The country’s largest provider of private federal court house security officers recently paid a $1.9 million fine to the federal government to settle allegations that some of its guards fudged results of gun-range tests.
Akal Security, a New Mexico company, denied the allegation and said it paid only to avoid further litigation that could cost the company more.
Still, the recent U.S. Department of Justice investigation was just the latest of a long series of legal matters plaguing the company.
The company of 10,000 employees disclosed 134 “pending, or current litigation matters” to a Washington D.C. federal court last year.
Akal president Daya Khalsa says the company is a victim of a litigious society and that other companies of its size face the same number of legal issues.
@2012 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.
Topics Lawsuits
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
Moody’s: US Faces $375B in Uninsured Flood Losses From 1-in-100-Year Event
Viewpoint: The AI Boom – When Risk Stops Being Rare, Insurance Must Evolve
US P/C Insurers Post Biggest Q1 Underwriting Profit in 25 Years
Florida Court Says 2020 Law Gives ‘Very Broad’ Liability Immunity to Rideshare Firms 


