Exclusion sparks protest over $2.25B contract

Gettyimages.com / MirageC

The Defense Counterintelligence and Security Agency eliminated one incumbent from a background investigation support program.

The U.S. Defense Counterintelligence and Security Agency currently has three companies providing services to support background investigations of those seeking to obtain government clearances.

But when it came time to issue the new contracts, DSCA whittled the field to a pair of companies and left an incumbent out in the cold.

Two identical solicitations and $2.25 billion awards went to incumbents CACI International and Peraton.

DCSA excluded Paragon Systems from the competition, which left it almost no choice but to file a bid protest.

Paragon, part of the Sweden-headquartered company Securitas, is arguing the agency's decision to exclude the company's bid was improper.

The company claims DCSA unreasonably evaluated its proposal and didn’t hold meaningful discussions.

A Government Accountability Office decision is due Nov. 2.

Deltek data shows how the contract has been lucrative for all three incumbents. Peraton leads the way with $695 million in task orders since 2019. CACI has received $613 million in orders, followed by Paragon at $283.1 million.

Companies provide support fieldwork investigations that include supplying investigators. Under the new contracts, the primes will support DCSA's transition to a new case processing system.

One goal for the government is a consistent quality to the investigations and meeting timeliness mandates.