GOVERNMENT CONTRACTING LAW

Similar documents
GOVERNMENT CONTRACTING LAW

GOVERNMENT CONTRACTING LAW

GOVERNMENT CONTRACTING LAW

GOVERNMENT CONTRACTING LAW

VOL. 5 NO. 2. gao recommends improvements to subcontracting under va s veterans First program Mitchell A. Bashur and Vijaya S.

GOVERNMENT CONTRACTING LAW

GOVERNMENT CONTRACTING LAW

GOVERNMENT CONTRACTING LAW

GOVERNMENT CONTRACTING LAW

GOVERNMENT CONTRACTING LAW

An A.S. PRATT PuBLICATION. vol. 4 no. 11. pratt s. Editor s Note: Supply Chain Integrity Victoria Prussen Spears. Fails to Satisfy Materiality

PRATT S ENERGY LAW REPORT

PRATT S ENERGY LAW REPORT

A POTENTIALLY MOMENTOUS DECISION: SECOND CIRCUIT EXPLAINS HOW TO CALCULATE CHAPTER 11 CRAMDOWN INTEREST RATE Stuart I. Gordon and Matthew V.

RESOLUTION POLICY FOR BANK-CENTRIC FIRMS: WHERE ARE WE AND WHERE ARE WE HEADED? Bimal Patel and Todd Arena

PRATT S ENERGY LAW REPORT

LexisNexis A.S. Pratt OCTOBER 2018

LANDMARK COURT OPINION INCREASES LIABILITY RISK PROFILE FOR GERMAN PORTFOLIO COMPANY MANAGEMENT Bernd Meyer-Löwy and Carl Pickerill

Privacy & Law. An A.S. Pratt Publication. vol. 3 no. 8. Editor s Note: Cybersecurity for Attorneys Victoria Prussen Spears

Energy Law. TRIBAL LANDS: THE NEXT SOLAR RUSH Tara S. Kaushik. EDITOR S NOTE Victoria Prussen Spears

Financial Fraud Law Report

SUPREME COURT REJECTS STRUCTURED DISMISSALS. NOW WHAT? Stuart I. Gordon and Matthew V. Spero

September 2018 VOL. 18-8

LEXISNEXIS A.S. PRATT JULY/AUGUST 2015

LEXISNEXIS A.S. PRATT SEPTEMBER 2016

Victoria Prussen Spears. Steven M. Wagner. Andrew V. Tenzer, Luc A. Despins, and Douglass Barron

RESOLUTION POLICY: WHERE ARE WE AND WHERE ARE WE HEADED? Bimal Patel and Todd Arena

Equipment Leases in Bankruptcy: A Plan for Riding Out the Storm James Heiser and Aaron M. Krieger

ENERGY LAW REPORT MAY 2018 VOL PRATT S

LEXISNEXIS A.S. PRATT SEPTEMBER 2016

Financial Fraud Law Report

REPORT PRATT S GOVERNMENT CONTRACTING LAW AN A.S. PRATT PUBLICATION APRIL 2018 VOL. 4 NO. 4. EDITOR S NOTE: SPLIT CIRCUITS Victoria Prussen Spears

DOES SILENCE MEAN CONSENT? SOME COURTS HAVE FOUND THAT IT DOES NOT (AT LEAST FOR PURPOSES OF SALES UNDER SECTION 363(f)) Debora Hoehne

PRIVACY & CYBERSECURITY LAW

VOLUME 3 NUMBER 6 JUNE 2011

Steven A. Meyerowitz. Byungkun Lim and Aaron J. Levy. Leo T. Crowley and Margot P. Erlich. Gregory G. Hesse and Matthew Mannering. Christopher Hopkins

Editor s Note: Bankruptcy in the Courts Steven A. Meyerowitz

Privacy & Law. An A.S. Pratt Publication. vol. 3 no. 8. Editor s Note: Cybersecurity for Attorneys Victoria Prussen Spears

