Monksdream
1 year ago
CACI
CACI International Inc NYSE: CACI
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Industrials : Professional Services | Mid Cap BlendCompany profile
CACI International Inc (CACI) is a holding company. The Company provides expertise and technology to enterprise and mission customers in support of national security missions and government modernization/transformation. The Company operates through two segments: Domestic Operations and International Operations. The Domestic Operations segment provides expertise and technology primarily to the United States federal government agencies. The International Operations segment provides expertise and technology primarily to international government and commercial customers. Its market areas include Digital Solutions, Command, Control, Communications, Computers, Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance (C4ISR), Cyber and Space, Engineering Services, Enterprise Information Technology (IT), and Mission Support. Its customers include agencies and departments of the United States government, various state and local government agencies, foreign governments, and commercial enterprises.
investor911
15 years ago
CACI Completes Acquisition of SystemWare, Inc.
CACI International Inc (NYSE: CACI) announced today that it has completed its transaction to acquire SystemWare, Inc. SystemWare designs, manufactures, and provides state-of-the-art signals acquisition and analysis systems that enable users to monitor and detect cybersecurity and physical security vulnerabilities and enhance operational security
Founded in 1988, SystemWare is headquartered in Camarillo, California, near CACIβs Oxnard facility, with East Coast operations directed from Elkridge, Maryland, where CACI also has a strong presence. More than half of the companyβs employees hold Secret-level security clearances and above, and its clientele includes the Department of Defense (DoD), the Intelligence Community, federal civilian agencies, and U.S. allies
SystemWare solutions include proprietary technologies that combine advanced software and analytical toolsets with cutting-edge, customizable hardware configurations to deliver industry-leading counterintelligence systems. Its quality management system has been awarded ISO 90002:2000 certification, assuring clients of high-quality software development. SystemWareβs revenue in calendar year 2009 was $16 million. The acquisition is expected to be accretive to CACIβs earnings per share during its first 12 months
CACI President of U.S. Operations Bill Fairl said, βWeβre pleased to bring SystemWare, Inc. into the CACI family. SystemWareβs products and services complement CACIβs information technology solutions and professional services to give us innovative new ways to help our clients solve their greatest challenges.β According to Paul Cofoni, CACI President and Chief Executive Officer, βCACI continues to lead as a strategic IT consolidator, enhancing shareholder value with our strategy of leveraging mergers and acquisitions to gain new capabilities and clients. Our acquisition of SystemWare is particularly important to our ongoing focus on meeting the strong demand for solutions in counterintelligence and cybersecurity, where we look forward to offering SystemWareβs proven high-value solutions.β CACI provides professional services and IT solutions needed to prevail in the defense, intelligence, homeland security, and federal civilian government arenas. We deliver enterprise IT and network services; data, information, and knowledge management services; business system solutions; logistics and material readiness; C4ISR integration services; cyber solutions; integrated security and intelligence solutions; and program management and SETA support services. CACI services and solutions help our federal clients provide for national security, improve communications and collaboration, secure the integrity of information systems and networks, enhance data collection and analysis, and increase efficiency and mission effectiveness. CACI is a member of the Fortune 1000 Largest Companies and the Russell 2000 index. CACI provides dynamic careers for approximately 12,800 employees working in over 120 offices in the U.S. and Europe. Visit CACI on the web at www.caci.com and www.asymmetricthreat.net
There are statements made herein which do not address historical facts, and therefore could be interpreted to be forward-looking statements as that term is defined in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Such statements are subject to factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from anticipated results. The factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those anticipated include, but are not limited to, the following: regional and national economic conditions in the United States and the United Kingdom, including conditions that result from a prolonged recession; terrorist activities or war; changes in interest rates; currency fluctuations; significant fluctuations in the equity markets; failure to achieve contract awards in connection with recompetes for present business and/or competition for new business; the risks and uncertainties associated with client interest in and purchases of new products and/or services; continued funding of U.S. government or other public sector projects, based