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CNBC: House Panels Probing Contract Awarded to Perelman-Affiliated Company
Washington,
June 14, 2011
Two Congressional committees are investigating how a company affiliated with financier Ron Perelman won a massive federal contract for smallpox antiviral medicine, CNBC has learned. At issue is whether or not Perelman’s Democratic political connections helped a company he holds a significant stake in secure a contract potentially worth billions of dollars. Capitol Hill’s top investigator, Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Calif.), said he wants documents from the White House and the Department of Health and Human Services relating to the award of a no-bid contract worth up to $2.8 billion, and he is demanding to know what the White House’s role was, if any, in prodding the HHS to sign off on the enormous pharmaceutical deal. One person familiar with the situation said he’s worried the company’s Democratic political connections could have improperly affected the deal. SIGA is well connected politically: Andy Stern, one of the United States’ top labor leaders and a close ally of the Obama White House, sits on SIGA’s board, along with Frances Fragos Townsend, the former Homeland Security Advisor to President George W. Bush. “The procurement began as a small business set-aside, and the Department received offers from at least two small business firms,” they wrote. “However, when SIGA was determined to not be a small business and therefore ineligible for the award under the terms of the solicitation, the Department chose to forego competition altogether, cancel the solicitation, and direct a sole source award to SIGA.” A spokesman for HHS said that no one from the White House communicated with HHS about the SIGA contract, and no one at the department discussed the contract with Andy Stern. “SIGA has at all times proceeded in compliance with all applicable contracting rules," said Christine Taylor, senior vice president of corporate communications at MacAndrews & Forbes. Two days later, however, the company announced a competing developer of antiviral medicines, Chimerix, Inc., had filed a protest with the Government Accountability Office that the contract was awarded improperly. |