Goblin House
Claim investigated: SEC filings appear at regular intervals (approximately annual or semi-annual), with filings in February (2010, 2012), May (2013), August (2014, 2022), and January (2009), suggesting standard 10-K and 10-Q reporting cycles Entity: CACI International Original confidence: inferential Result: STRENGTHENED → SECONDARY
The inference about SEC filing patterns is partially supported by the documented filing dates but contains analytical gaps. While the dates (2009-2022) confirm regular SEC reporting compliance, the claim about 'standard 10-K and 10-Q reporting cycles' requires verification of actual form types. The February pattern (2010, 2012) and August pattern (2014, 2022) could indicate annual reporting cycles, but without form types and fiscal year end confirmation, this remains speculative.
Reasoning: The documented SEC filing dates provide concrete evidence of regular reporting patterns spanning 13+ years. However, the specific claim about 10-K/10-Q cycles requires additional verification of form types and fiscal year structure to achieve primary confidence.
SEC EDGAR: CACI International Inc, CIK lookup and complete filing history 2009-2024
Would provide complete form types (10-K, 10-Q, 8-K), fiscal year end dates, and fill gaps in the 2014-2022 period to confirm or refute the reporting cycle inference.
SEC EDGAR: CACI International fiscal year end date and annual report filing patterns
Fiscal year end determines when 10-K annual reports are due, confirming whether February/August filings represent annual vs quarterly cycles.
SEC EDGAR: CACI International form type analysis for accession numbers corresponding to listed filing dates
Would definitively prove whether the filing pattern represents 10-K annual reports, 10-Q quarterly reports, or other SEC forms.
NOTABLE — Understanding CACI's fiscal reporting cycle is relevant to analyzing how defense contractors time financial disclosures relative to government contract awards and renewals, but the inference requires form-type verification to be actionable for accountability research.