Defense Secretary and 2019 Wash100 awardee Mark Esper has recused himself from a review of the Pentagons potential 10-year, $10B Joint Enterprise Defense Infrastructure cloud computing contract to avoid any issue of a conflict of interest.
Jonathan Rath Hoffman, a spokesperson for the Defense Department, said in a statement published Tuesday Esper has withdrawn himself from taking part in any decision making because of his sons employment with one of the first bidders.
A spokesperson for IBM (NYSE: IBM) said Espers son has been working since February at IBMs services business as a digital strategy consultant and his position is not associated with the firms pursuit of the single-award cloud contract, according to a report by the Wall Street Journal.
Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) and Amazon (Nasdaq: AMZN) emerged as final competitors for the JEDI contract in April after DoD ruled out bids from IBM and Oracle (NYSE: ORCL).
Hoffman said Esper has assigned David Norquist, deputy defense secretary and fellow Wash100 winner, to oversee the decision-making process for the JEDI cloud contract “out of an abundance of caution to avoid any concerns regarding his impartiality.”
In August, the Pentagons office of inspector general formed a team of auditors to review the departments handling of the JEDI cloud acquisition effort.