05 November 2013

Typical government excess

Rico says the US Marshals Service got caught with both hands in the cookie jar, and you can read all about it in an article by Massimo Calabresi in Time, or the actual gummint report (photo, above) here:
The Justice Department’s Office of the Inspector General (OIG) has released a report finding that the investigative operations division (IOD) of the US Marshals Service spent nearly $800,000 on “swag” from 2005 to 2010. The “trinkets” included, among other things, commemorative coins, silk ties, lambs wool blankets, and crystal statues. The IG finds:
These expenditures were excessive and, in some instances, in contravention of both department policies and Government Accountability Office (GAO) decisions and guidance. Furthermore, IOD’s spending on promotional items increased by 975 percent during the six-year period examined by the OIG, and vastly outpaced the growth of the USMS’ appropriation during the same period. As an illustration of some of the IOD’s spending, we found that, in six years, the IOD branches spent $155,081 on USMS challenge coins, $11,338 on neckties and silk scarves bearing the USMS seal, $13,605 on USMS-themed Christmas ornaments, $16,084 on USMS-themed blankets and throws, and $36,596 on USMS lapel pins.
The DoJ implemented controls in 2011 after an anonymous tip.

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