 This is your counsel integrity and efficiency as you remember from the cabinet meeting of the day when you had a defense contractor that tried to sell boats to the B-52 where the wings were defective, they went to jail. And you found that they on the U.S. asked New Jersey that saw a service in Lebanon when they tried to go ahead and sell the defective parts in terms of armor plating, they went to jail. These are the people that went and reduced their food stamp error rate by about one-third since you came in office. That's not small potatoes, it's about $350 million a year. And these are the people right now that you take a look at the headline, civil rights documents, back data. Jim Thomas, your IGU of Education, is the one that picked that up. So, the answer would be the junkyard dogs. They give you $84 billion and funds put to better use. They'll make over $100 billion by the time that you leave office and that's about one-tenth of our budget right now. Here's a semi-annual report and that's also a five-year report from your conference. You're there. I am glad it lasts to be in the room with all of you junkyard dogs. I want to thank you very much, all the members of the council, integrity and efficiency. When I created that council, I knew that fraud, waste and abuse problems were widespread and the type of cooperation that you've exhibited would be needed. I commend you for your spectacular gains over the past five years and I have to say you exceeded my wildest hopes in what you've accomplished. Now, as to the real reason that you're here today, I have the pleasure of presenting the Boucher Award, Memorial Award, named in honor of our Boucher, the late Inspector General of the Small Business Administration. So that means, Dick, that you're not. Thank you, Mr. President. Indeed, it's a real honor for all of us to be able to join you to honor Skip Myers and his wife, if you could step forward and tell a little bit about them. Mr. Myers is being recognized today for his outstanding contribution, particularly as lead case agent on his joint investigation with the FBI and Veterans Administration's task force. His investigation of possible fraud in over 2,000 single-family mortgage loans in Camden, New Jersey has resulted in three-fourth invictions to date and $857,000 in fines and restitution. So we're all very proud that he was selected to represent us in the Boucher Award. Well, I'm supposed to have a... Yeah. Perhaps for that. Almost hollowed out last year. Although, I'm very proud and just grateful to you and behalf of the nation presenting that to you. Congratulations. And we have a runner-up also who is an investigator, Bob Hankin, from the Veterans Administration. And his work is being recognized the fact that he directed one of the most far-reaching fraud investigations ever initiated by the Veterans Administration. His investigation showed that the mobile home manufacturers throughout the country were defrauding veterans and other taxpayers through prohibited rebates to dealers. His investigation thus far has yielded $777,000 in fines and penalties. So we're also very much proud of him. Well, yours is not a lack of a letter. Thank you very much. And over here, does the line come from that direction? Let's take a picture. Bob, why don't you start out here and explain to the general for the honorary. We have an opportunity to shake hands with each one of you. I'm certain. Thank you. We better pay attention to this. Sir, thank you. Thank you. Thank you again, sir. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you very much. Appreciate it. Thank you. Thank you. They just have to tell you, way back in World War II, the first time I really began to sniff out that maybe government did have some shortcomings. It seems that there was a warehouse discovered filled with unusable records anymore. They were of no use to anyone. And so a request went in for permission to destroy these now obsolete records, not used or of any purpose at all. And in the military, it means, of course, fondness, as you know, the endorsements on the bottom, sending it on to the next command, and then an endorsement of all the way up and down, all the way to the top. And then it came back, endorsed, all the way down. Permission granted, providing you make copies of every document you store.