SAIC faces challenge in False Claims defense
SAIC claims the lawsuit is false, but one expert says that the company is playing a game of chicken with the Justice Department.
Science Applications International Corp. could face a real challenge in fighting federal bid rigging allegations, according to a legal watchdog firm.
The Justice Department announced on July 2 that it was joining a whistleblower’s False Claims Act lawsuit against SAIC regarding a 2004 contract worth up to $3.2 billion, which the General Services Administration had awarded to the contractor. The lawsuit claims that SAIC engaged in a scheme to bias the contract in its favor.
Under the False Claims Act, a private party can file an action on behalf of the United States and receive a portion of the amount recovered. The Justice Department typically joins fewer than 100 cases annually out of about 350 False Claims Act cases filed, said Patrick Burns, a spokesman for Taxpayers Against Fraud, a watchdog group.
“For the Justice Department to take on a case like this is rare,” Burns said. “SAIC needs to settle this. They are playing a game of chicken with the Justice Department, and if they foolishly decide to go to a jury, good luck with that.”
An SAIC spokeswoman said the company is cooperating and the allegations are false. “We believe the government’s legal claims are without merit and we intend to vigorously defend against them,” Melissa Koskovich said in an e-mailed statement on July 7.
The lawsuit alleges that SAIC, its subcontractor Applied Enterprise Solutions and the chief executive of that company; along with two Naval officials, all conspired to rig the contract selection in favor of SAIC. The contract pertained to work for a Navy facility in Mississippi in 2004.
The case was filed by whistleblower David Magee, a former employee at the facility.
Another watchdog group, the Project on Government Oversight, said SAIC apparently was investigated for similar accusations in the past on a different contract. The group made that claim in a blog entry posted on July 7.
POGO reviewed documents through a Freedom of Information Act regarding an Energy Department investigation into SAIC contract activities starting in 2001. The case involved possible violations in a $90 million SAIC contract to provide IT services to an Energy Department facility in Washington State.
“The five-year investigation resulted in no punishment to SAIC, although the company probably dodged a bullet,” POGO said.
SAIC said it did nothing wrong in that case, either. “The record shows that this matter was thoroughly investigated by the government and that no action against SAIC was taken. That outcome speaks for itself,” Koskovich said.