Electric shocks came often at U.S. bases in Iraq, report
finds
http://www.cnn.com/2009/US/01/29/kbr.electrical/index.html?eref=rss_t...
(CNN) -- Improper wiring by military contractor KBR at U.S. bases in
Iraq led to electrical shocks about once every three days for nearly
two years, according to Defense Department documents obtained by CNN.

Ryan Maseth, a 24-year-old Green Beret, died in a shower at his base
in Iraq on January 2, 2008.


 Houston-based KBR, the military contractor responsible for
maintaining and providing services at most of U.S. bases across Iraq,
had "systemic failures" in its electrical work that threatened the
life, health and safety of people inside the bases, according to the
documents, from a violation report obtained by CNN.


There were 231 electrical shocks of personnel in Iraq from September
2006 through July 2008 in facilities maintained by KBR, the documents
state.


KBR has been at the center of controversy surrounding the
electrocution of soldiers on bases in Iraq. Much of the controversy
has surrounded the electrocution of Sgt. Ryan Maseth, a highly
decorated 24-year old Green Beret from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.


Maseth was electrocuted in a shower on a U.S. base in Baghdad, Iraq,
on January 2, 2008.


At least 18 troops have been electrocuted in Iraq since 2003, and
many
of the electrocutions have been attributed to shoddy electrical work
done on U.S. bases -- work managed by U.S. contractors -- according
to
Pentagon sources. Each of the electrocutions has occurred in
different
locations and under various circumstances.


The violation report shows that electrical shocks and problems with
wiring and grounding continued for much of last year, long after
Maseth was electrocuted.


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Heather Browne, a KBR spokesperson, said the company could not
comment
on the specific language in the document obtained by CNN because KBR
had not seen it.


But the company has previously said that "KBR found no link between
work it's been asked to perform and the reported electrocutions" and
that "KBR remains committed to the safety and security of all
employees and those the company serves. We have fully cooperated with
the government when issues have been raised about work in Iraq and we
will continue to do so."


On the death of Maseth, the company has said, "KBR's investigation
has
produced no evidence that KBR was responsible for Sgt. Maseth's
death.
We have cooperated fully with all government agencies investigating
this matter and will do so in the future."


Last week, CNN obtained other documents that show the Army
investigator assigned to look into Maseth's electrocution blamed KBR
for the death, stating that she believed the cause was "negligent
homicide" and that there is "credible information that KBR's
negligence led to Maseth's death."


The revelations about the frequency of shocks on bases are found in
the complete and detailed report that led to KBR's citation for being
in serious violation of its contract several months ago.


At that time, the Pentagon's Defense Contract Management Agency gave
KBR what is known as a "Level III Corrective Action Request." That is
issued only when a contractor is found in "serious non-compliance"
and
is just one step below the possibility of suspending or terminating a
contract, Pentagon officials said.


While that violation citation was previously known, the report's
precise language and details of KBR's alleged "failures" were not
known until now.


The 45-page report alleges KBR had improper electrical wiring,
grounding and overall electrical problems across Iraq.


"The government found systemic KBR failures to properly ground and
bond facilities -- failures that contributed to theater personnel
receiving shocks in KBR maintained facilities on average once every
three days" between September 2006 and July 31, 2008, the detailed
report says.


That information, the report says, came from KBR's own statistical
records.


"The conditions of these facilities created Life, Health, Safety
(LHS)
conditions for the occupants. The lack of grounding and bonding,
among
other electrical deficiencies" were "identified and confirmed by
three
separate independent inspection teams" from the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers, the U.S. Army Combat Safety Center and a multinational
force working with fire and electricity, the report states.


"Most facilities inspected had electrical deficiencies because KBR
failed to consistently follow contract standards every time it
constructed or emplaced a facility, inspected a facility, responded
to
a service order request, or performed maintenance and/or repairs on
facilities, generators and utilities," the report says.


Also, the report says, "the Government is unaware of any efforts
undertaken by KBR to independently identify, assess, and implement
corrective actions to its electrical support services or quality
control inspection program as a result of the extensive number of
electrical shock incidents ... "


Sen. Robert Casey, D-Pennsylvania, said his office has received
numerous anecdotal reports of U.S. military personnel continuing to
receive electric shocks.


"While KBR continues to assure the American people that it has
completed its own investigations and has found no evidence of
corporate wrongdoing, the emerging facts prove otherwise," Casey
said.
"According to an internal investigation led by the Pentagon's
contract
auditors, we now know that KBR failed to comply with basic
contractual
requirements even while being rewarded with billions of dollars by
U.S. taxpayers."


Casey called on the Pentagon "to treat this issue for the danger it
represents." The Defense Department, he said, "has taken some
encouraging actions [but] it needs to do much more."


"And it is high time that KBR begin to suffer real consequences for
what I consider to be blatant contractual noncompliance," Casey said.



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