Washington, October 23, SPA — The U.S. State Department is unable to account for most of $1.2 billion in funding that it gave to DynCorp International to train Iraqi police, a government report said Tuesday.
“The bottom line is that State can’t account for where it went,” said Glenn D. Furbish, who was involved in putting together the 20-page report for the special inspector general for Iraq reconstruction (SIGIR).
The Department of State’s Bureau for International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs (INL) “did not have the information needed to identify what DynCorp provided under the contract or how funds were spent,” the report said.
As a result, the audit agency announced it has suspended its oversight of the agency’s project until INL gathers the information.
“Their records are just not detailed,” Furbish said Monday in a telephone interview. “From an audit perspective, we’ve identified the problem; they’re working to rectify the problem.”
Though Iraqi police have indeed been trained and equipment has been provided under the contract, invoices and supporting paperwork submitted by DynCorp “were in disarray,” the report said.
In addition, INL “had not validated the accuracy” of invoices received prior to last October, and “INL does not know specifically what it received for most of the $1.2 billion in expenditures under its DynCorp contract for the Iraqi Police Training Program.”
The lack of controls “created an environment vulnerable to waste and fraud,” the report was quoted as saying by the Associated Press.