For in-house use, you'd be fine.
For selling to clients, you'd have to give the source code to them if they ask for it, and make sure that they know that they are entitled to the source code.
As Harper Shelby suggests, you should talk to your management chain first, then your company's lawyers. If they don't sort things out on their own, then you should consider contacting the Free Software Foundation (FSF) or the Software Freedom Law Center (SFLC), and maybe the authors of the packages too.
There was a recent post on Groklaw entitled "FSFE and GPL-Violations.org Release Guide to Handling License Violations". FSFE is the Free Software Foundation Europe, and GPL-Violations.org has the goal:
The gpl-violations.org project tries to raise public awareness about past and present infringing use(r)s of GPL licensed software.
The ultimate goal is to make vendors of GPL licensed software understand that GPL is not public domain, and that there are license conditions that are to be fulfilled.
For another illustration of GPL issues, see "Stallman Calls Out Cisco - GPL Violations Alleged" at Dr Dobbs CodeTalk. More on Cisco's problems with GPL.
