The
complaint alleges Lockheed paid more than $1 million to Mission
Support Alliance executives in order to win a $232 million
subcontract for providing management and technology support at
the Hanford, Washington site from 2010 through the middle of
2016 at inflated rates.
It also says the defendants lied about the amount of profit
included in Lockheed's billing rates.
A Lockheed Martin spokeswoman denied the allegations, saying the
company "rejects the suggestion that the corporation or its
executives engaged in any wrongdoing. Lockheed Martin will
defend this matter vigorously."
At the time, MSA was owned by Lockheed Martin Integrated
Technology LLC, Jacobs Engineering Group Inc., and Centerra
Group. It awarded the subcontract to Lockheed's technology group
without competition, according to the Justice Department.
The large 586-square mile Hanford nuclear site in southern
Washington, established during World War Two to produce
plutonium, is considered the biggest environmental cleanup in
U.S. history. It is administered by the Department of Energy,
Environmental Protection Agency and the state of Washington.
(Reporting by Lisa Lambert and Mike Stone; editing by Chris
Reese)
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