Press Release
CNN Drops Story on Multi-billion Dollar Contracting Scandal,
Says American Small Business League
Lou Dobbs Pulls Story on Diversion of Billions from
America's Middle Class
PETALUMA, Calif., Feb. 7, 2007 -- Primetime news program Lou
Dobbs Tonight dropped an investigative story exposing the
diversion of billions of dollars in federal small-business
set-aside contracts to some of the nation's largest
corporations and defense contractors just hours before the
segment was to air on CNN.
As part of Dobb's series, "The Attack on the Middle Class,"
the show's producers spent several weeks researching and
filming the segment featuring Lloyd Chapman, contracting
expert and president of the American Small Business League.
During his interview with CNN, Chapman discussed a series of
13 federal investigations by the Government Accountability
Office, Small Business Administration Office of Advocacy and
the SBA Office of Inspector General that found billions of
dollars in federal small business contracts were diverted to
Fortune 500 corporations. The Bush Administration reported
these contracts - awarded to firms like L3-Communications,
General Dynamics, Halliburton and major CNN advertisers
Boeing and Lockheed - as "small business" awards.
CNN producers told Chapman that the segment had been pulled
in the wake of more pressing news stories but assured him
that it would air shortly. After three months of waiting,
Chapman has concluded that the station abruptly pulled the
story to avoid embarrassing its major advertisers and has no
intention of ever airing the segment.
"CNN is never going to run that story," said Chapman. "I
think they pulled it because it was unflattering to its
major advertisers, Lockheed Martin and Boeing. CNN's
reputation as the most trusted name in news obviously
doesn't apply when you're talking about its advertisers."
Chapman points to a story featured on the highly rated blog
The Daily Kos, "Advertising as Payola: Who really owns CNN,"
that also suggests firms like Lockheed and Boeing, who have
no products to sell to the general public, advertise on
major networks to gain influence over the media outlet.
The latest government figures report Boeing with 37 federal
small business awards, totaling $495,319,668. Lockheed
Martin received $223,210,917 in federal small business
awards and Fortune 500 defense contractor L-3 Communications
was the top recipient of small business contracts with
$650,143,831. The ASBL projects that up to $65 billion a
year in federal small business contracts are diverted to the
top two percent of firms in the US.
For more information about the American Small Business
League, see http://www.asbl.com.
For information, contact:
Lloyd Chapman
lchapman@asbl.com
(707) 789-9575
http://www.asbl.com
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