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Offshore
Company Captures Online Military Vote
by
Lynn Landes
July
17, 2003
Last
year, while President Bush marshaled U.S. forces for the invasion of Iraq, the
patriots at the Department of Defense awarded the contract for a new online
voting system for the military... to an offshore company.
It
gets worse.
Secure
Electronic Registration and Voting Experiment (SERVE) is the system and
Accenture (formerly Anderson Consulting of Enron bankruptcy fame) is the
company. And although Accenture has not been officially implicated in the Enron
scandal, they have created a reputation of their own that is already raising
eyebrows.
This
is hot off the newswire:
7/15/03 NEW YORK (CBS.MW) -- Accenture
Ltd., the former Andersen Consulting, disclosed Tuesday that it might have
violated the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act. Chairman and CEO Joe Forehand,
on an earnings call with analysts and reporters Tuesday, said the consulting
firm's Middle East operations could be in non-compliance with the Act, which
prohibits the bribery of foreign government officials by U.S. persons.
The
Canada-based Polaris Institute published a scathing report on Accenture,
saying, "Accenture's efforts in government outsourcing have often been
very expensive and/or of poor quality. There is good reason to question
Accenture's track record in outsourcing of government services."
Accenture
is the leading offshore beneficiary of government contracts whose main business
is the privatization of government services, according to Lee Drutman of
Citizen Works, a non-profit founded by Ralph Nader. Accenture has a troubling
track record, a close business relationship with Dick Cheney's Halliburton, and
2500 partners - more than half are not U.S. citizens.
Since 2001 Accenture and Election.com have
been strategic partners "to jointly deliver comprehensive election
solutions to governments worldwide," according to their press release.
Last month Accenture bought the public-sector election assets of Election.com,
which suffered its own scandal this year when it was discovered that Osan Ltd,
a firm of Saudi and other foreign investors, bought controlling interest in it.
According to Mark Harrington of NewsDay.com, "Several shareholders of the
company said they were surprised by the recent buyout and have asked for
securities regulators to investigate."
Election.com
has had other problems. In January 2003, during Canada's New Democratic Party
leadership convention, the Canadian Broadcasting System reported, “Earl Hurd of
Election.com said he believes someone used a "denial of service"
program to disrupt the voting – paralyzing the central computer by bombarding
it with a stream of data”…service was restored, then… "Toronto city
councilor Jack Layton's victory on the first ballot surprised many, who had
expected a second or even third round of voting before a leader was chosen from
the pack of six candidates."
For
election security experts, a strong and growing suspicion is that computer
glitches or disruptions are actually vote rigging. A surprise election result
should raise a red flag.
Accenture
is big. It has more than 75,000 employees in 47 countries, and generated net
revenues of $11.6 billion for the fiscal year ended Aug. 31, 2002. On their Board of Directors is Steve
Ballmer, Microsoft's CEO and known to many as Bad Boy Ballmer for his ruthless,
if not illegal, business practices. Microsoft has been sued by the federal
government and several states for monopolistic business practices which were
designed to destroy their competition. Massachusetts’s Attorney General is
still pursuing Microsoft. In March 13, 2000 Andersen Consulting (now Accenture)
and Microsoft signed a "$1 Billion Pact To Form Joint Venture and Expand
Global Alliance." What's the alliance? To control voting systems around
the world?
A
sense of civic duty isn't high on Accenture's list of priorities. According to
an article last year in TheDailyEnron.com, "Accenture is lobbying
furiously on Capitol Hill to defeat a measure that would deny federal contracts
to US companies that move offshore to escape US taxes. Accenture, you see, has
incorporated in Bermuda. But, Accenture also holds nearly $1 billion in
government contracts in the US. The company earned nearly $700 million last
year working for Uncle Sam and - ironically - is currently under contract with
the Internal Revenue Service itself to redesign its online and Internet
operations."
Then
there’s the Accenture connection to Halliburton, vice president Dick Cheney’s
former employer. Halliburton is widely criticized for doing business with
brutal regimes and was the subject of a SEC investigation and several lawsuits
surrounding their accounting practices during and after Cheney’s tenure at the
helm. The Polaris Institute says that in July 2000 David Lesar succeeded Dick
Cheney as Chairman and CEO of Halliburton Company. Before joining Halliburton,
Lesar was employed by the Arthur Andersen, Accenture's former parent company.
Polaris says, "…while defending Halliburton's accounting practices, David
Lesar publicly acknowledged that Cheney knew about the firm's accounting
practices..."
In
an October 2001 press release, Halliburton and Accenture announced a major
expansion of their longstanding relationship with the signing of an alliance
between Accenture and Landmark Graphics Corporation, a wholly owned business
unit of Halliburton.
And
unlike the words of the U.S. military's anthem, "I'm proud to be an
American”, Accenture owes its allegiance to "partners" outside of the
USA.
In
a letter to the editor of the Austin Chronicle last year, Accenture's Director
of Corporate Communications, Roxanne Taylor wrote, "When Accenture's
parent company, Accenture Ltd., was first incorporated last year, the
organization's 2,500 partners, more than half of whom are non-U.S. citizens,
decided to incorporate in Bermuda. With thousands of partners and employees of
many nationalities, it was important commercially and culturally for the
organization to select a neutral location such as Bermuda for its parent
company.”
How
very global of them.
Potentially,
6 million U.S. military and civilian voters could soon be using the military's
new online voting system. According to computer voting security experts, any
online system will be easy to rig by company insiders and vulnerable to attack
by outsiders. Apart from that reality, does the U.S. military really want a
company owned by non-U.S. citizens in charge of their vote?
Can
anyone at the Pentagon spell "national security"?
Lynn Landes is a freelance
journalist. She publishes her articles at EcoTalk.org.
Formerly Lynn was a radio show host, a regular commentator for a BBC radio
program, and environmental news reporter for DUTV in Philadelphia, PA. She can
e contacted at: lynnlandes@earthlink.net
* Related Articles by Lynn Landes:
Suspicion
Surrounds Voter News Service
Mission
Impossible: Federal Observers & Voting Machines
2002
Elections: Republican Voting Machines, Election Irregularities, and
"Way-Off" Polling Results
Voting Machines
- A High Tech Ambush
Election
Night Projections: Cover For Vote Rigging Since 1964?
Elections In
America: Assume Crooks Are In Control