      In the United States Court of Federal Claims
                                    No. 15-78C
                       (Filed under seal February 24, 2015)
                           (Reissued February 27, 2015)
                            NOT FOR PUBLICATION


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FEDERAL ACQUISITION               *
SERVICES TEAM, LLC,               *
                                  *
           Plaintiff,             *
                                  *
      v.                          *
                                  *
THE UNITED STATES,                *
                                  *
           Defendant.             *
                                  *
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                                     ORDER

       The plaintiff, Federal Acquisition Services Team, LLC (FAST), has brought a
pre-award bid protest related to the U.S. Special Operations Command’s (SOCOM
or the agency) Solicitation No. H92222-14-R-0019 (the Solicitation) for acquisition,
procurement, and financial management support services. Compl. ¶ 1. A little
more than four and one-half hours before the deadline for submissions, FAST e-
mailed its proposal to SWMS@socom.mil, the address designated in the Solicitation.
See Admin. R. (AR) at 339, 620. The e-mail was rejected by SOCOM’s server
because it was found to exceed the size limit for messages. See id. at 626, 682.
After its post-deadline efforts to convince the agency to accept its proposal proved
fruitless, FAST filed a protest with the Government Accountability Office (GAO),
which was denied. Id. at 610–40, 755–58. The plaintiff then filed its case in our
court on January 27, 2015, alleging that the proposal was timely received by the
agency’s server and was improperly rejected although it complied with the size
requirements stated in the Solicitation. Compl. ¶¶ 9–10, 13, 25–26, 31–32. Other
offerors, FAST contends, had properly sized transmissions rejected, demonstrating
a problem with the government’s computer systems. Id. ¶¶ 33–34.
       Yesterday, the Court heard argument on FAST’s motion to supplement the
administrative record. As the Federal Circuit emphasized in Axiom Resource
Management, Inc. v. United States, 564 F.3d 1374 (Fed. Cir. 2009), in bid protests
the administrative record is supplemented only in rare cases in which it is
“necessary in order not ‘to frustrate effective judicial review.’” Id. at 1381 (quoting
Camp v. Pitts, 411 U.S. 138, 142–43 (1973)). Significantly, the administrative
record may be insufficient and supplementation warranted when it is missing
“relevant information that by its very nature would not be found in an agency
record --- such as evidence of bad faith, information relied upon but omitted from
the paper record, or the content of conversations.” Orion Int’l Techs. v. United
States, 60 Fed. Cl. 338, 343–44 (2004). As described below, the Court found limited
supplementation to be warranted.

       In its motion to supplement, FAST sought to add to the record materials it
submitted, and requested leave to conduct discovery. See Mot. to Supp. Admin. R.
(Pl.’s Mot.) at 7. Much of the plaintiff’s supplementation request had been rendered
moot, either because the administrative record already contained the material,
compare AR at 610–40 (GAO protest and attachments), with Supp. to Pl.’s Mot.,
ECF No. 14 (SAR), at 1–31 (same), or because the material was included in the
amendment to that record, see AR at 823–90. Remaining at issue were two
categories of requests. The plaintiff would like added to the record documents
concerning two SOCOM solicitations that are related to the one at issue in this
matter, Solicitation Nos. H92222-14-R-0020 and H92222-14-R-0021 (the SWMS
Group A and Group B Solicitations). Pl.’s Mot. at 10; SAR at 32–143. And FAST
requests permission to conduct discovery, in the form of requests for admission,
interrogatories, and the deposition of the contracting officer, Karen M. Stevens.
Pl.’s Mot. at 7, 13–16.

       Regarding the SWMS Group A and Group B Solicitations, the plaintiff has
submitted early drafts of the documents. See SAR at 32–143. In these documents,
as in the initial Solicitation for the SWMS Group C procurement that is the topic of
this lawsuit, see AR at 47, offerors were instructed to mail their proposals to the
contracting officer, see SAR at 79, 132. According to screen captures from the
FedBizOpps.gov website, the final solicitations were issued on December 5, 2014
(Group A) and October 27, 2014 (Group B), and changed the means of submission to
use of the aforementioned website. SAR at 145, 149–50. Offerors were also told
that the agency “is not responsible for technical difficulties associated with the
transmission of any electronic files to the website” and “encouraged to submit
proposals” early enough that confirmation of successful uploading may occur prior
to the deadline. Id. As the final solicitations and accompanying disclaimers were
issued after FAST filed its GAO protest, it contends these materials are probative of




