Until 2010, Boeing charged an average of $300 for a trash container used in the E-3 Sentry, a surveillance and radar plane based on the 707 civilian airliner. When the 707 fell out of use in the United States, the trash can was no longer a “commercial” item, meaning that Boeing was not obligated to keep its price at previous levels, according to a weapons industry source who spoke to RS.

In 2020, the Pentagon paid Boeing over $200,000 for four of the trash cans, translating to roughly $51,606 per unit. In a 2021 contract, the company charged $36,640 each for 11 trash containers, resulting in a total cost of more than $400,000. The apparent overcharge cost taxpayers an extra $600,000 between the two contracts.

In another case, Lockheed Martin hiked the price of an electrical conduit for the P-3 plane as much as 14 fold, costing the Pentagon an additional $133,000 between 2008 and 2015.

Jamaica Bearings — a company that distributes parts manufactured by other firms — sold the Department of Defense 13 radio filters that had once cost $350 each for nearly $49,000 per unit in 2022. The apparent markup cost taxpayers more than $600,000 in extra fees.

The revelations come as major arms manufacturers boast record revenues. Lockheed Martin, General Dynamics, and Raytheon Technologies have each reported all-time highs in demand following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, allowing the companies to give shareholders nearly $20 billion last year through stock buybacks and dividends. And the CEOs of the top five weapons makers each make between $18 million and $23 million per year.

  • anotherone [none/use name]
    ·
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    Former auditor here: the problem is that you need some kind of a trail of what goes to x y and z. Like if someone is embezzling money into a bank account - I just need to find those transfers and be able to link the bank account to the person. Ez pz.

    The Pentagon is such a fucking black box there will never be a successful audit besides putting a number on how much can not be accounted for and going shrug-outta-hecks

    • anotherone [none/use name]
      ·
      1 year ago

      100% waiting for the only other dork as big as me to come along and say "an auditor's job is not to find fraud it's to give reasonable assurance there are no material misstatements"

      If you're out there,,, hello