Bloomberg Quinn and SAIC let the Little People pay for their greed and stupidity.
Don't forget Rudy's role -- he gave us SAIC CityTime and his deputy mayors lobbyist
Bloomberg and Quinn 911 ECTP corruption green lighted billions in over - runs but 911 involves our lives...
Sept 11 meet Mike's 3rd term if we have a terrorist attack déjà vu.
But media always willing to kill news like serial killers and do damage control. I wait for accountability. Not holding my breath.
Don't forget Rudy's role -- he gave us SAIC CityTime and his deputy mayors lobbyist
Bloomberg and Quinn 911 ECTP corruption green lighted billions in over - runs but 911 involves our lives...
Sept 11 meet Mike's 3rd term if we have a terrorist attack déjà vu.
But media always willing to kill news like serial killers and do damage control. I wait for accountability. Not holding my breath.
Motley Fool thinks drone tracking cool, how about those 15 dead Afghan's killed by non military SAIC mistake ?
This video is the how to...
Link below is about the mistakes that can be made having NON military SAIC close to the tigger...what the heck....
Reporting from Washington—
After a U.S. airstrike mistakenly killed at least 15 Afghans in 2010, the Army officer investigating the accident was surprised to discover that an American civilian had played a central role: analyzing video feeds from a Predator drone keeping watch from above.
The contractor had overseen other analysts at Air Force Special Operations Command at Hurlburt Field in Florida as the drone tracked suspected insurgents near a small unit of U.S. soldiers in rugged hills of central Afghanistan. Based partly on her analysis, an Army captain ordered an airstrike on a convoy that turned out to be carrying innocent men, women and children.
"What company do you work for?" Maj. Gen. Timothy McHale demanded of the contractor after he learned that she was not in the military, according to a transcript obtained under the Freedom of Information Act.
"SAIC," she answered. Her employer, SAIC Inc., is a publicly traded Virginia-based corporation with a multiyear $49-million contract to help the Air Force analyze drone video and other intelligence from Afghanistan.