ENTERPRISE RISK MANAGEMENT: WHERE IS LEGAL AND COMPLIANCE? Thomas C. Baxter, Jr., and Won B. Chai

PRATT S ENERGY LAW REPORT

PAYMENTS ON COMMERCIAL MORTGAGE-BACKED SECURITIES LOANS CANNOT BE AVOIDED IN BANKRUPTCY Jonathan M. Sykes and Correy Karbiener

SUPREME COURT REJECTS STRUCTURED DISMISSALS. NOW WHAT? Stuart I. Gordon and Matthew V. Spero

LexisNexis A.S. Pratt september 2014

VOLUME 7 NUMBER 3 APRIL TREATMENT OF MAKE-WHOLE AND NO-CALL PROVISIONS BY BANKRUPTCY COURTS David M. Hillman and Lawrence S.

Copyright 2013 Carolina Academic Press, LLC. All rights reserved. SKILLS AND VALUES: CONSTITUTIONAL LAW

UNDERSTANDING TRADEMARK LAW Second Edition

PRATT S ENERGY LAW REPORT

Copyright 2013 Carolina Academic Press, LLC. All rights reserved. LOST IN TRANSLATION: EFFECTIVE LEGAL WRITING FOR THE INTERNATIONAL LEGAL COMMUNITY

GOVERNMENT CONTRACTING LAW

Copyright 2013 Carolina Academic Press, LLC. All rights reserved. SKILLS & VALUES: CIVIL PROCEDURE

Volume 2 Number 8 September 2010

Copyright 2012 Carolina Academic Press, LLC. All rights reserved. PLAIN ENGLISH FOR DRAFTING STATUTES AND RULES

LEXISNEXIS A.S. PRATT OCTOBER 2016

Bryson on Virginia Civil Procedure

Government Contract. Andrews Litigation Reporter. Intellectual Property Rights In Government Contracting. Expert Analysis

RESOLUTION POLICY: WHERE ARE WE AND WHERE ARE WE HEADED? Bimal Patel and Todd Arena

THE ENFORCEMENT OF ARBITRATION AGREEMENTS IN BANKRUPTCY PROCEEDINGS Michael J. Lichtenstein and Sara A. Michaloski

DRAFTING AND ANALYZING CONTRACTS

Financial Fraud Law Report

INTERACTIVE CITATION WORKBOOK FOR THE BLUEBOOK: A UNIFORM SYSTEM OF CITATION. Washington

LOUISIANA LAW OF CONVENTIONAL OBLIGATIONS A PRÉCIS SECOND EDITION

An A.S. Pratt & Sons Publication June 2013

Domestic Sourcing Requirement Doesn t Fit DOD s Gloves

Financial Fraud Law Report

TERMS AND CONDITIONS FOR BANTU PRODUCTS AND SERVICES

The Professor s Forum: Making Sense of Complex Government Contracting Issues

ENERGY LAW REPORT MARCH 2016 VOL PRATT S. EDITOR S NOTE: DEVELOPMENTS Steven A. Meyerowitz

Financial Fraud Law Report

An A.S. Pratt PUBLICATION SEPTEMBER 2015

CROSS-BORDER RESOLUTION OF BANKING GROUPS: INTERNATIONAL INITIATIVES AND U.S. PERSPECTIVES PART V Paul L. Lee

2 C.F.R and 2 C.F.R. Part 200, Appendix II, Required Contract Clauses

2017 SERVANT OF JUSTICE AWARDS DINNER

R A I L FULL COURT PRESS. The Journal of Robotics, Artificial Intelligence & Law. Volume 1, No. 6 November December 2018

OFFEROR S ASSERTION OF COMMERCIALITY. Part No(s) and Description(s) Supplier s Name:


Administration (GSA), and National Aeronautics and Space. Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) to implement a section

