IBM Corporation

CourtArmed Services Board of Contract Appeals
DecidedMarch 8, 2018
DocketASBCA No. 60332
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
IBM Corporation, (asbca 2018).

Opinion

ARMED SERVICES BOARD OF CONTRACT APPEALS

Appeal of-- ) ) IBM Corporation ) ASBCA No. 60332 ) Under Contract No. W91QUZ-04-D-0003 )

APPEARANCES FOR THE APPELLANT: David W. Burgett, Esq. Brendan M. Lill, Esq. Nicole D. Picard, Esq. Hogan Lovells US LLP Washington, DC

APPEARANCES FOR THE GOVERNMENT: Raymond M. Saunders, Esq. Army Chief Trial Attorney Frank A. March, Esq. Trial Attorney

OPINION BY ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE WOODROW ON APPELLANT'S MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT AND DISMISSAL

In 2003, the United States Army Contracting Command Agency (Army or government) awarded Indefinite-Delivery/Indefinite-Quantity (IDIQ) Contract No. W91QUZ-04-D-0003 to IBM Corporation (appellant or IBM) for worldwide information technology (IT) services. In 2003, the Army issued Task Order 0002 (TO 2) for IT support at the National Defense University at Fort McNair in Washington, DC. This appeal arises out of a contracting officer's final decision (COFD) asserting a government claim for $5,903,353 in alleged overcharges by IBM under TO 2, based on IBM's alleged failure to perform the requirements of TO 2.

Appellant's brief contains three distinct motions: ( 1) a partial motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction; (2) a motion for summary judgment on the basis that the government's claim is time-barred by the six-year statute of limitation set forth in the Contract Disputes Act (CDA), 41 U.S.C. §§ 7101-7109; and (3) a motion to dismiss the government's complaint with prejudice for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.

We address each of appellant's motions separately. STATEMENT OF FACTS (SOF) FOR PURPOSES OF THE MOTIONS

1. On 22 October 2003, the Army Contracting Command Agency-ITEC4 (Army or government) awarded IDIQ Contract No. W91QUZ-04-D-0003 (the contract) to IBM for IT services worldwide. With options, the contract period was from 22 October 2003 until 21 October 2010. (R4, tab 1 at 1)

2. On 30 June 2005, the Army awarded TO 2 to IBM for IT support at the National Defense University (NDU) (R4, tab 12 at 2). The task order included a base period of performance of 1 July 2005 through 1 July 2006, as well as two 12-month option periods, 1 July 2006 to 30 June 2007 and 1 July 2007 to 30 June 2008 (id. at 1, 5-17). The period of performance was extended to 2 September 2008 by Modification No. 27 (R4, tab 19).

3. TO 2's Performance Work Statement (PWS) provides: "The Contractor shall operate and maintain baseline services and infrastructure in accordance with Appendix C" (R4, tab 12 at 22). Appendix C consists of a table entitled "Operate and Maintain Baseline Services and Infrastructure." Below is an excerpt of the portion of the table relevant to the present motions.

Establish I) Create, maintain I) Ensure security I) Monthly certified 0.5%of total monthly and and update required documentation review of security price shall be administer NDU IA policy and complies with documentation deducted for IT security procedures mandated Federal documented program by DOD regulations legislation ... deficiencies noted in and federal laws Monthly reviews for 2) Review audit logs 2) Respond to 2) Review network identified monitor and monitor network security breaches security reports and activities and not security tools within 4 hours of logs corrected within 30 notification days. 3) Establish and 3) Ensure that 3) Review patch monitor University systems have latest documentation software patch security patches reports and logs program installed within 24 hours of approved release; 4) Analyze network 4) Provide monthly 4) Review IA related and web activity data network metric help tickets to identify possible reports to include problem trends and but limited to: propose proactive network, server and solutions services downtime;

2 5) Create and oversee 5) Provide IA 5) Survey users to a security training and training to faculty, ensure training [has] awareness program staff and students at been met least once a year; 6) Establish and 6) Ensure COOP 6) Review test plans, maintain for critical plans are current procedures and test NDU systems and and tested annually results continue to operate (COOP) plan, procedures and resources for ongoing operations under emergency situations 7) Provide 7) Test new 7) Review NDU information assurance technologies, projects for IA and security analysis security tools and compliance and on proposals related procedures prior to documentation to new technologies implementation and new operational policies within the university Establish Create, maintain and Ensure program Provide monthly 0.5% of total and update network documentation and network operational monthly price shall administer security policies, resource security activity be deducted for a network procedures and assignment reports to the NDU documented operations operational guidance necessary to Chief Information deficiencies noted in security mandated by federal achieve and Security Officer monthly reviews for program and DOD regulations maintain DOD and identified monitored federal compliance activities that are not corrected within 30 days of notification or by mandated DOD and federal implementation deadlines.

(R4, tab 12 at 33-34)

Staffing under the Contract

4. IBM had been providing IT support services to NDU under performance-based contracts for several years prior to 2005 (app. mot., Statement of Undisputed Material Facts (ASUMF), 1; gov't resp., Statement of Genuine Issues of Material Facts (GSGIMF), 1), when it was awarded TO 2 (ASUMF, 2).

3 5. NDU staff had the opportunity to directly observe IBM's day-to-day performance under TO 2. IBM employees worked side-by-side and in the same location as NDU employees. (ASUMF , 5)

6. IBM provided the government with a staffing plan at the contract's inception (ASUMF, 15; GSGIMF, 15). There are factual disputes concerning the content of the staffing plan, including whether certain personnel relevant to the government's claim were included in the staffing plan (R4, tab 8 at 18-20, 40-47; ASUMF, 15; GSGIMF, 15).

7. Of the 22 employees at issue in the government's claim, 4 had supported NDU prior to TO 2, under IBM's former contracts (ASUMF, 16; GSGIMF, 16).

8. Before making personnel changes during performance, IBM consulted with NDU officials about proposed personnel changes (ASUMF , 20). IBM provided to the government resumes of new candidates for review and also gave the government an opportunity to meet new candidates for contract positions during task order performance (ASUMF , 21; see, e.g., R4, tabs 36, 38).

Network Intrusions and Subsequent Government Investigations

9. The government identified a total of six malicious network intrusions during the period from January 2006 until June 2009. The six intrusions occurred on or about January 2006, November 2007, 4 November 2008, 14 May 2009, 17 June 2009, and 23 June 2009. The first network intrusion occurred in January 2006, but was not detected until November or December 2006 (ASUMF, 24; GSGIMF, 24; app. reply br., ex. A, 24). Two of the six network intrusions occurred during TO 2's period of performance, from 2005 to September 2008 (ASUMF, 23; GSGIMF, 23).

10. The six attacks resulted in the exfiltration of unclassified but sensitive DoD information, including personally identifiable information ofNDU students and faculty, expense and budget reports, and documents related to U.S. military technology and technical tradecraft. The attacks degraded NDU's network and compromised the DoD Non-Classified Internet Protocol Router Network (NIPRNET). (R4, tab 31 at 15-25)

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