CACI

Last updated
CACI International Inc.
FormerlyCalifornia Analysis Center, Inc. (1962-1967)
Consolidated Analysis Center, Inc. (1967-1973)
Company type Public
Industry Information technology
Consulting
Outsourcing
Defense
FoundedJuly 1962;61 years ago (1962-07) (Santa Monica, California)
Founders
  • Herb Karr
  • Harry Markowitz
Headquarters Reston, Virginia, U.S.
Key people
  • J.P. (Jack) London (Chairman)
  • John Mengucci (President and CEO)
RevenueIncrease2.svg US$4.35 billion (2017) [2]
Increase2.svg US$297.3 million (2017) [2]
Increase2.svg US$163.7 million (2017) [2]
Number of employees
20,000 (2018)  OOjs UI icon edit-ltr-progressive.svg
Website caci.com

CACI International Inc. (originally California Analysis Center, Inc., then Consolidated Analysis Center, Inc.) is an American multinational professional services and information technology company [3] headquartered in Northern Virginia. [4] CACI provides services to many branches of the US federal government including defense, [5] [6] homeland security, intelligence, [7] and healthcare. [8]

Contents

CACI has approximately 23,000 employees worldwide. [1]

CACI is a member of the Fortune 1000 Largest Companies, [9] the Russell 2000 index, [10] and the S&P MidCap 400 Index. [1]

History

CACI was founded by Herb Karr and Harry Markowitz, who left RAND Corporation in 1962 to commercialize the SIMSCRIPT simulation programming language. [11] [6] [12] The company went public in 1968. [1] "CACI", which was originally an acronym for "California Analysis Center, Incorporated", [13] was changed to stand for "Consolidated Analysis Center, Incorporated" in 1967. In 1973, the acronym alone was adopted as the firm's official name; reflecting the name customers had grown familiar with. [14]

Their CACI Limited (UK) subsidiary was founded in 1975. [15]

In February 2020, CACI announced the hiring of former White House staffer Daniel Walsh as corporate strategic adviser and senior vice president. [16]

In April 2022, CACI announced that it had been awarded the Gold Edison Award, for its critical data dark web analysis intelligence platform DarkBlue. [17]

Acquisitions

CACI's growth has been predominantly via acquisitions of other IT companies. [18]
  • 2003: Premier Technology Group, Inc. [19]
  • 2004: MTL Systems, Inc. [20]
  • 2004: CMS Information Services, Inc. [21]
  • 2004: American Management Systems, Inc. (Defense and Intelligence Group) [22]
  • 2005: National Security Research, Inc. [23]
  • 2006: Information Systems Support, Inc. [24]
  • 2006: AlphaInsight Corp. [25]
  • 2007: Institute for Quality Management, Inc. [26]
  • 2007: The Wexford Group International [27]
  • 2007: Athena Innovative Solutions, Inc. [28]
  • 2007: Areté Software Ltd (CACI Ltd.) [29]
  • 2007: Dragon Development Corporation [30]
  • 2008: SoftSmart Ltd (CACI Ltd.) [29]
  • 2009: EzGov Europe (CACI Ltd.) [31]
  • 2009: Monitor Media (CACI Ltd.) [32]
  • 2010: SystemWare, Inc. [33]
  • 2010: TechniGraphics, Inc. [34]
  • 2010: Applied Systems Research, Inc. [34]
  • 2011: Pangia Technologies, LLC [35]
  • 2011: Paradigm Holdings, Inc. [36]
  • 2011: Advanced Programs Group, LLC [37]
  • 2012: Delta Solutions and Technologies, Inc.
  • 2012: Tomorrow Communications. [38]
  • 2012: Emergint Technologies, Inc. [39]
  • 2013: IDL Solutions, Inc. [40]
  • 2013: Six3 Systems, Inc. [41]
  • 2015: Rockshore Group Ltd (CACI Ltd.) [42]
  • 2016: L-3 National Security Solutions, Inc. (L-3 NSS) [43]
  • 2016: Purple Secure Systems (CACI Ltd.) [44]
  • 2016: Stream:20 (CACI Ltd.) [45]
  • 2017: Spargonet (CACI Ltd.) [46]
  • 2017: Mapmechanics (CACI Ltd.) [47]
  • 2018: CSRA LLC (Systems Engineering and Acquisition Services Business Unit from GDIT) [48]
  • 2019: LGS Innovations [49]
  • 2019: MooD International Software Limited (CACI Ltd.)
  • 2019: Deep3 (CACI Ltd.) [50]
  • 2019: Next Century Corporation [51]
  • 2021: Bluestone Analytics [52]

Internal growth

CACI's SIMSCRIPT software product line added object-oriented capability, [55] and added a new government contracting area: Space. [56]

Controversies

Abu Ghraib

On June 9, 2004, a group of 256 Iraqis sued CACI International and Titan Corporation (now L-3 Services, part of L-3 Communications) in U.S. federal court regarding CACI's alleged involvement in the Abu Ghraib torture and prisoner abuse. Details are still, in 2019, under review by authorities, [57] [58] [59] and also as of 2023, where a judge refused CACI's 18th dismissal request. [60]

A 2017 story in The Washington Post reported that "a group of former Iraqi detainees got to make the case before a judge ... that they were tortured and that the contractor CACI International is partly to blame." [61]

As of April 2024, an Alexandria, Virginia federal civil jury was deliberating whether to hold CACI liable for its employees' torture of three Iraqi citizens at Abu Ghraib. [62] [63]

Competitors

Depending on the focus (USA, International), competitors to CACI include Accenture, Capgemini, Infosys, Leidos, and Booz Allen Hamilton. [64] [65]

See also

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