on April 23, 2012 12:04:32 AM EDT by PieterCasparzen

The former right-hand man for the official at the heart of the General Services Administration spending scandal pleaded guilty in a long-running embezzlement scheme just months before that fateful Las Vegas convention in 2010 -- a case one lawmaker now sees as a warning sign ignored.

"They were living in some strange bubble," Sen. Joe Lieberman, I-Conn., said of GSA employees, in an interview on "Fox News Sunday."

The senator, in announcing Sunday that he's urging the GSA inspector general to launch a probe of the entire agency for evidence of similar abuses, invoked the case of Daniel Voll. Looking back at the charges against Voll, the allegations of lavish spending at the Nevada convention and other taxpayer-backed trips have an element of déjà vu.

Voll used to be deputy commissioner in the western region of the GSA's Public Buildings Service -- that's the division Jeffrey Neely led until he was placed on leave for his involvement in the Vegas bash.

In April 2010, Voll pleaded guilty to defrauding the government of roughly $61,000. According to the Justice Department...

(Excerpt) Read more at foxnews.com ...

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When he checked out six days later, his bill totaled $2,645.98, including $413 for a couples massage, $80 a day in club charges and $12.50 for smoky almonds from the in-room minibar.

Voll paid the charges with a government-issued credit card and later claimed they were legitimate business expenses. In reality, they were part of a four-year string of falsified travel spending that resulted in taxpayers picking up the tab for luxury hotel stays, gourmet meals, massages and other frills.

In August, a federal judge in San Francisco arranged a different sort of stay for Voll – three months in prison, followed by one year of probation. He also was fined $100,000.

Voll had pleaded guilty four months earlier to embezzling public funds, after being charged with defrauding the government of more than $60,000. Prosecutors had recommended a sentence of 10 months in prison, plus a year of probation.

It was unclear from the case file what tipped off the GSA to Voll’s activities, or why they were not detected sooner.

A database of the agency‘s travel expenses, obtained by JunketSleuth through Freedom of Information Act requests, show that Voll accounted for the largest dollar amount of spending by any GSA employee from 2007 through 2009.

The database lists the actual expenditures on Voll’s trips at just over $250,000, which was more than 30 percent higher than any other employee.

Voll was deputy regional commissioner for the GSA’s Public Buildings Service, which oversees government-owned properties in a territory that includes California, Hawaii, Guam and American Samoa. In light of his job, some significant travel expenditures were understandable. But given that Voll was based in San Francisco and had a home in the Bay Area, the local hotel bills should have set off alarms.

According to documents filed in connection with his criminal case, he racked up more than $10,000 in charges for five stays at luxury San Francisco hotels between September 2008 and April 2009.

The bill for the first of those stays, also at the Intercontinental San Francisco, showed that Voll paid $750 the first night and $1,350 the second night for a one-bedroom suite on the 30th floor. His tab for the two-night stay was $2,970.87.

In February 2009, Voll logged back-to-back stays at the W San Francisco and the St. Regis San Francisco. He spent four nights at the W and three nights – including Valentine’s Day – at the St. Regis.

Voll’s room bill at the W was $1,623.81 and included $433.14 in food and beverage charges. Receipts filed in the criminal case show that Voll and a companion dined on foie gras, duck, and sole, then topped off the meal with sorbet and cappuccino.

The bill at the St. Regis was $2,641.26. The nightly room rate, before tax, was $480. The charges also included a couple’s massage, at $390, and more than $50 a day in parking charges.

Voll’s travel records show a one-night stay at the Palace Hotel in San Francisco in March 2009, followed by the six-night stay at the InterContinental in April.

More...

http://junketsleuth.com/government-official-takes-business-trips-his-own-hometown-goes-prison-embezzling-more-60000-taxpayer


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Top ICE figure expected to plead guilty to brazen $500G scam
 Fox News ^ | William La Jeunesse

Posted on Tuesday, May 01, 2012 11:30:46 AM by nuconvert

In a brazen criminal scheme to defraud taxpayers, one of the highest-ranking officials in the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency is expected to plead guilty Tuesday in federal court to helping embezzle more than $500,000 from the federal government.

Over three years, James Woosley and at least five other ICE employees scammed the agency by fabricating expenses for trips that were never taken and for hotel, rental car and restaurant expenses that did not exist, according to court records.

His son, also named James Woosley, and live-in girlfriend, Lateisha Rollerson -- both ICE employees -- allegedly ran the scam out of the elder Woosley's two Virginia homes.


(Excerpt) Read more at foxnews.com ...

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NOAA sought magician, now wants plans to disappear
Associated Press ^ | Thursday, May 3, 2012 9:18 PM EDT | SETH BORENSTEIN AP Science Writer
Posted on May 3, 2012 11:36:32 PM EDT by Hunton Peck

A federal agency needs illusionist David Copperfield to help escape from criticism over now-canceled plans to hire a speaker to train agency leaders using "magic tools."

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration is in hot water because on May 1 it posted a notice seeking a magician motivational speaker for a June leadership conference in suburban Maryland. The agency said presentations should include "physical energizers, magic tricks, puzzles, brain teasers, word games, humor and teambuilding exercises." It asked for the performer to create "a unique model of translating magic and principals of the psychology of magic, magic tools, techniques and experiences into a method of teaching leadership."

In an eight page bid solicitation, the agency in charge of weather, climate and oceans said it wanted to use the emotional intelligence techniques of a prominent Harvard professor who has written five books, but misspelled his name.

The posting came weeks after the General Services Administration was embroiled in a scandal involving a Las Vegas conference that cost nearly $1 million and included a mind reader.

Congressmen and senators called NOAA's plans frivolous and ridiculous. House Science Committee Chairman Ralph Hall, R-Tex., gave NOAA Administrator Jane Lubchenco a week to...

(Excerpt) Read more at centurylink.net ...