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Showing posts with label defense. Show all posts
Showing posts with label defense. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Copy that: Plagiarism charges unseat Germany's 'superstar' Defense minister (The Christian Science Monitor)

Frankfurt, Germany – He was Germany’s favorite politician, a conservative star boosting his party’s standing in the polls, a doer who pushed through a historic reform of the German armed forces.

But in a development that's rare for a country that never seemed to care much about politicians' private lives or personal indiscretions, Baron Theodor zu Guttenberg resigned this week amid Internet-fueled charges that he plagiarized his PhD dissertation. It was an embarrassment to Chancellor Angela Merkel's battered center-right Christian Democratic Union and the downfall of a politician whose career marked a departure from traditionally bland German politics.

"We’re seeing the failure of a concept where a person presents himself as superstar, where a politician tries to rise so high with so much glamour that he thinks he is an icon," says Gero Neugebauer of the Free University in Berlin.

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Mr. Guttenberg, whose wife is the great-great granddaughter of former chancellor Otto von Bismarck, seemed to flaunt his family name the way no German politician had done before. He was seen as a man of action, responsible for pushing through a plan to end the draft in the boldest reform of the armed forces since World War II.

Like many politicians here who see getting a doctorate as a way to increase their political fortunes, Guttenberg wrote his PhD dissertation in 2006 on the development of the US and European constitutions. But trouble started only two weeks ago when a law professor doing a review of the unpublished thesis uncovered incidents of plagiarism.

On Feb. 16, a German newspaper reported that parts of the thesis appeared to draw on articles in other newspapers, a US State Department website, and other essays without attribution. That news led to the development of a website, GuttenPlag Wiki, that made it possible for others to read the dissertation and discuss it.

Saying that Guttenberg, who became known as "baron cut and paste," had violated basic academic standards of honesty and integrity, 51,000 scholars signed a letter asking Chancellor Merkel for Guttenberg's dismissal.

Guttenberg initially dismissed the charges as "absurd." Merkel, too, treated it as a side issue, saying she’d hired a minister, not a research assistant. But when the University of Bayreuth, which had awarded his doctorate, withdrew Guttenberg’s degree, he resigned. "I’ve always been prepared to fight but I have reached the limits of my strength," he said Monday.

"The academic community acted collectively and said, ‘We’re not going to let that happen,' " says Mr. Neugebauer. "It was a milestone that scholars, and not politicians, were the ones that drove a politician to step down."

The scandal "is a reassertion of academic sovereignty vis-à-vis the political sphere," says Paul Nolte, a German historian who is currently a visiting professor of history at the University of North Carolina (UNC) at Chapel Hill. "But perhaps the lesson is that German politicians should think of themselves as doing politics, not at the same time pursuing some kind of academic career."

On Wednesday, Chancellor Merkel replaced Guttenberg, a potential chancellor candidate, with one of her most trusted aides, and seemingly increased her political chances for the future at the same time.

"Angela Merkel has lost a formidable competitor for chancellor," says Professor Nolte. "If there was anybody having the stature of a chancellor, it was Guttenberg and nobody else."

De Maiziere, the new Defense minister, is the best choice to continue Guttenberg’s milestone reform of the Army, says Nolte. "It’s striking a good deal for Merkel."

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SEC charges defense contractor, 3 ex-directors (AP)

WASHINGTON – Federal regulators on Monday charged a U.S. defense contractor and three of its former board members with accounting fraud, saying the company overstated earnings to investors.

The Securities and Exchange Commission said DHB Industries Inc. settled the civil charges without receiving any penalty. The company, which makes bullet-proof vests for the U.S. military and law enforcement agencies, agreed not to repeat the alleged violations.

The SEC said the settlement terms took into account corrective measures taken by DHB Industries.

The Pompano Beach, Fla., company changed its name to Point Blank Solutions Inc. in 2007 and is operating while in bankruptcy proceedings. Its main plants are in Florida and Tennessee.

Charges against former directors Jerome Krantz, Cary Chasin and Gary Nadelman are pending. The SEC said the directors from outside the company, who made up the board's audit and compensation committees, allowed senior managers to overstate income and other data in financial reports from 2003 to 2005.

Attorneys for Chasin and Nadelman disputed the SEC's charges. A lawyer representing Krantz didn't immediately return a telephone call seeking comment.

Former DHB Industries CEO David Brooks and former Chief Operating Officer Sandra Hatfield were convicted of criminal charges including securities fraud and conspiracy in September. The company's former chief financial officer, Dawn Schegel, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit fraud and testified against Brooks and Hatfield.

The SEC also accused Krantz, Chasin and Nadelman of "willful blindness" that allowed Brooks to siphon $10 million from DHB Industries to another company he controlled, and take another $4.7 million or so to pay for luxury cars, jewelry, art, real estate and prostitutes.

The SEC is seeking unspecified restitution and civil fines from the three former board members and wants them barred from serving as officers or directors of any public company.

Chasin's attorney, Amy Millard, said her client "faithfully carried out his role as an outside director of DHB (and) he looks forward to a resolution of this matter."

Nadelman lawyer Robert Gottlieb said "Mr. Nadelman is a good and decent man who did not willfully or knowingly do anything to justify today's SEC's action."


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