on a change in spending patterns, or in the event of a priority need for funds, such as homeland security, the war on terrorism or rebuilding Iraq; or an economic stimulus package; government contract procurement (such as bid protest, small business set asides, loss of work due to organizational conflicts of interest, etc.) and termination risks; the results of government investigations into allegations of improper actions related to the provision of services in support of U.S. military operations in Iraq; the results of government audit and reviews conducted by the Defense Contract Audit Agency or other government entities with cognizant oversight; individual business decisions of our clients; paradigm shifts in technology; competitive factors such as pricing pressures and/or competition to hire and retain employees (particularly those with security clearances); market speculation regarding our continued independence; material changes in laws or regulations applicable to our businesses, particularly in connection with (i) government contracts for services, (ii) outsourcing of activities that have been performed by the government, (iii) competition for task orders under Government Wide Acquisition Contracts (βGWACsβ) and/or schedule contracts with the General Services Administration; and (iv) accounting for convertible debt instruments; the ability to successfully integrate SystemWare, Inc.βs operations; our own ability to achieve the objectives of near term or long range business plans; and other risks described in the companyβs Securities and Exchange Commission filings
investor911
15 years ago
Northrop Joins With Academics For Cybersecurity Work
By Ann Keeton
Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES
CHICAGO -(Dow Jones)- Northrop Grumman Corp.(NOC) is joining with several U.S. universities in a consortium to address near and long-term Internet security.
The Los Angeles company will invest millions of dollars a year for the next five years, and likely beyond, to partner with Carnegie Mellon University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Purdue University to find ways to secure computer hardware, software and systems that support information sharing around the globe.
At a press conference Tuesday, which was webcast, Robert Brammer, chief technology officer of Northrop Grumman Information Systems, said each institution will work on several projects that play to its strengths in cybersecurity research. Revenue and patents resulting from the work would go to the institution, or Northrop, or be split, according to how the work is done, according to mutual agreements.
Northrop is a major provider of cybersecurity support for U.S. defense and intelligence, and to civil governments in the U.S. and elsewhere. Brammer said the collaboration will speed up research with ideas that can be incorporated in contracts coming up soon as well as explore pro-active ways to protect information in the public and private sectors.
Security problems are growing as global Internet use is expected to increase 10 times to 15 times by 2015, Brammer said.
The group didn't discuss specific Internet security breaches that have been in the news this year, including hacked information on the Joint Strike Fighter, the Pentagon's biggest defense program.
Gene Spafford, head of the center for education and research in information assurance at Purdue, said warnings on Internet security have been ignored for decades.
"Problems have only been addressed after they've occurred. They could have been prevented," he said.
Adrian Perrig, a professor at Carnegie Mellon, said the Internet gives users the freedom to use any name they want, making them hard to track. But he said technology now exists to identify hackers by backtracking groups of IP packets, or segments of digital information traveling on the Internet, to a source.
Computers don't know right from wrong, said Howard Shrode, a top computer scientist at MIT: "The solution is to tell the computer more about what it is doing in real time." He said that developing "meta data" gives computer hardware the ability to block information.
The Obama administration this year said protecting the nation's computer networks is a top economic and national security priority. Analysts expect that some $30 billion will be spent on Internet security initiatives. That's in addition to security costs already embedded in government IT contracts.
For investors, analyst Howard Rubel at Jeffries & Company said it may be hard to get a handle on specific technology breakthroughs, because they could tip the hands of hackers.
Still, government cybersecurity contracts will be awarded; at the Pentagon, Defense Secretary Robert Gates is keen to hire some smaller niche contractors, which in some cases could unseat bigger incumbents, said Scott Sacknoff, who manages the SPADE Index of Defense stocks. For small companies, a single contract might mean a lot more to the bottom line than it would to Northrop Grumman and its peers, he said.
Some possible winners include CACI International Inc. (CACI), SAIC, Inc. (SAI), and Symantec Corp. (SYMC), Cogent (COGT) and Stanley Associates (SXE).
-By Ann Keeton; Dow Jones Newswires; 312-750-4120; ann.keeton@dowjones.com
alien-IQ
15 years ago
CACI: Torture in Iraq, Intimidation at Home
By Joshua Holland, AlterNet. Posted November 21, 2006.
