U.S. judge puts Amazon challenge to Pentagon JEDI contract on hold
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[April 18, 2020]
By David Shepardson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A U.S. judge on
Friday put on hold a suit by Amazon.com Inc <AMZN.O> challenging the
Pentagon's decision to award a $10 billion contract to Microsoft Corp <MSFT.O>.
Judge Patricia E. Campbell-Smith granted the Pentagon's request to halt
further action on the lawsuit to allow the military to reconsider
aspects of the decision being challenged by Amazon, originally
considered to be the favorite to win the award. She ordered the case to
remain on hold until August 17, but said it could be extended or
shortened depending on the length of the review.
Known as Joint Enterprise Defense Infrastructure, or JEDI, the cloud
computing contract is intended to give the militarybetter access to data
and technology from remote locations.
The Amazon lawsuit, filed in November, said the Defense Department’s
decision was full of "egregious errors,” which were a result of
"improper pressure from President Donald Trump, who launched repeated
public and behind-the-scenes attacks” to steer the contract away from
Amazon “to harm his perceived political enemy”, Amazon head Jeff Bezos.
Trump has publicly derided Bezos and accused the Washington Post
newspaper, owned by Bezos, of unfair coverage.
Campbell-Smith released an opinion on March 7 that said Amazon was
likely to succeed on a key argument of its challenge, namely "the merits
of its argument that the DOD improperly evaluated" Microsoft's data
storage in one price scenario. She said Amazon is likely to show that
Microsoft's scenario was not "technically feasible" as the Pentagon
assessed.
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A 3D printed Amazon postal package is placed on a keyboard in this
illustration taken March 25, 2020. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic
The opinion did not mention Trump or address Amazon's claims of
improper influence.
The Pentagon had said it would reconsider its evaluation of the
technical aspects of the scenario cited by the judge if she sent the
contract back to the military for further review. The Pentagon added
that would give it the "opportunity to reconsider the award decision
at issue in light of (Amazon's) allegations."
Amazon did not immediately comment on Friday.
Defense Secretary Mark Esper has rejected that there was bias and
said the Pentagon made its choice fairly and freely without external
influence.
The Pentagon's inspector general on Wednesday said it could not
determine whether the White House influenced the award after senior
Defense Department officials asserted a "presidentialcommunications
privilege."
(Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Sonya Hepinstall)
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