LOBBYING DISCLOSURE ACT/EDITION II

Rogers Joseph O Donnell. Jeffery M. Chiow th Street, N.W., Ste. 725 Washington, D.C

Puzzles, games, and trivia for hours of presidential fun! Brian Thornton

Combating Trafficking in Persons (CTIPs) What Contractors Need to Know

LexisNexis Matthew Bender. LexisNexis Immigration Law Resources ORDER TODAY AND SAVE 20%!* lexisnexis.com/immigration

CUSTOMER CONTRACT REQUIREMENTS NSW IDIQ II - N D-0016

Public Purchasing and Contracting

Request for Vendor Contract Update

Melvin A. Brosterman, Charles F. Cerria, Harold A. Olsen, Mark A. Speiser, and Claude G. Szyfer

AMERICAN SOFTWARE, INC. (Exact Name of Registrant as Specified in Its Charter)

IDS Terms and Conditions Guide Effective: 10/21/2005 Page 1 of 6

Bid Protests. Presented By: Keith Romanowski, Watkins Meegan LLC Dan Herzfeld, Pillsbury

In re Altair Nanotechnologies Shareholder Derivative Litigation CASE NO.: 14-CV TPG-HBP

LAWS OF MARYLAND RELATING TO PUBLIC LIBRARIES

(Billing Code ) Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement: Acquisition. Acquisition Regulation Supplement (DFARS) to implement sections

EDGAR CERTIFICATIONS ADDENDUM FOR AGREEMENT FUNDED BY U.S. FEDERAL GRANT

IDS Terms and Conditions Guide Effective: 5/17/2007 Page 1of 10 CUSTOMER CONTRACT REQUIREMENTS Japan RSIP CUSTOMER CONTRACT F D-0016 DO 0050

Government Contract. Andrews Litigation Reporter. Federal Contracting Under the Government s New E-Verify Program. Expert Analysis

CUSTOMER CONTRACT REQUIREMENTS BLOCK III FY05 NONRECURRING ENGINEERING CUSTOMER CONTRACT W58RGZ-05-C-0001

Securities Dealer Licence. Application Form

INTERACTIVE CITATION WORKBOOK FOR THE BLUEBOOK: A UNIFORM SYSTEM OF CITATION. Illinois

SPECIAL CONDITIONS PROGRAM REGULATIONS

"FAR" means the Federal Acquisition Regulation, issued as Chapter 1 of Title 48, Code of Federal Regulations.

1. In these conditions ( these Conditions ) unless the context requires otherwise:

Transcription:

AN A.S. PRATT PUBLICATION NOVEMBER 2016 VOL. 2 NO. 11 PRATT S GOVERNMENT CONTRACTING LAW REPORT EDITOR S NOTE: NEVER A DULL MOMENT Victoria Prussen Spears AGENCIES PUBLISH STRICT NEW REPORTING GUIDELINES FOR GOVERNMENT CONTRACTORS Garen E. Dodge and Hilary A. Habib DOD FINAL RULE ADDRESSES SOURCE REQUIREMENTS AND COST RECOVERY FOR USE OF COUNTERFEIT ELECTRONIC PARTS Patrick Stanton and Susan B. Cassidy FIVE RECENT DEVELOPMENTS IN SMALL BUSINESS CONTRACTING SMALL AND LARGE GOVERNMENT CONTRACTORS SHOULD KNOW David T. Hickey, William Jack, Elizabeth C. Johnson, and Amba M. Datta THE CHANGING LANDSCAPE OF FCA LITIGATION FOR HEALTHCARE PROVIDERS DUE TO INCREASED CIVIL PENALTY AMOUNTS Mark A. Srere, Cliff Stricklin, Laura S. Perlov, and Alexis L. Kirkman HIPAA AUDIT CHECK-UP WHERE WE ARE AND WHAT S TO COME Adam H. Greene and Rebecca L. Williams IN THE COURTS Victoria Prussen Spears