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its claim that the agency’s server malfunction prevented its proposal from being
accepted. Pl.’s Mot. at 8–12. †

       In its opposition to the motion to supplement, the government argues that
“FedBizOpps had been tested and used successfully” by the time the other two
solicitations were issued, and that this and other reasons (not problems with the
mail server) were why the website was employed for proposal submissions. Def.’s
Opp’n at 9. This information apparently was supplied by the contracting officer, but
not submitted in evidentiary form.

       The plaintiff also requests discovery directed at the contracting officer, which
it argues is justified given alleged evidence of bad faith. Pl.’s Mot. at 7–8, 13–15.
Among other things, FAST notes that before the GAO the contracting officer only
acknowledged two offerors (other than the plaintiff) to have had proposal e-mails
rejected due to size, when at least one other (Res Rei Development, Inc.) had that
problem. Id. at 15. While it is not clear to the Court why, in the GAO proceeding,
the agency apparently only looked for e-mail rejections occurring on the last day for
submitting proposals, the Court is not persuaded that the contracting officer’s
statements are evidence of bad faith. Indeed, rather than being “conduct that is
hard to explain absent bad faith,” Beta Analytics Int’l, Inc. v. United States, 61 Fed.
Cl. 223, 226 (2004), it is hard to see how bad faith would lead a contracting officer to
discuss two offerors’ problems but hide those of a third. The plaintiff infers from an
e-mail exchange involving another bidder (V1 Analytical Solutions), contained in
the amended administrative record, see AR at 888–89, that this bidder might have
been allowed to use a means other than the SWMS e-mail address to submit its
proposal. But such suspicions do not constitute the sort of “hard facts” needed to
support discovery based on bias or bad faith. See InfoReliance Corp. v. United
States, 118 Fed. Cl. 744, 748 (2014).

       The Court, however, does conclude that this protest presents a question ---
whether a systemic problem with the agency’s server precluded properly sized
submissions from being accepted --- that by its nature will involve evidence beyond
what one would ordinarily find in an administrative record. The existing record,
containing computer print-outs concerning server activity, bears this out. See AR at
671–85. Under these circumstances, effective court review requires a slight
supplementation of the assembled record. As the use of the FedBizOpps website to
receive proposals could, if it indeed was substituted for the SWMS e-mail address,
be probative of the systemic problem alleged, the Court will add to the
administrative record the Group A and Group B documents submitted by the
plaintiff, SAR 32–157. And while the deposition of a contracting officer by oral
examination “is not lightly to be ordered” because it can be time-consuming and

† The plaintiff also contends that the SWMS@socom.mil electronic delivery address
was included at some point in the draft solicitations for Groups A and B. Pl.’s Mot.
at 10.
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disruptive of other duties, see Impresa Construzione Geom. Domenico Garufi v.
United States, 238 F.3d 1324, 1341 (Fed. Cir. 2001), the Court finds a limited
deposition of Ms. Stevens by written questions to be an appropriate means to fill
gaps in the record and thereby enable effective judicial review. In particular, the
genesis of the submission method employed in the Group A and Group B
Solicitations, and a clarification of the means of receiving the V1 Analytical
Solutions proposal, should be elicited. Accordingly, plaintiff’s motion is
GRANTED-IN-PART as described above, and DENIED-IN-PART to the extent a
deposition by oral examination and other discovery was requested.

        At the conclusion of yesterday’s argument, the Court gave FAST leave to file
a draft of written deposition questions for Ms. Stevens, for review and, if necessary,
modification. These were timely filed. See Proposed Interrogs., ECF No. 21. The
Court has reviewed the five questions submitted. The first one is approved, except
that in place of the request in subpart “a”, the contracting officer may identify the
proposal by referring to the appendix to her December 3, 2014 declaration, AR at
726. Questions two, three, and five are also approved. The contracting officer need
not answer question four. The government shall serve and file the contracting
officer’s answers to these written deposition questions on or by Wednesday,
February 25, 2015.


IT IS SO ORDERED.

                                        s/ Victor J. Wolski
                                        VICTOR J. WOLSKI
                                        Judge




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