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- NATION, Page 31American NotesVIRGINIAAn "Ill Wind" Picks Up Speed
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- More than two years after it began, the Justice
- Department's investigation into the Pentagon bribery scandal,
- code-named Ill Wind, may finally be poised to blow in some major
- indictments. Charles Gardner, a former top executive of Unisys
- Corp., pleaded guilty last week to bribing former Assistant
- Secretary of the Navy Melvyn Paisley in return for Paisley's
- help in winning at least $194 million in contracts on the Aegis
- electronic-warfare system.
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- Gardner says he arranged for the purchase at an inflated
- price of a vacation condominium that Paisley owned in Sun
- Valley, Idaho. Prosecutors say the payment -- about $149,000 for
- a condo later sold for $100,000 -- constituted a bribe. The
- money came from a secret $5 million fund that Gardner set up
- with Unisys money and devoted to bribery and illegal campaign
- contributions, as well as his personal use. He allegedly
- replenished the fund by charging the military for consulting
- work that was never performed -- which would mean that the
- Pentagon unknowingly supplied the money to corrupt its own
- officials.
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- No charges have been brought against Paisley, who has
- denied any allegation that he was knowingly bribed. But U.S.
- Attorney Henry Hudson promises that the cooperation he expects
- to get from Gardner, as well as from two associates who were
- also charged, "will move this investigation forward at a
- tremendous pace." Declaring itself "outraged," Unisys announced
- its intention to sue Gardner, who was forced to resign last
- March.
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