Gee Whiz I wonder why they are having recruiting problems?
They come up with a incredibly flawed system, entice participation from underpaid military, then come back and say:Military always had problems.
Just now though..
"Army leadership told Congress in 2014 that Task Force Raptor might uncover as much as $100 million in fraud. Three years later, the Army revised that estimate to $6 million, after spending around $28 million on the investigation."MSN linkMSN
www.msn.com
Army injustice: Thousands of soldiers, veterans slapped with misleading criminal record
Soldiers and veterans say the Army's investigation of a now-defunct recruiting program left them with a criminal record even though they were never charged.www.foxnews.com
Well, that and claiming people were arrested, that never were."Army leadership told Congress in 2014 that Task Force Raptor might uncover as much as $100 million in fraud. Three years later, the Army revised that estimate to $6 million, after spending around $28 million on the investigation."
I think I found the actual fraud.
That, plus the fact that now, they are being paid to investigate the original investigation. I wonder how that one will turn out...."Army leadership told Congress in 2014 that Task Force Raptor might uncover as much as $100 million in fraud. Three years later, the Army revised that estimate to $6 million, after spending around $28 million on the investigation."
I think I found the actual fraud.
duhServicemen:
Your government does not care about you.
"Army leadership told Congress in 2014 that Task Force Raptor might uncover as much as $100 million in fraud. Three years later, the Army revised that estimate to $6 million, after spending around $28 million on the investigation."
I think I found the actual fraud.
Adding up all of the expenses of the several people, equipment, maintenance and consumables involved in the investigation of a broken car mirror is, in itself, a fraudulent assessment. All of this doesn't exist simply to respond to one broken car mirror.By the way, we do this all the time in the real world. Say someone comes outside and finds their car side mirror broken. They call the police. Thus begins a chain of several people. First the 911 dispatcher takes your call. Pay them, and their overhead. Next a LEO drives from wherever to the broken mirror. Gas, wear and tear on the vehicle. Salary for the LE person. They take time to do a little report for the victim. When LE leaves they somehow file the report. If electronic some IT person sees it's filed or saved properly. Pay them. The victim calls the insurance company or agent. Now a claims adjuster and their staff does their thing. Finally the $100 dollar mirror is replaced, costing the combined system of LE and insurance company $1,200 to get it done.
Adding up all of the expenses of the several people, equipment, maintenance and consumables involved in the investigation of a broken car mirror is, in itself, a fraudulent assessment. All of this doesn't exist simply to respond to one broken car mirror.
So perhaps the story is full of **** on the amount spent on the investigation, but I have no knowledge on whether they just added up everyone's salaries and benefits to get to the $28 million figure, or if they actually exceeded normal costs of day to day operations to the tune of $28 million.
Regardless, your comparison with winning or losing money in lawsuits is irrelevant. So is the surgery comparison. This is a matter of typical government incompetence costing the taxpayers millions, with the only result being Americans who served their country being branded with fraudulent criminal records.