Florida Case Involves Firms Close to Murtha
Roll Call Staff
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Rivers said the money for that project came from an earmark inserted in the 2006 appropriations bill by Rep. Bill Young (R-Fla.).
Youngs spokesman Harry Glenn confirmed that the Congressman requested $3 million for Schaller to build the CERV after a staff member went to Florida to see a prototype and an Air Force general told Young that it was a worthwhile project. Congress approved the earmark for $1.7 million.
Youngs office later learned that there had been a problem with the contracting office that was managing the program and that the money for the contract was never released, Glenn said.
As far as we know, the company never got the funds, Glenn said, and it was the only time Youngs office dealt with Schaller.
Rivers said it became clear in 2007 that the CERV was not going to get additional funding, so he bought out Ianieri and Schaller. American Electric Vehicles is now the new name of Colorado Power Systems, and it is no longer based in Windber.
Rivers said that Kuchera later built copies of the CERV and paid him to provide batteries for them, but that he has no idea what became of them. An August 2007 story in the Johnstown (Pa.) Tribune Democrat indicates that Kuchera and Coherent Systems were looking for ways to market the vehicle to law-enforcement and security organizations.
Rivers told Roll Call that OHair is a patriot and a thoroughly good guy who would not even allow Rivers to buy his lunch at a local sandwich shop. Everything I have seen has been thoroughly ethical and right on his part.
These guys are classic type-A people and aggressive types, Rivers said. When you cause waves, you may rightly or wrongly get wet.
According to the indictment, OHair signed off on an $8.1 million contract for Coherent Systems in September 2005 to build four Ground Mobile Gateway Systems. Air Force documents indicate that these systems were communications platforms that would allow the integration of information from various sources on the battlefield. That contract included $200,000 to Schaller Engineering to provide miniature radio frequency tracking devices that could be used to tag targets in the field.
The indictment alleges that Coherent Systems paid the $200,000 to Schaller Engineering but never received the target tags. Schaller Engineering then wrote three $60,000 checks to other businesses owned or controlled by Sumrall, OHair and Richard Schaller, the government alleges.
Murthas office said the Congressman provided a $1.7 million earmark for Ground Mobile Gateway Systems in fiscal 2007. His office had no information about funding for the program in other years.
Mark Shellans, the chief scientist at Pathfinder Technology, said the allegations against OHair and Schaller are untrue.
Shellans argued that OHair had disclosed to the military his consulting arrangement with Pathfinder and that the military had approved it. Shellans said he provided documents to the U.S. Attorneys Office and offered to testify before the grand jury to explain the relationships with OHair and Schaller, but was never invited to do so.
OHair was targeted and the other firms involved were barred from federal contracts as part of a turf battle over the expansion of the Battlefield Airman program, Shellans said. Pathfinder was barred and then reinstated, but Shellans said the Air Force never provided a rationale for either action.
Shellans said Members of Congress including Murtha were pursuing $64 million worth of earmarks for the Battlefield Airman programs that OHair was overseeing, but his bosses wanted to use that money for other purposes. Murthas office said it had no information about these earmarks.
OHair is a guy of absolute integrity, Shellans said. The fact that he has gotten caught up in this is an absolute tragedy.
Schumer Advocates for Many on Panel
Nov. 16, 12 a.m.
As Senate Majority Leader, Lyndon Johnson once said of the Joint Economic Committee, Its as useless as tits on a bull. But as that panels chairman during the 110th Congress, Sen. Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) seized the opportunity to elevate the traditionally low-profile post to the forefront of shaping policy. Read Full Article










