Welcome to our Archives. You are free to explore our archives, send documents to friends, and download the reports and testimony you find here. We welcome any citation of our reports and documents, but ask that you credit us as the source. All documents are copyrighted by the Project On Government Oversight and must include notification of such. If you have any questions about our reports simply contact us. We are very willing to help facilitate your research needs.
Our country's national defense should never take a back seat to private special interests. But too often it does, putting our nation's servicemen and women at risk and the agendas of defense contractors ahead of legitimate national security needs. POGO's "Defense Investigations" expose wasteful military spending, the inappropriate influence that contractors wield over government decision-making, and weapons that do not work.
The devastating terrorist attacks of September 11th forever changed our nation's perspective. POGO's homeland security investigations are challenging the government for failing to adequately protect the public. In 2002, the U.S. government created a 180, 000 employee bureaucracy charged with domestic protection. POGO's investigations focus on the allocation of dollars and resources in America's homeland defense.
The U.S. federal government is the largest consumer of goods and services in the world, spending $330 billion (FY 2004) annually on goods and services. POGO's "Contract Oversight Investigations" examine the federal government's policies and relationships with grant recipients as well as major companies receiving billions of dollars in contracts and subsidies annually.
POGO strongly believes that sunshine is the best disinfectant and that we must empower citizens with the information and tools to hold their government accountable. POGO's "Open Government Investigations" aim to prevent corruption in the federal government by encouraging insiders and whistleblowers to expose wrongdoing, increasing the ways that citizens can participate in their government, and improving citizen and journalist access to government documents and information.
Regularly powerful mining, oil, and nuclear interests successfully push their agendas before Congress, the Administration, and the courts. The result is that the government often fails to fairly balance the commercial interests of these industries with the common good. POGO's "Energy and Natural Resources Investigations" expose how these problems cost taxpayers and our nation’s natural resources.
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