SBA revokes USAID’s 8(a) contracting authority in wake of bribery scandal
Originally published in Washington Technology on July 31, 2025
In the wake of guilty pleas by three contractors and a former government contracting officer for a bribery scheme at the U.S. Agency for International Development, the Small Business Administration has revoked USAID’s 8(a) contracting authority.
These four individuals all pled guilty in June for their roles in the scheme:
Walter Barnes, the former owner of PM Consulting Group, which did business as Vistant
Darryl Britt, former owner of Apprio
Paul Young, former president of a subcontractor to Apprio and Vistant
Roderick Watson, former contracting officer at USAID
Britt and Barnes paid bribes to Watson to influence contract awards to their companies, while Young helped to conceal the payments. Their scheme involved $550 million in contract awards.
Following their pleas, SBA on Wednesday said USAID could no longer award 8(a) contracts on its own.
SBA announced an audit of the 8(a) program in late June after the guilty pleas.
Awards are continuing to be made under USAID even though the agency has been absorbed into the State Department, according to analysis by TechnoMile.
“This announcement effectively ensures no set-asides will be issued by USAID without outside scrutiny,” Kevin Brancato, senior vice president of product strategy at TechnoMile, told Washington Technology.