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Mar 27, 2008 11:22 pm US/Eastern
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Feds Suspend Local Contract Over Faulty Arms
MIAMI BEACH (CBS4) ―
The Army has suspended a Miami Beach company from government contract work for reportedly providing Chinese-made ammunition to the Afghanistan army, in violation of its contract and U.S. law. AEY Inc., a firm with eight employees, is under criminal investigation for reportedly claiming that the munitions were made in Hungary.
A Pentagon spokesman said there have been no reports that the ammunition was unsafe or failed to work properly. But he said some of it may not have been used because of concerns that it was not packaged well, according to the Associated Press.
In a letter earlier this week, the Army told company owner Efraim Diveroli that the investigation could lead to AEY being barred from any U.S. government work. Diveroli's attorney, Hy Shapiro, said Thursday he had not seen the Army's letter yet and declined further comment until he had. No one answered the door at the Miami Beach apartment listed as Diveroli's in Florida state records.
It turns out, Diveroli began working as an alleged arms dealer at 18-years-old. The business was started by his father as a small printing company, but in just four years, it's alleged Diveroli became one of the major players of arms in the world.
Michael Diveroli said his son is out of the country and is very hard to find. When asked if he believs the allegations that his son sold illegal ammunition, he replied, "I'm ignorant..I don't know. I don't have any involvement in his business."
The elder Diveroli isn't sure his son is making the right choices. "I would prefer he became a nice Jewish doctor or lawyer rather than an arms dealer...He's never asked for my approval of the company...He doesn't always take my advice, I don't try to influence him. As a father of a boy genius, he's hard to control," Michael Diveroli said.
Efraim Diveroli is no stranger to legal problems. He was arrested earlier this month for DUI.
According to an Army Legal Services memo, AEY began contracting for the defense and state departments in 2004, and to date has been awarded more than 150 contracts, worth in excess of $200 million.
The key contract was awarded in 2007, and was for various types of ammunition for the Afghan National Army and the Afghan National Police. It included bullets for machine guns, assault rifles, shotguns and pistols.
After questions arose about the origin of the munitions, U.S. Army investigators in January reviewed shipments at an Afghan Army weapons depot. Stamps on munitions in 14 containers showed that the ammunition was manufactured in factories in China, the memo said.
According to the contract, based on federal law, companies doing business with the U.S. government cannot buy any munitions directly or indirectly from a Chinese military company, or any entity that is part of China's defense industrial base.
(© 2008 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)
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