==Allegations of Unrestrained Force==
"These aren't insurgents that we're brutalizing," says Craun. "It was local civilians on their way to work. It's wrong." Capt. [[Bill Craun]] is one of four former Custer Battles employees in an [http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/6947745/ NBC report] that allege civilian contractors used such unrestrained force in Iraq, they had to quit soon after because of disgust. "What we saw, I know the American population wouldn't stand for," Craun said referring to subcontracted local youth shooting the place up.
==Former executives keep working==
[http://www.businessweek.com/ap/financialnews/D8AM6RHO1.htm?campaign_id=apn_home_down Business Week] reported on June 12, 2005 that former operations chief for Custer Battles, [[Rob Roy Trumble]], has formed new companies to bid on contracts in Iraq. Two of Trumbles new companies, [[Emergent Business Services]] and [[Tarheel Training LLC]] are housed in the fromer office of Custer Battles at Suite 100 on Hammerlund Way in Middletown Rhode Island.
Both companies are affiliated with the Romanian company, [[Danubia Global Inc.]] which is owned by [[Security Ventures International Ltd.]], a British Virgin Islands firm.
Said former CPA official, Franklin Willis, about Trumbles new companies, "They're like mushrooms, they just keep sprouting up."
In addition, former chief financial officer [[Joseph Morris]], who had submitted fake invoices to the government which resulted in a suspension forbidding him from receiving "new public contracts in Iraq and elsewhere", has been working on reconstruction projects for [[Sallyport Global Holdings]]. Upon seeing Morris' name on the suspension list, Sallyport has said they will not renew his contract. Morris had claimed he has been exonerated for acting as a federal witness.
==Whistleblowing on Massive Billing Fraud==