David Packouz joined Efraim Diveroli’s arms company AEY Inc. in 2005; Efraim was only 19 years old at the time, while David was 23. By the end of 2006, they had won 149 contracts worth around $10.5 million. In early 2007, AEY secured a nearly $300 million U.S. government contract to supply the Afghan Army with 100 million rounds of AK-47 ammunition, millions of rounds for SVD Dragunov sniper rifles, and aviation rockets.The ammunition that AEY had secured in Albania to fulfill the contract had originally come from China, violating the terms of AEY’s contract with the US Army, banning Chinese ammunition.
Packouz was sentenced to seven months of house arrest for conspiracy to defraud the United States. Diveroli was sentenced to four years in federal prison. They are a central subject of the Todd Phillips’ film War Dogs, released in 2016.
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So, what you're telling me, is that these guys did what the US government keeps doing (supplying terrorists and generally not giving a damn about how the weapons are used), and these guys are the ones who got in trouble?
Got it.
isent this the story from war dogs