ORDER
In this post-award bid protest action, plaintiff, on March 16, 2009, moved to supplement the administrative record and conduct discovery. It sought to include four documents (or categories thereof) in the record: (i) the source selection decision in another solicitation claimed to be “identical” to the solicitation in question; (ii) an affidavit by NEQ’s vice president of operations, providing information designed to rebut the agency’s view of its needs; (iii) all written communications between the contracting officer and the technical evaluation panel relating to the agency’s corrective action in response to NEQ’s Government Accountability Office protest; and (iv) all written communications between the agency and the awardee during the period between August 22, 2008,
On March 20, 2009, the court ordered defendant to file the aforementioned electronic messages. In that same order, it denied the remainder of plaintiffs motion. The court indicated that an explanation of its ruling would be forthcoming. This, of course, is that explanation.
The court views adding the two electronic messages in question as not supplementing the administrative record, per se, but merely as ensuring the completeness of the record. See RCFC App. C ¶ 22. This is particularly so as the messages in question were before the agency when it rendered its award decision.
Plaintiffs remaining requests, however, seek to supplement the record with materials that were not considered by the agency in rendering its substantive award decision herein. In seeking the inclusion of those materials, plaintiff invokes several opinions that seem to relax unduly the standard for supplementing the record — so much so, if the court reads them correctly, as to “risk[] converting arbitrary and capricious review into a subtle form of de novo review.” ARINC Eng’g Servs., LLC v. United States,
Nor does Impresa Construzioni Geom. Domenico Garufi v. United States,
There are other sound reasons for denying certain of plaintiffs requests. In particular, the court sees no reason to open this record to source selection information taken from another solicitation, no matter how comparable. The court cannot perceive how such information could be relevant in determining whether the decision here was arbitrary and capricious, as other courts have held. See SDS Int’l v. United States,
These were the reasons that prompted this court to render its March 20, 2009, order, granting, in part, and denying, in part, plaintiffs motion.
Notes
. The Supreme Court has repeatedly made clear that "the focal point for judicial review [in cases governed by the APA] should be the administrative record already in existence, not some new record made initially in the reviewing court.” Camp v. Pitts,
Recently, the Federal Circuit echoed similar sentiments in emphasizing the limited nature of the record review in bid protest cases. See Bannum, Inc. v. United States,
. In concluding that this requirement was satisfied in Impresa, the Federal Circuit noted that the contracting officer’s responsibility determination was contradicted by court documents already in the record that suggested that the company in question ”lack[ed] a satisfactory record of business ethics” because of apparent ties to organized crime.
