Pentagon Reviewing Potential Conflicts of Interests in Cloud Bid
Pentagon Reviewing Potential Conflicts of Interests in Cloud Bid · Bloomberg

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(Bloomberg) -- An unexpected twist in an ongoing legal battle over a $10 billion Pentagon cloud contract has thrust a former Defense Department official’s connections to frontrunner Amazon.com Inc. into the spotlight.

The latest development raises the odds that the department might have to restart the massive procurement process, after spending 18 months on it. The Pentagon was set to announce a winner this spring.

Oracle Corp., which opposes the Pentagon’s winner-take-all plan for the cloud contract, sued in federal court to stop the award.

The Pentagon said in a court filing made public Friday that it’s reviewing new information about Deap Ubhi, a former employee at a high-level Pentagon technology unit, and "possible personal conflicts of interests" related to the procurement.

Oracle’s lawsuit alleges that Ubhi helped design the cloud contract that is favorable to Amazon while negotiating to sell his company to the e-commerce giant. Amazon is widely considered to have an edge over Oracle and several other large tech companies for the cloud contract.

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Ubhi, who had worked at Amazon before joining the government, did disclose Amazon contacts to his Pentagon superiors. As a result of that disclosure, Ubhi had to recuse himself from working on the agency’s cloud-computing procurement.

The government asked the U.S. Court of Federal Claims to pause proceedings in Oracle’s lawsuit so that the Pentagon could review the “new information” that it only became aware of this month. The judge in the case, Eric Bruggink, granted the request on Tuesday and directed the government to file a status report within five days of deciding whether conflicts of interest affected the procurement’s integrity.

A Pentagon contracting officer determined in July that Ubhi’s potential conflicts didn’t compromise the integrity of the procurement, according to the government’s filing.

“It’s exceedingly rare that the government would investigate potential conflicts of interest only after bidding on a contract is underway, after defending itself against a bid protest, and after being sued in federal court,” Bloomberg Government analyst Christopher Cornillie said in an email. “The Pentagon reopening the case at this stage speaks to the fact that officials don’t think they’ve covered all their bases up to now,” he added.

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The latest development may bolster Oracle’s argument that terms for the cloud project, known as the Joint Enterprise Defense Infrastructure, or JEDI, violate federal procurement standards and are unfairly tailored for Amazon. If the judge finds the procurement process was corrupted, he could send the Pentagon back to the drawing board. Oral argument is scheduled for April 4.