Right Now

Jun 14 2014

Senators Press Defense Department to End “Plugging” Numbers

false numbers mask accounting and control deficiencies

WASHINGTON – Several senators are pressing Defense Department leaders to end the practice known as “plugging.”  “Plugging” is the use of false numbers in financial ledgers that forces balances and effectively masks accounting errors and control deficiencies.

Senators Chuck Grassley, Tom Coburn, Tom Carper and Ron Johnson wrote Defense Department Comptroller Robert Hale and Inspector General Jon Rymer urging the Defense officials to take “strong corrective action to end the long-standing, wide-spread use of ‘plug’ figures, which continue to reflect a major shortcoming in DoD financial management.”

“Of great concern to us is the fact that the use of ‘plugs’ appears to be growing. For example, the fiscal year 2008 value of DoD ‘plugs’ used in the fund balance with Treasury was $5.3 billion, but in the short space of five years, it rose to $9.6 billion in 2013. That is an increase of $4.3 billion or 80%.  However, these are just net ‘plug’ figures used to balance the statements and may be just the tip of the iceberg.  When gross amounts – positive and negative ‘plugs’ -- are tallied up, it is estimated that the dollar value of all DoD “plugs” would be much higher,” the senators wrote.

The members concluded, “The DoD ‘plugging’ problem is long-standing and deep-seated in the Defense Department’s accounting culture. Such dependence on ‘plugging’ is indicative of a dysfunctional finance and accounting system. It is symptomatic of the root causes that leave the Department’s accounting books in an un-auditable condition and lead to well-deserved criticism that the Department is not a good steward of the taxpayers’ money. ‘Plugging’ should never be granted a safe haven in the DoD OIG’s own financial statements.”

Here is the text of the letter.  A signed copy of the letter can be seen by clicking here.

June 12, 2014

Transmitted Electronically

The Honorable Robert F. Hale
Under Secretary (Comptroller) and Chief Financial Officer
Office of the Under Secretary of Defense (Comptroller)
United States Department of Defense
1100 Defense Pentagon
Washington, DC 20301-1100

Mr. Jon T. Rymer
Inspector General
Department of Defense
4800 Mark Center Drive
Alexandria, VA 22350-1500

Dear Comptroller Hale and Inspector General Rymer:

The Department of Defense (DoD) has taken encouraging steps to strengthen financial management.  Department-wide improvements will allow more timely, reliable, accurate, and useful information for operational and financial decision making. However, as we surely all agree, we must all work together in order to overcome continuing and pervasive financial management problems that affect the Department’s ability to control costs, anticipate future expenditures, measure performance,  prevent and detect fraud, waste, and abuse, and above all, to provide an accurate and complete accounting of how the money is spent. 

We are writing to you today to urge you to take strong corrective action to end the long-standing, wide-spread use of “plug” figures, which continue to reflect a major shortcoming in DoD financial management.

“Plugs,” also known as reconciling amounts, are unsupported adjustments to an accounting record or general ledger. They are false numbers used to force balances and have the effect of masking accounting and control deficiencies. While not strictly prohibited by law, their use is considered unacceptable and improper by regulation and accepted accounting practices and audit standards.[1]

The use of “plug” figures throughout the Department  recently received in-depth exposure in the second part of a three-part series of articles by Scot J. Paltrow of the Reuters News Service entitled “Unaccountable: The High Cost of the Pentagon’s Bad Bookkeeping.”[2]

Of great concern to us is the fact that the use of “plugs” appears to be growing. For example, the fiscal year 2008 value of DoD “plugs” used in the fund balance with Treasury was $5.3 billion, but in the short space of five years, it rose to $9.6 billion in 2013. That is an increase of $4.3 billion or 80%.[3]However, these are just net “plug” figures used to balance the statements and may be just the tip of the iceberg. When gross amounts – positive and negative “plugs” -- are tallied up, it is estimated that the dollar value of all DoD “plugs” would be much higher.[4] A recent DoD Office of the Inspector General report on the Army and other related reports indicate that DoD plugs could easily run into hundreds of billions of dollars.[5]

Surprisingly, even the DoD Office of the Inspector General’s (OIG) own financial statement for FY 2012, which failed to earn a clean opinion, contained “unsupported adjustments” of more than $200 million, according to the independent auditor. These “plugged” entries were similarly used to “force” the general ledger into agreement with the budget execution and cash management reports to the Treasury Department. [6] We believe the OIG should be setting an example of excellence in accounting for the entire department to follow by producing credible and reliable financial statements, which would not include the use of “plugs.”

