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USAID Fraud Case Proves Folly of Awarding Contracts to ‘Disadvantaged’ Contractors

Posted on Monday, June 30, 2025
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by Outside Contributor
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Want to know how American taxpayers were cheated out of more than half a billion dollars for more than a decade? Blame the inevitable corruption that flows from rewarding federal contracts, grants, and funds based on skin color rather than competence, efficiency, and optimum benefit to the public.

That’s the only conclusion one can draw from the guilty pleas of an official at the U.S. Agency for International Development — the agency liberals love — and three other corporate executives. In essence, the executives, who are Black, bribed a USAID contracting officer, Roderick Watson, who is also Black, to steer contracts their way through set-asides and sole-source contracts available to minority contractors (you know, “disadvantaged” contractors) without a competitive bidding process.

Mr. Watson received $1 million in cash, laptops, tickets to suites at NBA games, a country club wedding, a down payment on not one but two residential mortgages, cellphones, a vacation on Martha’s Vineyard, and jobs for his relatives. The bribes were often concealed through electronic bank transfers listing the government official on the contractors’ payrolls, using shell companies, and false invoices.

Shell companies? Gosh, did they receive advice from Hunter Biden? And did Mr. Watson say hello to President Obama when he was on Martha’s Vineyard?

The contractors who pleaded guilty include Walter Barnes of Potomac, Maryland, owner and president of PM Consulting Group LLC doing business as Vistant; Darryl Britt of Myakka City, Florida, owner and president of Apprio Inc.; and Paul Young of Columbia, Maryland, a subcontractor of Vistant and Apprio.

Messrs. Barnes and Britt got themselves certified as qualified small businesses under the U.S. Small Business Administration’s 8(a) contracting program. This program awards contracts to businesses owned at least 51% by “U.S. citizens who are socially and economically disadvantaged” and have personal net worth, gross income, and assets below specified dollar amounts.

“Socially and economically disadvantaged” is usually code for the color of the skin or gender of the business owner, and Messrs. Barnes, Britt, and Young took full advantage of that.

As the press release from the Maryland U.S. attorney’s office outlines, Mr. Watson sent contracts their way by “manipulating the procurement process at USAID” that took advantage of “non-competitive contract awards, disclosing sensitive procurement information … providing positive performance evaluations to a government agency, and approving decisions on the contracts, such as increased funding and a security clearance.”

The conspiracy among these fraudsters also demonstrates how easily minority contractors game the system. At first, Apprio was the prime contractor being awarded USAID contracts. After Apprio lost its qualification status under the 8(a) program, the conspirators made Vistant the prime contractor, and Apprio became the subcontractor so they could continue to steal federal funds based on their supposed “disadvantages.”

Of course, the only ones disadvantaged in the end were American taxpayers.

The contractors also used Mr. Watson to fraudulently obtain loans, credit agreements, and private equity investments, listing the USAID official as a reference for their “outstanding” performance as government contractors. Naturally, Mr. Watson neglected to inform anyone that he had been bribed into awarding those contracts and giving such an outstanding performance review.

That included a $14 million loan to Vistant, out of which Mr. Barnes paid himself a $10 million dividend. No, really: $10 million!

The bottom line is that this bribery and fraud scheme would not have happened if the federal government required all contracts to be awarded on a competitive basis and did not play favorites based on skin color, gender, or any other factor that has absolutely nothing to do with doing work for the government.

The federal government owes it to Americans to make efficient use of their hard-earned taxpayer dollars. No contracts of any kind should be awarded based on any condition other than being the best-qualified contractor capable of delivering the highest-quality products or services for the best possible price.

Period, end of story.

None of these individuals has been sentenced, so we don’t know how long they will spend in prison. The Justice Department has entered into “deferred prosecution agreements” with the two companies, Apprio and Vistant, for “cooperating in the investigation.” Apparently, they do not have the financial wherewithal to pay back the huge amount they stole from all of us. According to the Justice Department, both companies met the “burden of establishing an inability to pay the criminal penalty sought.”

Accordingly, there is a civil settlement in which Apprio will pay back $500,000 and Vistant will pay $100,000. That’s $550 million in illegally obtained government contracts versus a $600,000 payback.

Nice work if you can get it.

Hans von Spakovsky is a senior legal fellow in the Meese Center for Legal and Judicial Studies at The Heritage Foundation.

Reprinted with permission from The Washington Times by Hans von Spakovsky.

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of AMAC or AMAC Action.

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Leslie Jones
Leslie Jones
11 months ago

Give yourself $10 million and you are still “disadvantaged”?
This case stands out for its blatant fraud. Hopefully hundreds more will be revealed as the skin slowly peels off the USAID onion.
Meanwhile- seize everything they own, check all the accounts of friends and relatives and get our money back!

Jimmy P
Jimmy P
11 months ago

What a wretched hive of scum and villainy D.C. is.

anna hubert
anna hubert
11 months ago

Never mind half a billion in a decade, how about the billions over half a century that taxpayers were fleeced for , their families deprived as billions were poured into the sand. Who will answer for that?

kit
kit
11 months ago

merit only always

Stephen Russell
Stephen Russell
11 months ago

Change the system purge the system

Tina
Tina
11 months ago

I sure hope they go to prison at the very least and judgements have been recorded against them. Hope they had to sell their homes and everything they owned????????????

Smike
Smike
11 months ago

And the list goes on and on. It’s kind of like drugs, once you start it only get worse and it’s almost impossible to stop. And like our drug problem, we know what’s going on and we even know most of the players but we only do a show or two to make us gullible American tax payers think something is being done. We investigate and point fingers for years in court rooms and do nothing but pay judges and lawyers to dance around on social media. Some got caught off guard with the Doge investigations but it’s only a drop in the bucket. Very little has changed nor do I expect it to.

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