Dogged by serious allegations of human rights abuses in Iraq, a leading profiteer from the Iraq war engages in intimidation campaigns against journalists in America who seek to expose its practices.
Consider the unique problems faced by the corporate suits at CACI International, a defense contractor whose services have included "coercive" interrogations of prisoners in Iraq -- interrogations most people simply call "torture."
Think about the image problems a major multinational corporation faces after becoming inextricably linked with the abuses at Abu Ghraib, a firm whose employees have contributed to the iconic images of the occupation of Iraq -- the symbols of American cruelty and immorality in an illegal war. What can a company like that possibly do to protect its brand name after contributing to the greatest national disgrace since the My Lai massacre?
CACI's strategy has been two-fold: its flacks have distorted well-documented facts in the public record beyond recognition, and its senior management has lawyered up, suing or threatening to sue just about every journalist, muckraker and government watchdog who's dared to shine a light on the firm's unique role as a torture profiteer.
Lately, the company's sights have been set squarely on Robert Greenwald, director of Iraq for Sale: The War Profiteers, in which CACI plays a starring role. Greenwald has been in a back-and-forth with CACI's CEO, Jack London, and its lead attorney, William Koegel, during "months of calls, emails and letters" in what Greenwald calls a campaign to "intimidate, threaten and suppress" the story presented in the film.
"The threatening letters started early, trying to get us to back off," Greenwald told me. "We refused, and went back at them with a very strong letter saying, 'no, you're war profiteers and we won't be silenced.' Like any bully, they backed down when confronted. No lawsuit was filed-- they're a paper tiger."
The story they don't want told is of a federal contractor that, according to the Washington Post, gets 92 percent of its revenues in the "defense" sector. The Washington Business Journal reported that CACI's defense contracts almost doubled in the year after the occupation of Iraq began, and profits shot up 52 percent.
Yet CACI insists it isn't a war profiteer (a subjective term anyway), but was just answering an urgent call in Iraq. In a letter to Greenwald, Koegel wrote: "the army needed ... civilian contractors to work as interrogators" because the military didn't have the personnel, and CACI responded to the "urgent war-time circumstances" and "has no apologies."
But while the firm had experience in electronic surveillance and other intelligence functions, it, too, didn't have the interrogators. Barry Lando reported finding an ad on CACI's website for interrogators to send to Iraq, and noted that "experience in conducting tactical and strategic interrogations" was desired, but not necessary. According to a report by the Army inspector general, 11 of the 31 CACI interrogators in Iraq had no training in what most experts agree is one of the most sensitive areas of intelligence gathering. The 205th Military Intelligence Brigade, which was in charge of interrogations at Abu Ghraib when the abuses took place, didn't have a single trained interrogator at the facility.
"It's insanity," former CIA agent Robert Baer told The Guardian. "These are rank amateurs, and there is no legally binding law on these guys as far as I could tell. Why did they let them in the prison?"
That's one of many questions the company doesn't care to have asked. It's common for corporations to be fiercely protective of their brand's image, often obsessively so. That's true of multinationals selling soda pop or accounting services or military intelligence. But a company on a federal contract that rents out interrogators who become involved in a torture scandal that ends up splashed across the cover of Time Magazine -- that's the kind of thing that can be a real problem for the PR flacks back at corporate headquarters.
Colonel William Darley with the Military Review wrote of Abu Ghraib's impact:
We have never recovered from the Abu Ghraib thing. And it's likely all the time we're in Iraq, we never will. It will take a decade and beyond. I mean, those pictures, a hundred years from now, when the history of the Middle East is written, those things will be part and parcel of whatever textbook that Iraqis and Syrians and others are writing about the West. Those pictures. It's part of the permanent record. It's like that guy in Vietnam that got his head shot. It's just a permanent part of the history. That will never go away.
