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Anteon International Corp.
In June 2002, S. Daniel Johnson, then executive vice president of public services at KPMG Consulting (later to become executive vice president and COO of Anteon Corp.) testified before the House Subcommittee on Technology and Procurement Policy. He was there to voice KPMG Consulting's support for H.R. 4629, a bill calling for the establishment of a program to encourage innovative homeland security solutions. The bill was sponsored by Virginia Congressman Tom Davis.
http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Anteon_International_Corp.
Anteon Intl. Corp is a military subcontractor based in Virginia specializing in simulators and training of interrogators. The company gained notoriety because it trained some of the interrogators who worked in Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo. As stated in the About Us blurb about the company: We are a leading provider of information technology solutions and advanced engineering services to government clients. Headquartered in Fairfax, Virginia, we have a 28 year corporate history marked by continual growth in revenue and customer base. We currently have approximately 8,600 employees at over 100 offices serving more than 1,000 customers worldwide.
Revenue for 2003 was $1.042 billion. The remaining contract value, previously referred to as “backlog” was $5.6 billion at year-end 2003. We are led by a senior management team whose members average over 20 years of management experience and nearly eight years of tenure with Anteon.[1](http://www.anteon.com/company/about_profile.htm) This is what Pratap Chatterjee had to say about the company: Among the private contractors cashing in on the privatization boom is Virginia-based Anteon International Corp., which has grown tenfold in the last decade. The company has become one of the nation's primary contractors for intelligence sharing, intelligence training and video game warfare simulators. One of Anteon's offices is located on the Huachuca base itself, while the second sits a mile away on Main Street, in a bright, freshly-painted pink building, sandwiched between Enterprise Rent-A-Car, with whom it shares a parking lot, and Filiberto's Mexican restaurant.
Although Anteon first came into existence in 1976, its profits really began to soar 20 years later, when former investment banker Frederick Iseman bought the company assets for a mere $48 million. Today, Anteon's annual revenues exceed a billion dollars and its share price has jumped from it's initial public offering of $18 to $36 in the last three years.[2](http://www.corpwatch.org/article.php?id=11940)
[4]
http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Anteon_International_Corp.
Anteon Intl. Corp is a military subcontractor based in Virginia specializing in simulators and training of interrogators. The company gained notoriety because it trained some of the interrogators who worked in Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo. As stated in the About Us blurb about the company: We are a leading provider of information technology solutions and advanced engineering services to government clients. Headquartered in Fairfax, Virginia, we have a 28 year corporate history marked by continual growth in revenue and customer base. We currently have approximately 8,600 employees at over 100 offices serving more than 1,000 customers worldwide.
Revenue for 2003 was $1.042 billion. The remaining contract value, previously referred to as “backlog” was $5.6 billion at year-end 2003. We are led by a senior management team whose members average over 20 years of management experience and nearly eight years of tenure with Anteon.[1](http://www.anteon.com/company/about_profile.htm) This is what Pratap Chatterjee had to say about the company: Among the private contractors cashing in on the privatization boom is Virginia-based Anteon International Corp., which has grown tenfold in the last decade. The company has become one of the nation's primary contractors for intelligence sharing, intelligence training and video game warfare simulators. One of Anteon's offices is located on the Huachuca base itself, while the second sits a mile away on Main Street, in a bright, freshly-painted pink building, sandwiched between Enterprise Rent-A-Car, with whom it shares a parking lot, and Filiberto's Mexican restaurant.
Although Anteon first came into existence in 1976, its profits really began to soar 20 years later, when former investment banker Frederick Iseman bought the company assets for a mere $48 million. Today, Anteon's annual revenues exceed a billion dollars and its share price has jumped from it's initial public offering of $18 to $36 in the last three years.[2](http://www.corpwatch.org/article.php?id=11940)
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[edit]
Board and Personnel
[edit]
Board of directors
- Gilbert F. Decker
- Robert A. Ferris
- Frederick J. Iseman
- Paul G. Kaminski, Link Here
- Steven M. Lefkowitz
- Paul Miller (Admiral, USN (ret.))
- William J. Perry
- Henry Hugh Shelton (General, USA (ret.))
- Thomas J. Tisch
- Michael T. Smith – appointed March 2, 2005[3](http://phx.corporate-ir.net/phoenix.zhtml?c=130842&p=irol-newsArticle&ID=680594&highlight=)
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Management
- Joseph Kampf – President and CEO
- S. Daniel Johnson – Executive VP and COO
- Charles Ream – Executive VP and CFO
- Seymour Moskowitz – Executive VP, Technology
- Mark Heilman – Executive VP, Corporate Development
- Roger Gurner – Senior VP, Business Development & Strategic Planning
- Howard Dawson – Senior VP of Administration
- Curtis Schehr – Senior VP and General Counsel
- Dennis Kelly – Senior VP , Investor Relations
- Vincent Kiernan – Senior VP, Finance
- Deborah Alderson – Group President, Systems Engineering Group
- Mark Green – Group President, Technology Solutions Group
- Mike Canavan – Group President, Information Systems Group
[edit]
Joint Ventures
[edit]
Lobbying Expenditures
Defense Electronics Industry Year Amount Firm| 1999 | $20,000 | Advantage Associates, Inc. |
| 2001 | $0 | PMA Group |
| 2002 | $100,000 | Parry Romani DeConcini & Symms ($60K); PMA Group ($40K) |
| 2003 | $180,000 | PMA Group ($110K); Parry, Romani ($80K) |
| 2004 | $160,000 | PMA Group ($80K); Copeland, Lowery & Jacquez ($40K); Joel S. Lisker ($40K) |
| 2005 | $20,000 | Joel S Lisker |
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Latest page update: made by bgiltner
, Jun 8 2008, 9:51 PM EDT
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