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Does cocktail hour count as overtime?

Tim Gould
by Tim Gould
July 28, 2009
1 minute read
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There’s probably something fishy going on if an employees claims to work 18 hours a day, every day, for three months straight.
In an audit by the Justice Department, it was discovered that U.S. taxpayers were billed an average of $45,000  in overtime and extra pay for each FBI agent posted to Iraq between 2003 and 2007.
Dealing with sniper fire and mortar blast might make those amounts seem seriously low-balled, but the Justice Department’s audit found over $7.8 million of those wages were improperly billed.
Several agents noted they’d spent time during the week washing clothes — and they included those hours in their overtime requests. When asked whether agents should be paid for such activities, one agent said, “When you’re in that environment, anything you do to survive is work for the FBI.”
Other agents claimed they should be paid for important “liaison” meetings — which turned out to be regular Saturday night cocktail parties. In another case, dozens of agents claimed they were preparing evidence for Saddam Hussein’s court trial when they were taking part in a massive poker tournament.
The report also noted some misused overtime and extra pay allowances in Afghanistan and with agents in the Drug Enforcement Administration and U.S. Marshals Service, but those cases were far less severe.

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