But CACI's tried hard to make it go away. The company sued Air America Radio host Randi Rhodes for $11 million for defamation, including $10 million in punitive damages. The supposed defamation? Rhodes read a portion of an interview with Janice Karpinski, the former Brigadier General who commanded the MPs at Abu Ghraib. The suit was dismissed with a summary judgment in April.
After the Institute for Policy Studies named CACI and CEO London in its annual "Executive Excess" report on CEO pay, they received "a blistering seven-page letter" from London himself, demanding that CACI be removed from the report. Later, Sarah Anderson, one of the study's co-authors said she got "a rather ominous email just saying that they were monitoring everything I wrote about them."
Then a blogger at Blogcritics got the "CACI treatment" for reporting on the Air America suit, as did the online media watchdog Newsbusters. When David Rubenstein, a columnist for the alternative paper Pulse of the Twin Cities, wrote an article about former Minnesota Congresman Vin Weber that mentioned CACI, it triggered, as Rubenstein would later recall, "a bombastic two-page single-spaced letter" from London with a "wholesale attack on my credibility." Runbenstein wrote of London's letter:
He doctors a quote from a newspaper interview. He quotes selectively from a Senate hearing. He constructs logical absurdities and lays them out as if they were pronouncements from an oracle. Apparently he thinks because he is the CEO of a $1.6-plus billion company that is willing to throw its weight around, he can say whatever he wants. It's a calculated strategy to shut down critics.
According to the New Standard, CACI has even characterized suits brought against it by human rights lawyers as slander. In a press release responding to a case brought by the Center For Constitutional rights on behalf of prisoners abused at Abu Ghraib, CACI's attorneys said the firm "rejects and denies the allegations of the suit as being a malicious recitation of false statements and intentional distortions" and called the allegations of abuse "ill-informed" and "slanderous."
After the article ran, The New Standard got a threatening letter (PDF) that quickly made its way around the internet.
CACI's problem is, ultimately, with reality. The firm claims that it was vindicated by the military's investigations into Abu Ghraib, including in a Washington Post editorial by Koegel in which he wrote that "no CACI employee has been charged with any misconduct in connection with interrogation work." It's technically true in that no CACI employee has faced formal charges -- it's unclear what jurisdiction civilian contractors in Iraq fall under, if they fall under any -- but the Taguba Report (PDF) said that CACI's Steven Stephanowicz had encouraged MPs under his command to terrorize inmates, and "clearly knew his instructions equated to physical abuse."
The irony is that by trying to spin Abu Ghraib and bully the media into ignoring the story, CACI has violated the fundamental rules of corporate crisis management. PR consultants who specialize in the field talk about the "Tylenol model" -- named for the pain-relief medication that faced a crisis in the 1980s after some of its bottles were found to contain cyanide. According to the experts, companies facing a crisis must "demonstrate concern, care and empathy" for the victims of its actions and should always "treat the media as a distribution channel, not as enemies." Rule number one is: "take responsibility."
http://www.alternet.org/world/44506/
Proud?
goldwingeurope
15 years ago
The Evermedia Group Acquires Majority Stake(80%) in System Technology Solutions
NEW YORK, NY--(Marketwire - 09/11/09) - Evermedia Group, Inc. (Pinksheets:EVRM - News) is pleased to announce that it has completed an agreement to acquire a majority interest in the San Antonio, TX based defense contractor, System Technology Solutions, Inc. (STS). Currently, the Evermedia Group owns 80% of STS through its parent company and will now control two operating subsidiaries. The deal was financed primarily with common stock, requiring Evermedia to increase its authorized shares to finance the purchase. The companies will consolidate certain aspects of their businesses such as contract management, administrative functions and financial reporting while operations and division management will remain independent. Richard Weitzel will be named the new Chief Executive Officer of STS Evermedia Corporation, the parent of STS, and will also be a director at the Evermedia Group. The "change of command" will take place on or about 1 OCT 2009.
Regarding the acquisition, CEO of Evermedia Jonathan Sym stated: "This increased ownership of STS is a milestone event for us. This is the most significant event in our company's young history as it will allow us to participate in the revenues of a terrific company. With STS as a subsidiary and some recent agreements we have yet to announce, we look forward to posting strong third quarter financials. Furthermore, we structured this acquisition so Evermedia will now become a Service Disabled Veteran Owned Small Business. This will create tremendous contracting and financial opportunities for us going forward."