PRATT S GOVERNMENT CONTRACTING LAW REPORT VOLUME 2 NUMBER 11 NOVEMBER 2016 Editor s Note: Never a Dull Moment Victoria Prussen Spears 375 Agencies Publish Strict New Reporting Guidelines for Government Contractors Garen E. Dodge and Hilary A. Habib 377 DoD Final Rule Addresses Source Requirements and Cost Recovery for Use of Counterfeit Electronic Parts Patrick Stanton and Susan B. Cassidy 381 Five Recent Developments in Small Business Contracting Small and Large Government Contractors Should Know David T. Hickey, William Jack, Elizabeth C. Johnson, and Amba M. Datta 384 The Changing Landscape of FCA Litigation for Healthcare Providers Due to Increased Civil Penalty Amounts Mark A. Srere, Cliff Stricklin, Laura S. Perlov, and Alexis L. Kirkman 392 HIPAA Audit Check-Up Where We Are and What s to Come Adam H. Greene and Rebecca L. Williams 395 In the Courts Victoria Prussen Spears 398

QUESTIONS ABOUT THIS PUBLICATION? For questions about the Editorial Content appearing in these volumes or reprint permission, please call: Heidi A. Litman at... 516-771-2169 Email:... heidi.a.litman@lexisnexis.com For assistance with replacement pages, shipments, billing or other customer service matters, please call: Customer Services Department at.......................... (800) 833-9844 Outside the United States and Canada, please call............... (518) 487-3000 Fax Number........................................ (518) 487-3584 Customer Service Web site................. http://www.lexisnexis.com/custserv/ For information on other Matthew Bender publications, please call Your account manager or............................... (800) 223-1940 Outside the United States and Canada, please call................ (518) 487-3000 Library of Congress Card Number: ISBN: 978-1-6328-2705-0 (print) Cite this publication as: [author name], [article title], [vol. no.] PRATT S GOVERNMENT CONTRACTING LAW REPORT [page number] (LexisNexis A.S. Pratt); Michelle E. Litteken, GAO Holds NASA Exceeded Its Discretion in Protest of FSS Task Order, 1 PRATT S GOVERNMENT CONTRACTING LAW REPORT 30 (LexisNexis A.S. Pratt) Because the section you are citing may be revised in a later release, you may wish to photocopy or print out the section for convenient future reference. This publication is sold with the understanding that the publisher is not engaged in rendering legal, accounting, or other professional services. If legal advice or other expert assistance is required, the services of a competent professional should be sought. LexisNexis and the Knowledge Burst logo are registered trademarks of Reed Elsevier Properties Inc., used under license. A.S. Pratt is a registered trademark of Reed Elsevier Properties SA, used under license. Copyright 2016 Reed Elsevier Properties SA, used under license by Matthew Bender & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. No copyright is claimed by LexisNexis, Matthew Bender & Company, Inc., or Reed Elsevier Properties SA, in the text of statutes, regulations, and excerpts from court opinions quoted within this work. Permission to copy material may be licensed for a fee from the Copyright Clearance Center, 222 Rosewood Drive, Danvers, Mass. 01923, telephone (978) 750-8400. An A.S. Pratt Publication Editorial Office 230 Park Ave., 7th Floor, New York, NY 10169 (800) 543-6862 www.lexisnexis.com (2016 Pub.4938)

Editor-in-Chief, Editor & Board of Editors EDITOR-IN-CHIEF STEVEN A. MEYEROWITZ President, Meyerowitz Communications Inc. EDITOR VICTORIA PRUSSEN SPEARS Senior Vice President, Meyerowitz Communications Inc. BOARD OF EDITORS MARY BETH BOSCO Partner, Holland & Knight LLP DARWIN A. HINDMAN III Shareholder, Baker, Donelson, Bearman, Caldwell & Berkowitz, PC J. ANDREW HOWARD Partner, Alston & Bird LLP KYLE R. JEFCOAT Counsel, Latham & Watkins LLP JOHN E. JENSEN Partner, Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman LLP DISMAS LOCARIA Partner, Venable LLP MARCIA G. MADSEN Partner, Mayer Brown LLP KEVIN P. MULLEN Partner, Jenner & Block VINCENT J. NAPOLEON Partner, Nixon Peabody LLP STUART W. TURNER Counsel, Arnold & Porter LLP WALTER A.I. WILSON Senior Partner, Polsinelli PC iii

