Texas couple paid almost $4 million by Army for setting up what looked like an official recruiting website
The Army said it would pay for the names of potential recruits, sometimes as much as $2,000 per. So this couple, no dummies, set up an official-looking site, “OfficialArmy.com.”
So reports USA Today’s Tom VandenBrook.
So reports USA Today’s Tom VandenBrook.
Here’s how the deal went down: The Army said it would pay for the names of potential recruits, sometimes as much as $2,000 per. So this couple, no dummies, set up an official-looking site, “OfficialArmy.com.” (No, it isn’t there anymore.) And then they forwarded to the Army the names of people who visited it. Bingo! Uncle Sam writes checks for $3.8 million bucks.
Sen. Claire McCaskill thinks this is not the best use of your money. But when she first asked the Army about it, she said, the Army said it liked what the couple was doing.
MORAL OF THE STORY: If you’ve been playing poker for half an hour and you don’t know who the chump in the game is, who do you think the chump might be?
Flickr/Tracy O
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