1. Dale C Stoffel was an American businessman and arms dealer who was involved with the American reconstruction efforts following the Iraq War.

1. Dale C Stoffel was an American businessman and arms dealer who was involved with the American reconstruction efforts following the Iraq War.
In 1985, Stoffel was recruited by the Office of Naval Intelligence to work on missile technology.
Dale Stoffel openly despised dishonesty and repeated for years that Pollard was a money grubber who used spying for Israel as a way out.
Dale Stoffel's lifestyle mirrored that of a soldier of fortune and he was known to routinely carry an automatic weapon slung across his shoulder with a cigar in his mouth.
Dale Stoffel had a close relationship with a number of Washington lobbyists connected to Ahmed Chalabi.
The contract was jointly administered by Wye Oak and another Dale Stoffel-related company, CLI, Inc.
Dale Stoffel was an arms dealer with a mysterious past, a swashbuckling, larger-than-life character who'd been around the block of international intrigue more than once.
On May 20,2004, Dale Stoffel was granted limited immunity from prosecution by the Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction in a whistleblower complaint.
Dale Stoffel gave investigators information regarding US corruption in the Iraqi reconstruction effort that implicated Colonel Anthony B Bell, and SIGIR opened an investigation of him among others.
Immediately after delivering the first batch of tanks in November 2004, Dale Stoffel alerted the Pentagon to irregularities regarding the way his company was being compensated.
Dale Stoffel alleged that the Ministry was forcing him to use preferred sub-contractors.
Dale Stoffel's case was part of a larger trend involving middlemen and kickbacks in the Iraqi government and the rebuilding process.
Dale Stoffel met with Pennsylvania senator Rick Santorum, who wrote to Secretary Donald Rumsfeld on December 3,2004, on Stoffel's behalf, urging the Pentagon to address the issue of payment to Wye Oak Technology with the Iraqi Minister of Defense, Hazim al-Shaalan.
Friends and colleagues report that Dale Stoffel considered the problem solved at that time.
Dale Stoffel had been shot several times in the head and back, while Wemple was shot once through the head.
Dale Stoffel's death raised questions about the integrity of the Iraqi reconstruction effort, which had been hampered by corruption.
Dale Stoffel was an adventurer who seemed to have met his end at the hands of jihadists while engaged in one of the riskiest businesses on the planet.
Wye Oak, owned by the estate of Dale Stoffel, was the plaintiff versus the defendant, named as the "Republic of Iraq", in the US District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia.