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						Amazon could challenge loss of $10 billion Pentagon 
						cloud deal as early as next week
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		 [October 29, 2019]  By 
		Nandita Bose 
 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - If Amazon.com 
		decides to fight the Pentagon's decision to award a highly contested $10 
		billion cloud computing contract to Microsoft, it could act as early as 
		next week.
 
 A challenge to the Defense Department's award announced Friday is widely 
		expected by legal experts, analysts and consultants, especially after 
		President Donald Trump publicly derided Amazon's bid for the high-stakes 
		contract.
 
 In July, Trump said the administration was reviewing Amazon's bid after 
		complaints from other companies. Before then, Amazon was widely 
		considered to be a front-runner. Trump has repeatedly taken swipes at 
		Amazon and its founder Jeff Bezos, who owns the Washington Post.
 
 For over a year, the acrimonious contract-award process for the Joint 
		Enterprise Defense Infrastructure (JEDI) contract, set off a showdown 
		among Amazon, Microsoft Corp, Oracle Corp and IBM Corp and involved 
		conflict of interest allegations, legal challenges and intense lobbying.
 
		
		 
		
 In a statement, Amazon Web Services said it was "surprised about this 
		conclusion." A person familiar with the matter told Reuters the company 
		is considering options for protesting the award. The company did not 
		respond to requests for comment on its next steps.
 
 Reuters spoke to several legal experts who said the company primarily 
		has two options. It could go to the U.S. Government Accountability 
		Office (GAO) - a legislative branch of the government that offers 
		auditing services, which could offer an immediate stay. Amazon could 
		also go to the U.S. Court of Federal Claims, which could allow it to 
		strengthen its case through discovery.
 
 Amazon has three calendar days to request a debriefing: a process in 
		which the government explains to Amazon why it was unsuccessful and 
		shares details on the evaluation process, said Michael Hordell, an 
		attorney who works with Barnes and Thornburg LLP.
 
 The debriefing could also get extended by a few days if the Defense 
		Department allows additional questions after offering an explanation - a 
		move the agency has allowed in the past, several attorneys said.
 
 After the Pentagon has answered Amazon's questions, the company has five 
		calendar days to file a "protest" with the GAO, Hordell said.
 
 If the company is not happy with the GAO's decision, Amazon could also 
		go to the United States Court of Federal Claims, the attorneys said. It 
		could even skip going to the GAO altogether, they said.
 
		
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			 Attendees at Amazon.com 
			Inc annual cloud computing conference walk past the Amazon Web 
			Services logo in Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S., November 30, 2017. 
			REUTERS/Salvador Rodriguez 
            
			 
Another option for Amazon is to file a protest with the Department of Defense, 
but all attorneys Reuters spoke to said that is highly unlikely.
 AN AUTOMATIC STAY
 
 If Amazon goes to the GAO, it can get an "automatic stay of performance," said 
Franklin Turner, an attorney with McCarter & English LLP.
 
 That gives the GAO 100 days to make a decision, Turner said.
 
If the company goes to the court, it does not get an automatic stay and has to 
file a preliminary injunction: an order that may be granted before or during 
trial, with the goal of preserving the status quo before final judgment.
 The court, on the other hand, allows for "discovery": a process which allows an 
aggrieved party to obtain evidence by requesting additional documents and 
depositions.
 
The direction of the company's legal fight could further be decided by a set of 
documents and evidence that the Defense Department will need to offer the 
company after Amazon files its protest.
 If Amazon does not receive all the documents and evidence it wants, the company 
could either file a supplemental protest at the GAO or could go to court, the 
attorneys said.
 
 Amazon is likely to fight the decision if only to show it is serious about its 
government contracting business, some of the attorneys and analysts said.
 
 Down the road, the company is likely to focus on winning cloud contracts from 
the Central Intelligence Agency, which is looking to ramp up its reliance on the 
cloud, with plans to solicit tens of billions of dollars of work from tech 
companies next year.
 
 Amazon already has a $600 million contract with the CIA.
 
 (Reporting by Nandita Bose in Washington; Editing by Chris Sanders and Lisa 
Shumaker)
 
				 
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