Supreme Foodservice GmbH

CourtArmed Services Board of Contract Appeals
DecidedMay 27, 2020
DocketASBCA No. 57884, 58666, 59636, 59811, 61361
StatusPublished

This text of Supreme Foodservice GmbH (Supreme Foodservice GmbH) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Supreme Foodservice GmbH, (asbca 2020).

Opinion

ARMED SERVICES BOARD OF CONTRACT APPEALS

Appeals of -- ) ) Supreme Foodservice GmbH ) ASBCA Nos. 57884, 58666, 59636 ) 59811, 61361 ) Under Contract No. SPM300-05-D-3130 )

APPEARANCES FOR THE APPELLANT: Philip J. Davis, Esq. Rand L. Allen, Esq. John R. Prairie, Esq. Tara L. Ward, Esq. Nina S. Samuels, Esq. J. Ryan Frazee, Esq. Wiley Rein Washington, DC

APPEARANCES FOR THE GOVERNMENT: Daniel K. Poling, Esq. DLA Chief Trial Attorney Steven Cruz Herrera, Esq. J. Maxwell Carrion, Esq. Kari L. Scheck, Esq. Trial Attorneys DLA Troop Support Philadelphia, PA

OPINION BY ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE O’CONNELL

Appellant, Supreme Foodservice GmbH (Supreme), appeals decisions by a contracting officer from the Defense Logistics Agency (DLA). In ASBCA Nos. 57884 and 61361, DLA established final rates for payments made to Supreme for delivery of foodstuffs in Afghanistan under the above-captioned contract (the contract) and demanded the return of payments amounting to $1.1 billion made under provisional rates. In ASBCA Nos. 58666 and 59636, Supreme contends that it is entitled to payment based on the original rates and seeks about $2.4 billion. Finally, in ASBCA No. 59811, DLA requests that the Board declare the contract void ab initio due to Supreme’s guilty plea for major fraud and for a variety of other allegedly fraudulent or dishonest actions and seeks the return of all the money it paid Supreme on the contract, more than $8 billion.

The Board conducted a hearing from January 15 to February 14, 2019, at which it received into evidence more than 3,000 Rule 4 tabs or exhibits, and heard testimony from 14 witnesses. Both liability and quantum are before us. We sustain ASBCA Nos. 57884 and 61361 in part and remand to the parties for calculations based on this decision, deny ASBCA Nos. 58666 and 59636 with respect to Supreme’s interest claim, otherwise we hold that they are moot, and deny ASBCA No. 59811.

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. These appeals arise from a commercial item contract to furnish and deliver food in Afghanistan (R4, tabs 1, 5). DLA refers to this type of contract as “subsistence prime vendor,” or SPV. SPV contracts use commercial infrastructure to support the food needs of military customers using electronic ordering. (Tr. 6/57)

Notable Events Prior to Award

2. On May 6, 2002, a DLA employee researching the feasibility of SPV for Afghanistan spoke with Stephen Orenstein, Supreme’s Managing Director and part owner (tr. 11/154, 12/59; R4 tab 376 at 1),1 to discuss Supreme’s capabilities. The DLA employee summarized the conversation in an email and sent it to, among others, MAJ Joseph H. Alvarez, who forwarded it to Gary Shifton (R4, tab 376 at 1-2).

3. In 2002, Mr. Shifton was Integrated Supply Team Chief at Defense Supply Center Philadelphia 2; he supervised the two contracting officers discussed in this opinion, Maryann DiMeo and Lourdes Valentin (tr. 6/54, 56). MAJ Alvarez was a 1984 graduate of the United States Military Academy at West Point (R4, tab 136). He was Chief of the Food Service Business Unit for the European Region and had been a contracting officer (CO) since about 1996 (R4, tab 376 at 1; tr. 13/10, 79).

4. After the May 2002 interview of Mr. Orenstein, DLA considered whether and how to implement SPV in Afghanistan, including a sole source award to Supreme, as documented in a series of emails MAJ Alvarez sent or received (tr. 6/64; R4, tabs 128-29, 131-32, 385, 403).