PRATT S GOVERNMENT CONTRACTING LAW REPORT is published twelve times a year by Matthew Bender & Company, Inc. Copyright 2016 Reed Elsevier Properties SA., used under license by Matthew Bender & Company, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this journal may be reproduced in any form by microfilm, xerography, or otherwise or incorporated into any information retrieval system without the written permission of the copyright owner. For permission to photocopy or use material electronically from Pratt s Government Contracting Law Report, please access www.copyright.com or contact the Copyright Clearance Center, Inc. (CCC), 222 Rosewood Drive, Danvers, MA 01923, 978-750-8400. CCC is a not-for-profit organization that provides licenses and registration for a variety of users. For subscription information and customer service, call 1-800-833-9844. Direct any editorial inquires and send any material for publication to Steven A. Meyerowitz, Editor-in-Chief, Meyerowitz Communications Inc., 26910 Grand Central Parkway Suite 18R, Floral Park, New York 11005, smeyerowitz@meyerowitzcommunications.com, 718.224.2258. Material for publication is welcomed articles, decisions, or other items of interest to government contractors, attorneys and law firms, in-house counsel, government lawyers, and senior business executives. This publication is designed to be accurate and authoritative, but neither the publisher nor the authors are rendering legal, accounting, or other professional services in this publication. If legal or other expert advice is desired, retain the services of an appropriate professional. The articles and columns reflect only the present considerations and views of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of the firms or organizations with which they are affiliated, any of the former or present clients of the authors or their firms or organizations, or the editors or publisher. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Pratt s Government Contracting Law Report, LexisNexis Matthew Bender, 630 Central Avenue, New Providence, NJ 07974. iv

DOD FINAL RULE ADDRESSES COUNTERFEIT ELECTRONIC PARTS DoD Final Rule Addresses Source Requirements and Cost Recovery for Use of Counterfeit Electronic Parts By Patrick Stanton and Susan B. Cassidy * The Department of Defense has taken several steps recently, many of which have taken the form of new requirements on contractors, to protect against counterfeit electronic parts. The authors of this article discuss the steps and the compliance challenges. Supply chain protection has been a point of increasing emphasis by the government and especially the Department of Defense ( DoD ) in recent years. In no area is this truer than ensuring that government systems and equipment are free from counterfeit electronic parts, which can raise both security and defect concerns. DoD has accordingly taken several steps, many of which have taken the form of new requirements on contractors, to protect against counterfeit electronic parts. With these requirements has come added risk to contractors that even mistakenly use electronic parts in the goods they sell to DoD. However, an August 30, 2016, final Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement ( DFARS ) rule (implemented at DFARS 231.205-71) 1 seeks to mitigate some of this risk by allowing contractors to recover the cost of replacing counterfeit electronic parts, as long as the contractor has taken certain steps to prevent the use of such parts. Under the final rule, DoD contractors will now be able to recover the cost of counterfeit electronic parts and suspect counterfeit electronic parts, as well as the cost of rework and other corrective action necessary to address the use of counterfeit electronic parts in sales to DoD. Recovery is possible when a contractor meets three threshold requirements: 1. The contractor has implemented an operational system to detect and avoid counterfeit electronic parts and suspect counterfeit electronic parts; 2. The part in question is government furnished property or has been * Patrick Stanton is an associate at Covington & Burling LLP and a member of the firm s Government Contracts group advising clients on a variety of contracting and procurement issues. Susan B. Cassidy is a partner at the firm advising clients on the complex rules and regulations imposed on government contractors, with a special emphasis on the defense and intelligence sectors. The authors may be contacted at pstanton@cov.com and scassidy@cov.com, respectively. 1 https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/fr-2016-08-30/pdf/2016-20475.pdf. 381