After the last Paltrow article in Reuters was published, Senator Grassley asked the DoD OIG what it had done or was planning to do to root out, expose, and address “plugging” abuses. The OIG replied by stating: “We have been reporting about the problem of unreliable data, unsupported journal vouchers and plugging for many years.” [7]To back-up this assertion, a list of 35 OIG audit reports going back to March 1994 was provided.  While these 35 reports identified plugging issues, the remedies proposed by the OIG were, for the most part, not fully implemented. The audit reports essentially told the military services and agencies involved to create new policies and procedures to do what they are already supposed to be doing. [8]  Despite all these reports, the problem of plugging within the Department is still wide-spread. The Department still needs to fix the problem. The DOD responses do not provide a high-level of confidence that the gravity of this problem is truly understood and accepted and that a solution will come any time soon.

The DoD “plugging” problem is long-standing and deep-seated in the Defense Department’s accounting culture. Such dependence on “plugging” is indicative of a dysfunctional finance and accounting system. It is symptomatic of the root causes that leave the Department’s accounting books in an un-auditable condition and lead to well-deserved criticism that the Department is not a good steward of the taxpayers’ money. “Plugging” should never be granted a safe haven in the DoD OIG’s own financial statements.

We believe that the DoD OIG must play a constructive role in helping the Department to fix its broken accounting system and to meet mandated audit readiness deadlines.

In order to play a leadership role in financial management reform, the DoD OIG should start by ending the use of plugging in its own financial statements.

We also urge the DOD Comptroller and IG to end the wide-spread use of plugging throughout the Department.  We request that you provide our offices with a plan that includes a specific timetable to accomplish this important goal. Your careful consideration of this proposal would be appreciated.

Sincerely,

Charles E. Grassley                                                     
Ranking Member                                                         
Committee on the Judiciary                                

Tom Coburn, M.D.                                                     
Ranking Member                                                         
Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs  

Thomas R. Carper                                                       
Chairman                                                                     
Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs

Ron Johnson
Ranking Member
Subcommittee on Financial and Contracting Oversight
Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs

[1]DoD Financial Management Regulation 7000.14R, Volume 4, Chapter 2, Accounting for Cash and Fund Balances with Treasury, Section 020102.B1 (Dec. 2009) as cited in CRS American Law Division Memo to Senator Grassley, 2/12/14; ``Federal Financial Management Improvement Act of 1996,''  (section 803.a.); OMB Circular A-136 Revised, “Financial Reporting Requirements,” (October 21, 2013, pages 31-33); Statement of Federal Financial Accounting Concept 5, ( pgs. 1-2): and DoD FMR, volume 6A, chapter 2, prescribes JV-related supporting documentation and approval requirements implementing Federal law and OMB requirements;
[2] How the Pentagon’s Payroll Quagmire Traps America’s Soldiers, 7/2/13, Reuters.com;  Behind the Pentagon’s Doctored Ledgers, A Running Tally of Epic Waste, 11/18/13, Reuters.com; and Why the Pentagon’s Many Campaigns to Clean Up Its Accounts Are Failing, 12/23/13, Reuters.com
[3] GAO email, 11/14/13; and DoD Agency Financial Report for FY 2013, p.82;
[4] GAO email to Senator Grassley’s office, 4/4/14;
[5] DoD OIG Report No. 2012-096, 5/31/12; Oversight Review of Audit Reporting by the DoD OIG, prepared by the Staff of Senator Chuck Grassley, 9/7/10, p. 25;
[6] DoD OIG, Financial Statement Audit, FY 2012, Independent Auditor’s Report, pp. 32-34 and 72;
[7] Emails from office of Senator Chuck Grassley to DoD OIG, 11/21/13 and 12/18/13, and DoD OIG email response, 12/17/13;
[8] Reports 98-192, 8/25/98 and  2001-177, 8/31/2001;