In order for a company to be designated a service disabled company, a minimum of 51% of the outstanding shares must be directly owned by veterans with a service related disability.Given this mandate, Evermedia increased its authorized to meet this requirement as well as to allow enough shares for future, targeted acquisitions. Accordingly, Evermedia believes that they are the only iris biometric and defense contracting company to have this designation.
Weitzel commented, "This is a very exciting time for us all. We have been winning some terrific contracts as well as forming teaming agreements with some of the best and largest defense contractors in the world.
Now having exclusive access to biometric technologies through Evermedia, we have a distinct advantage over our competitors as demand for biometric security applications continue to grow within the DoD. This partnership with Evermedia is outstanding and we look forward to growing this family of companies together."
About Evermedia
Based in New York, NY Evermedia develops biometric-based identification management and authentication solutions using proprietary, patent-protected iris recognition technology. Evermedia is involved in the development of biometric-based authentication and verification systems to protect personal identity. The company's proprietary technology is patented in the United States, China and South Korea. The Evermedia Group is also the largest shareholder in STS Evermedia, the parent of System Technology Solutions, Inc.
About System Technology Solutions
Based in San Antonio, TX, STS is a defense contractor providing engineering, logistics, IT and security services to government and large commercial enterprises. STS also provides technical design, program management and security services globally.
stervc
15 years ago
CACI Awarded $50 Million Prime Contract...
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/CACI-Awarded-50-Million-Prime-prnews-2796969147.html?x=0&.v=1
CACI Awarded $50 Million Prime Contract to Support U.S. Army RDECOM CERDEC Night Vision and Electronic Sensors
Directorate Continuing Work Helps Enhance Warfighter Acquisition Capabilities Under Adverse Conditions
ARLINGTON, Va., Sept. 9 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- CACI International Inc (NYSE: CACI - News) announced today that it has been awarded a $50 million prime contract to support the Infrared Focal Plane Array (FPA) Technology (IFT) branch of the U.S. Army's Research Development and Engineering Command (RDECOM) Communications-Electronics Research Development and Engineering Center (CERDEC) Night Vision and Electronic Sensors Directorate (NVESD). CACI received the three-year award (one base year and two option years) under its Strategic Services Sourcing (S3) contract with the Army. This new award increases both the size and scope of CACI's work with NVESD and strengthens CACI's functional core competency in C4ISR (command, control, communications, computers, intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance).
NVESD provides the Army with research and development of advanced night vision and other sensor technologies, such as infrared weapon sights, surveillance systems, and systems that enhance the soldier's ability to operate at night and during limited visibility conditions. CACI brings extensive technical and management expertise to support the IFT branch mission, with ongoing work first initiated in 2003.
With this contract, CACI will help advance NVESD's infrared focal plane technology to enhance warfighter target acquisition and identification capabilities, which will help service members on land, at sea, and in the air to see better in all day and night environmental conditions. The company also provides technical support to NVESD for concept development, systems development, and systems integration and testing. In continuing its NVESD support role, CACI ensures uninterrupted services delivered by a team with in-depth knowledge of, and familiarity with, NVESD's technical and mission requirements.
According to Bill Fairl, President of U.S. Operations, "We are very pleased with this award as it demonstrates Night Vision and Electronic Sensors Directorate's sustained confidence in CACI's ability to strategically assemble proven teams to develop essential technology. This contract provides the opportunity to continue to grow a part of our business with which we have had long-term success."
CACI President and CEO Paul Cofoni said, "Helping warfighters perform their missions at peak efficiency is always a top priority in countering global terrorism. We're thankful that this continuing work with the NVESD under the Army's Strategic Services Sourcing contract helps advance that critical objective while meshing so precisely with CACI's core business structure."
