Hawaii Bribery Case Raises Risk for Defense Contractors and Pacific Innovation Projects


HAWAII — A federal bribery and fraud case tied to the U.S. Army’s Hawaii-Pacific Innovation Campus is drawing new attention to contractor oversight, procurement integrity, and the risks facing defense technology programs in the Pacific.

The case follows earlier reporting on Leonard Pick and Brian Kent, two Florida men charged in connection with an alleged scheme involving the construction and operation of the Army’s Hawaii-Pacific Innovation Campus in Honolulu. Federal prosecutors allege the project was affected by bribery, inflated contract costs, and efforts to steer work through corrupted procurement channels.

According to the Justice Department, Pick and Kent allegedly conspired to bribe a U.S. Army employee with approximately $1.25 million over five years. Prosecutors also allege contract costs were fraudulently inflated to conceal the bribe payments. Kent is separately accused of inflating costs to direct approximately $680,000 to his own consulting business.

Explore a world of contract job opportunities

Become part of the POC community and join members who are serious about opportunities, growth, networking, and staying informed.

Join the Community

Connect. Learn. Grow with the community.

The case has become more significant because the Hawaii-Pacific Innovation Campus was not a routine construction project. It was intended to support the testing, evaluation, and adoption of emerging defense technologies for the Department of War in the Pacific. That gives the case added weight at a time when the Indo-Pacific remains one of the most important regions for U.S. military modernization.

New reporting from Stars and Stripes adds more detail to the project’s role. The campus reportedly included the Pacific Innovation Center, also known as the Innovation Lab, which was designed as a centralized location where defense industry vendors could showcase and test new technologies for possible Department of War adoption.

The Pentagon reportedly spent at least $100 million on the campus. Army Pacific funded contractors and subcontractors for construction, establishment, and initial operations, with the lab expected to become self-funding once fully operational.

That structure matters for contractors. Innovation hubs, test centers, and technology campuses often bring together government officials, prime contractors, subcontractors, vendors, consultants, and technical teams. When oversight breaks down, the damage can move beyond one contract and affect trust in the larger procurement ecosystem.

“Defense innovation depends on trust, fair competition, and credible contractor performance. When alleged bribery and inflated costs enter a technology program, it does not only affect taxpayer dollars — it damages the legitimate companies trying to compete for work and support military modernization the right way.” — POC

The indictment also points to a broader federal focus on fraud and collusion within the Hawaii defense contracting industry. Investigators involved in the case include the Justice Department’s Antitrust Division, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Hawaii, the FBI, Army investigators, DCIS, GSA OIG, and NCIS.

For the contractor community, this case is a reminder that Pacific defense work is expanding, but so is scrutiny. Hawaii, Guam, Japan, the Philippines, and other Indo-Pacific locations remain central to U.S. military planning, logistics, infrastructure, and technology modernization. As more money moves into the region, competition and compliance standards will matter even more.

The defendants face charges including conspiracy, bribery, major fraud against the United States, and wire fraud. Kent faces an additional major fraud charge. Both defendants are presumed innocent unless proven guilty in court.

The broader takeaway is clear: defense contractors working in high-value Pacific programs should expect closer attention from federal investigators, especially where subcontracting, consulting relationships, technology demonstrations, and government approval authority overlap.

Share this post with someone