GOVERNMENT CONTRACTING LAW REPORT purchased from an acceptable supplier under DFARS 252.246-7008; 2 and 3. The contractor reports the part to its contracting officer(s) and the Government Industry Data Exchange Program ( GIDEP ) within 60 days of becoming aware that the part is counterfeit or suspected counterfeit. Though seemingly straightforward in nature, these threshold requirements are significant. For example, in promulgating the original counterfeit electronic part rule in May 2014, DoD made clear that the responsibility for implementing an operational system to detect and avoid counterfeit electronic parts falls on the contractor who must establish[] a risk-based counterfeit detection and avoidance system that reflects its unique circumstances. As set out in DFARS 252.246-7007, 3 such systems must include, among other features, training, inspection and testing, risk-based processes that allow for electronic part tracking, reporting and quarantining mechanisms for counterfeit parts, and processes for keeping continually informed regarding current counterfeiting information. Even for the most sophisticated contractors these requirements impose a burden, and for smaller contractors and subcontractors such requirements may prove too tall a hurdle to pass. Second, whether a contractor s suppliers meet the criteria of DFARS 252.246-7008 is both a new and complex question. This clause has only been in existence since August 2, 2016, when DoD issued a final rule 4 creating the clause and making minor adjustments to DFARS 252.246-7007. The new clause applies to all contracts, even those at or below the simplified acquisition threshold and contracts for the acquisition of commercial items, including commercial off-the-shelf items, and also must be flowed down to all subcontractors (except those that are the original manufacturer). And under the clause, contractors must deploy a tiered approach to obtaining electronic parts, deploying different protections and using various types of dealers depending upon the availability of the part. 1. Tier One are parts that are in production from the original manufacturer and must be obtained either from that manufacturer, the manufacture s authorized suppliers, or suppliers that only obtain parts from original manufacturers or their suppliers. 2. Tier Two are parts that are no longer in production or available from 2 http://www.acq.osd.mil/dpap/dars/dfars/html/current/252246.htm#252.246-7008. 3 http://www.acq.osd.mil/dpap/dars/dfars/html/current/252246.htm#252.246-7007. 4 https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/fr-2016-08-02/pdf/2016-17956.pdf. 382

DOD FINAL RULE ADDRESSES COUNTERFEIT ELECTRONIC PARTS the stock of Tier One suppliers and must be obtained from contractorapproved suppliers, meaning suppliers the contractor has vetted using industry approved counterfeit prevention measures. 3. Tier Three are parts that cannot be obtained from Tier One and Tier Two sources. These parts can still be used, but only when the contractor notifies the contracting officer; is responsible for inspection, testing and authentication; and documents its inspection, testing and authentication for review by the government. While these requirements provide some guidance to contractors, many questions remain unanswered. For example, there is little guidance on what constitutes a contractor approved supplier beyond stating that such suppliers are determined trustworthy by a contractor. Similarly, what constitutes sufficient industry approved counterfeit prevention measures is unclear. And, the degree of effort a contractor must exert to ensure that a part is not available under Tier One or Tier Two before moving on to a lower tier supplier is not well defined. These types of questions make adherence to DFARS 252.246-7008 challenging and therefore could complicate the extent of protection provided by the new safe harbor rule. CONCLUSION Ultimately, the new safe harbor rule is a welcome protection for contractors that are facing the conflicting realities of a DoD customer that is increasingly sensitive to the use of counterfeit electronic parts and a supply chain that is ever more complex and difficult to monitor. However, the ability of contractors to actually meet the requirements for this protection remains to be seen and will likely take trial, error, and litigation to clarify over the coming years. 383