CACI International Inc provides the professional services and IT solutions needed to prevail in today's defense, intelligence, homeland security, and federal civilian government arenas. We deliver enterprise IT and network services; data, information, and knowledge management services; business system solutions; logistics and material readiness; C4ISR integration services; cyber security, information assurance, and information operations; integrated security and intelligence solutions; and program management and SETA support services. CACI services and solutions help our federal clients provide for national security, improve communications and collaboration, secure the integrity of information systems and networks, enhance data collection and analysis, and increase efficiency and mission effectiveness. We add value to our clients' operations, increase their skills and capabilities, and enhance their missions. CACI is a member of the Fortune 1000 Largest Companies and the Russell 2000 index. CACI provides dynamic careers for approximately 12,500 employees working in over 120 offices in the U.S. and Europe. CACI is the IT provider for a networked world. Visit CACI on the web at www.caci.com and www.asymmetricthreat.net.
There are statements made herein which do not address historical facts, and therefore could be interpreted to be forward-looking statements as that term is defined in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Such statements are subject to factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from anticipated results. The factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those anticipated include, but are not limited to, the following: regional and national economic conditions in the United States and the United Kingdom, including conditions that result from a prolonged recession; terrorist activities or war; changes in interest rates; currency fluctuations; significant fluctuations in the equity markets; failure to achieve contract awards in connection with recompetes for present business and/or competition for new business; the risks and uncertainties associated with client interest in and purchases of new products and/or services; continued funding of U.S. government or other public sector projects, based on a change in spending patterns, or in the event of a priority need for funds, such as homeland security, the war on terrorism; or rebuilding Iraq; or an economic stimulus package; government contract procurement (such as bid protest, small business set asides, loss of work due to organizational conflicts of interest, etc.) and termination risks; the results of government investigations into allegations of improper actions related to the provision of services in support of U.S. military operations in Iraq; the results of government audit and reviews conducted by the Defense Contract Audit Agency or other governmental entities with cognizant oversight; individual business decisions of our clients; paradigm shifts in technology; competitive factors such as pricing pressures and/or competition to hire and retain employees (particularly those with security clearances); market speculation regarding our continued independence; material changes in laws or regulations applicable to our businesses, particularly in connection with (i) government contracts for services, (ii) outsourcing of activities that have been performed by the government, (iii) competition for task orders under Government Wide Acquisition Contracts ("GWACs") and/or schedule contracts with the General Services Administration; and (iv) accounting for convertible debt instruments; our own ability to achieve the objectives of near term or long range business plans; and other risks described in the company's Securities and Exchange Commission filings.
Corporate Communications and Media:
Jody Brown, Executive Vice President, Public Relations
(703) 841-7801, jbrown@caci.com
Investor Relations:
David Dragics, Senior Vice President, Investor Relations
(866) 606-3471, ddragics@caci.com
***************************************************************
v/r
Sterling
investor911
15 years ago
CACI Awarded $72 Million Prime Contract to Provide Information Technology Support Services for U.S. Naval Criminal Investigative Service
CACI Awarded $72 Million Prime Contract to Provide Information Technology Support
Services for U.S. Naval Criminal Investigative Service
--New Work Will Establish Worldwide, Fully Functional Information Technology
Capability for NCIS
ARLINGTON, Va., Aug 31, 2009 /PRNewswire-FirstCall via COMTEX/ -- CACI
International Inc (CACI) announced today that it has been awarded a new, $72
million prime contract to provide information technology support services for the
U.S. Naval Criminal Investigative Service (NCIS). The value of this award was
previously reported as part of an August 3, 2009 news release. The
performance-based contract is for one base year, three option years, and one
award year. The company will provide technical support and services, expand
support into new optional areas, and assist NCIS in the development of new
processes, procedures, and program management principles. With the award, CACI
continues to grow its core competency in enterprise information technology and
network services.
NCIS is the primary law enforcement and counterintelligence arm of the United
States Department of the Navy. It works closely with other local, state, federal,
and foreign agencies to counter and investigate the most serious crimes involving
terrorism, espionage, computer intrusion, homicide, rape, child abuse, arson,
procurement fraud and more. The service is the Navy's primary source of security
for the service members, ships, aircraft, and resources of the nation's seagoing
expeditionary forces worldwide.
