DOJ Drops Hammer: Fed Contractor Exec Criminally Charged for Faking Cyber Compliance
The U.S. Department of Justice just indicted a senior manager at a federal cloud computing contractor for straight-up lying about her company’s cybersecurity setup to snag massive government deals. This December 10 bombshell marks a sharp escalation in DOJ’s crackdown on cyber slop in the contractor world.
Digging into the meat: This exec allegedly fed auditors and officials bogus info on her firm’s cloud platform, claiming it met tough FedRAMP and DoD Risk Management Framework (RMF) standards when it straight-up didn’t. We’re talking hundreds of millions in contracts across agencies, all greenlit on these misrepresentations—she ignored internal warnings and third-party red flags to keep the cash flowing. No specific CVE here, but it’s classic fraud via fake security controls.
Why should you, the dev, give a damn? If your shop touches federal work—even as a subcontractor—this is your wake-up call. DOJ’s not just slapping wrists with False Claims Act fines anymore; they’re gunning for prison time on individuals who greenlight BS cyber claims. Your code, your commits, your attestations could land you or your boss in the crosshairs if compliance is lip service. Time to audit your own stack hard.
Bottom line: Federal contractors, lock down those internal controls, escalate shady statements, and verify every rep to Uncle Sam. DOJ’s on a tear—don’t be the next poster child.

