PRESS NOTICE 1441 Main Street * Suite 500 * Columbia, SC 29201 * (803) 929-3000 * November 20, 2007 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT PERSON: KEVIN MCDONALD CIVILIAN CONTRACTOR INDICTED FOR ALLEGEDLY SOLICITING BRIBES WHILE WORKING AT CAMP ARIFJAN IN KUWAITWASHINGTON - A civilian contractor from Georgia has been indicted by a federal grand jury in the District of Columbia for allegedly soliciting bribes while working at Camp Arifjan, an Army base in Kuwait, Assistant Attorney General Alice S. Fisher of the Criminal Division announced today. The indictment returned this morning charges Terry Hall, 41, of Rex, Georgia, with one count of bribery. Hall was arrested
in Atlanta on a criminal complaint charging bribery on Nov. 15, 2007.
The indictment alleges that Hall paid money and other things of value
to a U.S. military contracting officer assigned to Camp Arifjan, a U.S.
Army base in Kuwait, in order to influence the actions of that officer,
including the awarding of contracts. The indictment alleges
that an Army Major who served as an Army contracting officer at Camp Arifjan
in 2005 and 2006 made over $10 million worth of calls on a blanket purchase
agreement for bottled water in Kuwait in favor of companies operated by
Hall. Beginning in January 2005 through at least the fall of 2006, Hall
allegedly offered and paid money to the Army Major to influence the Major's
official acts, including the awarding of the bottled water blanket purchase
agreements and related calls. In October 2006,
the Department of Justice announced the formation of a National Procurement
Fraud Task Force designed to promote the early detection, identification,
prevention and prosecution of procurement fraud associated with the increase
in government contracting activity for national security and other government
programs. The Procurement Fraud Task Force - chaired by Assistant Attorney
General Fisher - includes the United States Attorneys' Offices, the FBI,
the U.S. Inspectors General community, and a number of other federal law
enforcement agencies. The cases brought by members of the Task Force demonstrate
the Department of Justice's commitment to helping ensure the integrity
of the government procurement process.
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