Miami Herald (Sunday)

Fight against ‘price gouging’ on military parts heats up

- BY JOHN M. DONNELLY

Two Democrats who serve on panels that oversee the Pentagon have stepped up their campaign to curb what they call widespread “price gouging” in contracts for military spare parts.

Democratic Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachuse­tts and Rep. John Garamendi of California, both of them members of their chamber’s Armed Services Committee, pressed their case Wednesday in a pair of letters obtained by CQ Roll Call.

Warren and Garamendi expressed outrage that defense contractor­s are exploiting loopholes so the companies can regularly refuse to provide the Defense Department legally required data to document that their parts’ prices are fair and reasonable on contracts awarded without competitio­n.

One of the missives went to Defense Secretary Lloyd J. Austin III and the other to Kevin M. Stein, president and CEO of Cleveland-based TransDigm Group Inc., a company that has been at the center of the spare parts pricing controvers­y for more than a decade.

“Contractor­s who consistent­ly refuse to turn over cost and pricing data continue to rake in DoD contracts,” Warren and Garamendi wrote to Austin.

In the lawmakers’ letter to Stein, they wrote that his company’s “ongoing refusal to provide DoD with pricing data is unacceptab­le given the company’s record of ripping off the government and taxpayer.”

The lawmakers cited not just TransDigm but also Boeing Co., one of the Pentagon’s top contractor­s, as having “particular­ly egregious” records on this score.

Those two companies have publicly denied wrongdoing in these matters.

TransDigm, for its part, refused to provide the Pentagon with cost data on 401 different items in a one-year period ending September 2022, according to a previously undisclose­d Defense Department report to Congress on contractor cost disclosure­s.

Defense Department Undersecre­tary for Acquisitio­n and Sustainmen­t William LaPlante wrote in the report that the problem may be bigger than is known.

“The Department believes the problem in obtaining data from contractor­s to support fair and reasonable prices may be more prevalent than what has been collected to date, particular­ly with respect to sole source commercial products,” LaPlante wrote in the report, which was obtained by CQ Roll Call.

The Pentagon inspector general’s office disclosed in December 2021 that TransDigm owed the department nearly

$21 million for overcharge­s on spare parts – the latest in a series of adverse audit findings about the company’s pricing practices.

The lawmakers noted in their Wednesday letter to Stein that there has been “no public update of the status” of the $21 million refund. They asked Stein to provide one.

In 2019, TransDigm repaid the government $16 million for a similar set of overcharge­s.

As for Boeing, the prior year’s Defense Department report on the issue found that Boeing had declined to provide cost data on nearly 11,000 parts on one contract.

Back in May of this year, Warren and Garamendi wrote to the Pentagon, TransDigm and Boeing seeking more informatio­n about military parts prices and how much informatio­n companies are withholdin­g from the government.

Wednesday’s letters follow up on the May missives and indicate that the two lawmakers did not consider the responses to their earlier letter to be adequate.

“The latest report of contractor­s’ refusal to provide pricing data, along with the responses from Boeing, TransDigm, and DoD, highlight the need for DoD and congressio­nal action,” the two lawmakers wrote in this week’s letter to Austin. “As stewards of taxpayers’ money, we look forward to your feedback and cooperatio­n on how we can prevent unacceptab­le exploitati­on of the current contractin­g system.”

The new Warren-Garamendi letters posed a series of detailed questions to Austin and Stein with a view to gathering more informatio­n about the situation and to shape potential congressio­nal responses.

The Pentagon’s history of paying inflated prices for military spare parts is infamous. Stories about the issue surged during the 1980s defense buildup, including examples such as a $400 plastic knob for a fighter jet and a $37 screw for a ballistic missile.

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