UNITED STATES SUES RAYTHEON CO. UNDER FALSE CLAIMS ACT WASHINGTON, D.C. -- The Department of Justice filed a suit against Raytheon Co. in U.S. District Court in Boston today, charging that the Lexington, Massachusetts, company violated the False Claims Act by inflating the cost of a defense contract for a radar system. Assistant Attorney General Frank Hunger, in charge of the Civil Division, said the allegations relate to the PAVE PAWS system, a phased array radar system designed to detect incoming submarine-launched ballistic missiles. PAVE PAWS was originally constructed in the late 1970's at Otis Air Force Base in Massachusetts and Beale AFB in California. The system was expanded in 1983 to Warner Robbins AFB in Georgia and El Dorado AFB in Texas, with Raytheon constructing the radar at the new sites. When completed, the systems at Robbins and El Dorado were technically superior to those at Otis and Beale and the Air Force, to provide the same level of capability at all sites, negotiated a contract with Raytheon to upgrade the systems at Otis and Beale. In its suit, the United States alleged that Raytheon knowingly inflated its "skill mix," or ratio of higher to lower skilled employees, to increase the price of the contract. According to the suit, when the United States requested data on the skill mix Raytheon said it did not have the information in the form requested by the United States. The United States alleged that Raytheon not only had the information in the requested form, but also analyzed the skill mix proposal itself and, when the comparison was unfavorable, instructed the employee who performed the analysis to "bury" the information. "It is always disappointing when a government contractor knowingly violates federal law and more so when the violation is by a major contractor and results in millions of taxpayers' dollars being wasted," said Hunger. "We owe it to the taxpayers to litigate this matter to ensure that contractors know that this type of behavior will not be tolerated."