5. By the latter part of 2003, pressure grew to award an Afghanistan contract (tr. 6/89, 91). In October 2003, Department of Defense (DoD) officials visited Supreme’s Kabul facility and took photos that MAJ Alvarez forwarded to Mr. Shifton. One of the attendees of the site visit was LTC Fred Lyons, who worked in MAJ Alvarez’s office. (R4, tab 129 at 1-2, tab 387; tr. 6/79-83)

1 Rule 4 citations are to the page number of the .pdf file. 2 Defense Supply Center Philadelphia later became Defense Logistics Agency Troop Support (e.g., R4, tab 111). We will refer to both as “DLA.”.

2 6. The site visit drew unfavorable attention from DLA headquarters, which, among other things, had concerns about whether security protocols had been followed (tr. 6/84). In a sharply worded December 1, 2003 email on which MAJ Alvarez was copied, a DLA headquarters official ordered all visits to Supreme to cease (R4, tab 387). We find that this was an email that people likely would have remembered.

7. Just nine days later, MAJ Alvarez sent an email to Mr. Ralph Lohmann, Command Ethics Counselor, concerning his post-government employment plans, that stated in part:

Ralph - Per our previous conversation, I wish to pursue post-government employment opportunities with Supreme Food Services in Moerfelden, Germany. At this time, my Business Unit has no dealings with Supreme Food Services or have we since I have been here.

(R4, tab 391) At the hearing, Mr. Alvarez testified both that he did not remember writing the email (tr. 13/17) and that it was accurate because “no dealings with Supreme” actually meant no “contractual dealings” with Supreme (tr. 13/109-10). We find this testimony to be self-serving and not credible.

8. On December 15, 2003, Mr. Lohmann informed MAJ Alvarez “there is no barrier to your entering into discussions with [Supreme] concerning possible employment after your retirement from the Army” (R4, tab 391).

9. Subsequent to the Lohmann emails, MAJ Alvarez continued to work with Mr. Shifton on the development of a prime vendor platform concept for Afghanistan (tr. 6/95). As late as February 24, 2004, MAJ Alvarez received an email concerning the development of that platform (R4, tab 133 at 1).

10. On March 5, 2004, Supreme hired Mr. Alvarez, who then informed DLA (R4, tab 696; app. supp. R4, tabs 851, 851A, 856).

11. Despite nearly two years of effort, at the time MAJ Alvarez gave his notice DLA had made only limited progress in developing a solicitation. On March 17, 2004, Mr. Shifton conducted a meeting of DLA officials seeking assistance in “attempting to define requirements” for a prime vendor solicitation. MAJ Alvarez does not appear to have attended. (R4, tab 416 at 11)

12. MAJ Alvarez left DLA and began transitioning from the Army to retirement on April 13, 2004, but did not formally retire until July 31, 2004 (R4, tabs 136, 407). He went on Supreme’s payroll and began receiving compensation in late April 2004 (app. supp. R4 tab 1384; tr. 11/114).

3 13. By the end of his service, MAJ Alvarez had become disgruntled with the Army. On May 21, 2004, he wrote to a DLA official:

Glad to be out of the “green machine” – it drained my creativity and what intelligence that I had remaining in undamaged brain cells. I am finally trying to add value and be a productive citizen.

(R4, tab 278 at 2)

14. After MAJ Alvarez had left DLA, he still had access to his DLA email and used it to forward internal DLA documents to Supreme. On April 22, 2004, MAJ Alvarez received an email from another DoD official that he forwarded to jalvarez@supreme-foodservice.com (R4, tab 698). Attached to the email were reports showing what DLA’s customers in Afghanistan were ordering, including the quantities (tr. 6/110-11). DLA did not share such information with contractors (tr. 6/110).

15. On May 7, 2004, MAJ Alvarez forwarded from his DLA email to his Supreme email “Week 17 Reports” from Bahrain Maritime & Mercantile International (BMMI) DLA’s prime vendor for Bahrain and Kandahar Air Base in Afghanistan (R4, tab 701; tr. 6/113). The reports included detailed information about what food items the base had ordered, the amounts billed by BMMI, and the entire catalog of items (and prices) that BMMI had in stock (tr. 6/113-17).

16. As a prime vendor, BMMI was a competitor to Supreme (tr. 6/117).

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