Connected Global Solutions, LLC v. United States

CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedMay 6, 2022
Docket22-292
StatusPublished

This text of Connected Global Solutions, LLC v. United States (Connected Global Solutions, LLC v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Federal Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Connected Global Solutions, LLC v. United States, (uscfc 2022).

Opinion

In the Gnited States Court of Federal Claims

Nos. 22-292C & 22-317C (consolidated) Filed: April 21, 2022 Reissued: May 6, 2022°

CONNECTED GLOBAL SOLUTIONS, LLC,

Plaintiff, and

AMERICAN ROLL-ON ROLL-OFF CARRIER GROUP, INC.,

Plaintiff, v. THE UNITED STATES, Defendant, and HOMESAFE ALLIANCE, LLC,

Intervenor-Defendant.

ORDER

In this post-award bid protest, Plaintiff, American Roll-on Roll-off Carrier Group, Inc. (“ARC”), claims that awardee, HomeSafe Alliance, LLC (‘HomeSafe”), materially misrepresented the security level of its information technology system in its proposal before the agency. (Compl. at P 53, ECF No. 35).' On April 4, 2022, ARC moved to conduct discovery related to that alleged misrepresentation. (ARC Mot., ECF No. 36). The Court finds that ARC is entitled to limited discovery related to meeting its burden to prove that HomeSafe’s representation was false. However, the Court will not grant the breadth of ARC’s request. Nor

This Opinion was filed under seal on April 21, 2022. On May 5, 2022, the parties filed a joint status report proposing redactions of protected information. (ECF No. 50). This public version reflects those redactions.

' An unredacted copy of this pleading can be found in Case No. 22-317, ECF No. 1. does the Court determine at this early juncture whether information gleaned from this limited discovery would properly supplement the administrative record. Accordingly, ARC’s Motion is granted-in-part;, ARC may serve two interrogatories and a request for admission seeking clarity as to HomeSafe’s bases for the purported compliance rating.

In the underlying case, ARC challenges the Department of Defense, U.S. Transportation Command’s (“TRANSCOM”) decision to award a contract to HomeSafe to perform complete, global household goods relocation services. (Compl. at 3). The Request for Proposal contained four evaluation factors. (Compl. at 4; see also ARC Mot. Appendix (“A__””) at 002, Ex. 1). Relevant to the pending motion, the Technical Capability Factor was comprised of four equally weighted subfactors: (1) Operational Approach; (ii) Capacity and Subcontractor Management; (111) Transition/Volume Phase-In; and (iv) Information Technology (“IT”) Services. (ARC Mot. A002, Ex. 1). It is this last factor at issue here.

Under the IT Services Sub-Factor, offerors were asked to describe their technical approaches to meeting 16 separate requirements, one of which being “Secure Access.” (/d.). For this requirement, contractors had to “provide and maintain an easy to use, secure, web-based, mobile device compatible IT system able to manage complete household goods relocation services globally during peak (surge) and non-peak seasons.” (ARC Mot. A004, Ex. 2).

To meet the secure access requirement, HomeSafe proposed the use of a products and services. (ARC Mot. A006—007, Ex. 3). HomeSafe’s proposa indicated that “‘[a]s has achieved FedRAMP High compliance, HomeSafe is able to take advantage of Authority to Operate (ATO) to ensure its own FedRAMP compliance.” (Id.). “FedRAMP” refers to the Federal Risk and Authorization Management Program, which provides a standardized approach to security assessment, authorization, and continuous monitoring for cloud products and services as a prerequisite for use by the Federal Government. (USA Resp. Appendix (“A__”’) at 003-005, ECF No. 38). FedRAMP provides “a uniform way to determine . . . security capabilities.” Oracle Am. v. United States, 144 Fed. Cl. 88, 118 (2019). The security categories are based on the potential impact that certain events would have on an organization’s ability to accomplish its assigned mission, protect its assets, fulfill its legal responsibilities, maintain its day-to-day functions, and protect individuals. (/d.). Security ratings are categorized into one of three impact levels—Low, Moderate, and High—across three security objectives—Confidentiality, Integrity, and Availability. (USA Resp. A004).

The FedRAMP program management office maintains a public website that lists all FedRAMP authorizations, including the impact level of each authorization. (ARC Mot. A051, Ex. 5). ARC contends that this website reveals that il has achieved authorization only at the Moderate impact level. (ARC Mot. at 4). ARC thus argues that the representation that had

achieved a High compliance score is a material misrepresentation and takes issue i II (1). 82 cites TRANSCOMS prase of

HomeSafe’s IT plan, stating:

(/d. citing ARC Mot. A077, Ex. 6) (emphasis removed).

ARC initially protested this award before the Government Accountability Office (“GAO”) and, among other arguments, noted this perceived misrepresentation. (ARC Mot. A089-091, Ex. 8). After briefing concluded, the GAO invited the parties to provide additional briefing on the appropriate remedy when an offeror’s proposal contains a material misrepresentation. (ARC Mot. A093, Ex. 9). In response, HomeSafe submitted a declaration from the President of one of its subcontractors, MoveHQ, as evidence that HomeSafe did not intend to “mislead the Agency regarding ’s FedRAMP status,” and indicated that HomeSafe relied on publicly-available information from *s website. (ARC Mot. A98, A100—106, Exs. 10, 11; see also HomeSafe Resp. at 13, 17, ECF No. 39). The declaration seems to indicate that

’s website includes documentation

. It states that

documentation

| (/d.). Further, the declaration states that website informed

users that

(/d.). The GAO determined that, based on these representations, HomeSafe had not made material misrepresentations in its proposal. (ARC Mot. A108—110, Ex 12). Although briefing in this case has not begun and the Administrative Record has not been filed, that declaration will necessarily be included. RCFC App. C, § 22(u).

ARC seeks leave to conduct discovery into the subject matter of MoveHQ’s declaration HomeSafe submitted to the GAO. (ARC Mot. at 6). Should leave be granted, ARC intends to serve six interrogatories, six requests for production of documents, one request for admission on HomeSafe, and one subpoena for non-party MoveHQ containing the same six requests for production of documents. (See ARC Mot. Al11—118, Exs. 13, 14). Ordinarily, documents or other evidence not considered by an agency in making a procurement decision should not be added to the administrative record in a procurement-related dispute.

In most protests, the protester challenges, and this Court evaluates, whether an agency reasonably evaluated competing proposals. Because the focal point for judicial review is the agency’s administrative record, “the standard for discovery in the bid protest is narrower,” than non-bid protest cases. Proxtronics Dosimetry, LLC v. United States, 128 Fed. Cl. 656, 681 (2016). Thus there is often no need for the Court to consider anything beyond the record the agency developed at the time it evaluated proposals. However, not every bid protest fits within that box and some exceptions apply. To justify the “rare” departure from “the rule that review of an administrative decision should be confined to the administrative record,” courts reviewing APA claims have required a party seeking discovery to show that “discovery is . . . necessary to create a record without which [a] challenge to the agency’s actions cannot be evaluated.” Liftle Co. of Mary Hosp. v. Sebelius, 587 F.3d 849, 856 (7th Cir. 2009) (cleaned up). The Court must grant a request to supplement the administrative record or conduct discovery in a bid protest “if

3 necessary for effective judicial review or if the existing record cannot be trusted.” Diversified Maint. Sys. v. United States, 93 Fed. Cl. 794, 802 (2010) (internal quotations omitted); cf Axiom Res.

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