CACI will support the service's networks, servers, software engineering,
application engineering, and all personal and network-wide communications for
NCIS headquarters and approximately 160 locations around the globe. The company
will make extensive use of the Information Technology Infrastructure Library
(ITIL) to provide a framework of best practices to assure its delivery of IT
services.
Bill Fairl, CACI's President of U.S. Operations, said "We are very pleased that
this new work enables CACI to form a true partnership with the Naval Criminal
Investigative Service and help it deliver support and services that are mission
and customer-service focused. We are extremely proud to be a member of the NCIS
team."
According to CACI President and CEO Paul Cofoni, "With this contract, CACI's
support of the U.S. Navy is further enhanced. For the first time, we can provide
the Department of the Navy with comprehensive expertise in the areas of law
enforcement, counterintelligence, and counterterrorism worldwide."
CACI International Inc provides the professional services and IT solutions needed
to prevail in today's defense, intelligence, homeland security, and federal
civilian government arenas. We deliver enterprise IT and network services; data,
information, and knowledge management services; business system solutions;
logistics and material readiness; C4ISR integration services; cyber security,
information assurance, and information operations; integrated security and
intelligence solutions; and program management and SETA support services. CACI
services and solutions help our federal clients provide for national security,
improve communications and collaboration, secure the integrity of information
systems and networks, enhance data collection and analysis, and increase
efficiency and mission effectiveness. We add value to our clients' operations,
increase their skills and capabilities, and enhance their missions. CACI is a
member of the Fortune 1000 Largest Companies and the Russell 2000 index. CACI
provides dynamic careers for approximately 12,500 employees working in over 120
offices in the U.S. and Europe. CACI is the IT provider for a networked world.
Visit CACI on the web at http://www.caci.com and http://www.asymmetricthreat.net.
There are statements made herein which do not address historical facts, and
therefore could be interpreted to be forward-looking statements as that term is
defined in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Such statements
are subject to factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from
anticipated results. The factors that could cause actual results to differ
materially from those anticipated include, but are not limited to, the following:
regional and national economic conditions in the United States and the United
Kingdom, including conditions that result from a prolonged recession; terrorist
activities or war; changes in interest rates; currency fluctuations; significant
fluctuations in the equity markets; failure to achieve contract awards in
connection with recompetes for present business and/or competition for new
business; the risks and uncertainties associated with client interest in and
purchases of new products and/or services; continued funding of U.S. government
or other public sector projects, based on a change in spending patterns, or in
the event of a priority need for funds, such as homeland security, the war on
terrorism; or rebuilding Iraq; or an economic stimulus package; government
contract procurement (such as bid protest, small business set asides, loss of
work due to organizational conflicts of interest, etc.) and termination risks;
the results of government investigations into allegations of improper actions
related to the provision of services in support of U.S. military operations in
Iraq; the results of government audit and reviews conducted by the Defense
Contract Audit Agency or other governmental entities with cognizant oversight;
individual business decisions of our clients; paradigm shifts in technology;
competitive factors such as pricing pressures and/or competition to hire and
retain employees (particularly those with security clearances); market
speculation regarding our continued independence; material changes in laws or
regulations applicable to our businesses, particularly in connection with (i)
government contracts for services, (ii) outsourcing of activities that have been
performed by the government, (iii) competition for task orders under Government
Wide Acquisition Contracts ("GWACs") and/or schedule contracts with the General
Services Administration; and (iv) accounting for convertible debt instruments;
our own ability to achieve the objectives of near term or long range business
plans; and other risks described in the company's Securities and Exchange
Commission filings.
Corporate Communications and Media:
Jody Brown, Executive Vice President, Public Relations
(703) 841-7801, jbrown@caci.com
Investor Relations:
David Dragics, Senior Vice President, Investor Relations
(866) 606-3471, ddragics@caci.com
SOURCE CACI International Inc
http://www.caci.com
Copyright (C) 2009 PR Newswire. All rights reserved