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COMMERCE BUSINESS DAILY ISSUE OF JULY 29,1997 PSA#1897Dept. of the Army, Directorate of Contracting, Attn: ATZS-DKO-I, P.O.
Box 12748,Fort Huachuca, AZ 85670-2748 A -- ADVANCED FORENSIC DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM SOL Oroad Agency
Announcement 96-05 POC Program Manager, Dean Fetteroff, (703)640-1445;
Contracting Officer, Patricaia Wozneck; Contract Specialist, Barbara
VanDoren(520) 538-0423 Broad Agency Announcement 96-05, for Innovative
Research and Development Projects in the Advanced Forensic Development
Program (AFDP). The Counterdrug Technology Assessment Center (CTAC) of
the Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) in cooperation with
the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) Laboratory is soliciting
white papers for innovative research and development projects in the
advanced forensic development program (AFDP). CTAC is the central drug
enforcement research and development organization of the United States
Government. The intent of the Broad Agency Announcement (BAA) is to
identify technologies to provide near and mid term solutions to enhance
the forensic capabilities of Federal, State, and local Law Enforcement
Agencies (LEA) in drug cases. The FBI Laboratory, the world leader in
forensic research and applications, is participating with CTAC to
provide this capability to the forensic community. In the United
States, a high percentage of all criminal cases involve the sale,
distribution or abuse of illegal drugs. The vast majority of forensic
laboratories have been established to provide forensic analysis of
evidentiary material. Therefore, little coordinated, prioritized, and
budgeted effort is spent on research and development. The goal of this
research and development (R&D) is to employ innovative technological
approaches to provide counterdrug enforcement and drug demand reduction
agencies with increased forensic capabilities toward the presentation
of reliable scientific evidence in courts of law under existing
operational constraints. Projects addressing collaborative partnerships
between forensic laboratories, universities, research institutes or
commercial firms are preferred. The BAA is focused on nine major
forensic disciplines: (1) Chemistry: Projects in this area should
include improved analytical methods for the positive identification,
quantitation, and characterization of illicit drug materials. (2)
Portable Instrumentation: This area will develop new non-destructive
inspection technologies applicable to crime scene investigations and
investigative support for the detection of trace physical evidence of
illegal drug materials on surfaces, or hidden in conveyances and false
compartments such as walls. Projects may also include substantive
improvements to existing inspection devices, intelligent prescreening
techniques, signal processing algorithms for detection enhancement, and
the fusing of multiple type sensors. (3) Biological and DNA: Projects
to be considered in this area would apply technologies to the
determination of source country or species identification of coca,
poppy, or marijuana plant material through DNA analysis. (4)
Toxicology: Projects to be considered should include technologies to
improve the speed, sensitivity, selectivity, size cost and simplicity
of current screening and confirmation procedures for the detection of
illegal drugs and their metabolites in biological fluids and
tissues.(5) Firearms/Toolmarks: (a) Projects to be considered favorably
would develop technological solutions and applications to an
interactive and automated database for comparison, correlation,
identification, and matching of firearms, cartridge cases, and bullets
to suspects and weapons in drug and violent crimes. (b) Other projects
to be considered include a measurement system for 3-D surface mapping
and comparison of recovered bullets with test firings from suspected
weapons. (6) Computers and Computational Research:Projects to be
considered should include methods for the analysis of computer data and
networks for patterns of criminal activity and the recovery and
presentation of erased, encrypted and compressed data. An additional
project to be considered would be to establish and or maintain a secure
dial up E-Mail server for forensic laboratories. Computer aided
presentation of complex evidence is desirable. (7) Document
Examination: Projects to be favorably considered should include
interactive neural networks and expert systems for handwriting
(signature) comparison and the automated comparison of shoeprint,
tiretread, watermarks and markings on drug packages. (8) Photographic
and Video Techniques: Projects to be considered should include advanced
spectroscopic video imaging techniques, video and audio noise
suppression, subtraction and enhancement and videographic presentation
of evidentiary material. (9) Fingerprint technology: Projects to be
considered should include latent fingerprint visualization on plastic
materials and tapes used for drug packaging and the study of the
spectroscopic properties and imaging of natural fingerprint residues.
White papers may be submitted any time prior to the closing date of
12/30/97 to the Technical Agent listed below. Submission procedures are
as follows: Ten (10) copies of all white papers shall be submitted and
must reference BAA #96-05. White papers must be UNCLASSIFIED. White
papers must be limited to 10 pages (including figures, charts, and
tables) on single-sided, double-spaced pages; font shall not be smaller
than 12 point; 1" margins left/right/top/bottom. White papers shall
contain a rough order of magnitude cost estimate. White papers must
clearly indicate the forensic discipline being addressed in order to
facilitate Government evaluation. White papers will not be returned.
Telephone inquiries concerning the status of white papers will not be
entertained. Following evaluation of the white papers, the Contracting
Officer reserves the right to request a full proposal from any, all,
part of, or none of the white papers. In the event a white paper is
considered favorably, the offeror will be invited to submit a proposal
within 45 calendar days of notification by the Contracting Officer.
Such notification will confirm that the offeror's white paper addresses
areas of interest and relevance to the AFDP and the offeror has a
reasonable chance for a competitive award based on CTAC's subsequent
evaluation of the offeror's proposal. Those offerors invited to submit
a proposal shall submit the proposal in two volumes as described
below, formatted (i.e. 8-1/2" X ll" pages, etc) in a manner identical
to that of the white papers described previously. Volume I shall be the
technical portion and shall include an Executive Summary, a Technical
Approach, descriptions of relevant prior work, a program plan outlining
the scope of the project, milestone charts, a facilities and equipment
description, and a management plan including a description of the
company's plans for counterdrug enforcement products, technology
products, substance abuse, and additional research applications. This
volume shall be limited to 50 pages including all figures, tables,
foldouts, and charts. All paragraphs containing proprietary information
must be clearly marked. Volume II shall contain all cost/price
information with supporting schedules in accordance with Appendix A of
the Proposer Information Pamphlet, entitled "Standard Form 1411
(SF1411), Contract Pricing Proposal CoverSheet". The breakdown shall
include materials, direct labor, indirect costs and other direct costs
such as special test equipment or travel. Offerors shall provide
exhibits as necessary to substantiate the cost elements. Ten (10)
copies of each proposal shall be submitted to the technical agent
listed below and must reference subject BAA. All submissions shall be
received within 45 calendar days of their request by the agency. White
papers and all proposals will be evaluated by a Proposal Review Board
of Federal, State, and local forensic laboratory personnel. Offerors
must include a statement authorizing review of the white paper and
proposals by the Federal. State, and local forensic laboratory
personnel. Both white papers and proposals will be evaluated with
respect to the following criteria in descending order of importance:
(1) Potential contribution of the effort to a forensic laboratory's
specific mission, including relevance and contribution to the national
technology base; (2) Overall scientific andtechnical merit of the
proposal including (a) an understanding of the technical problem and
its application to a specific forensic discipline. The offeror shall
demonstrate a solid understanding of the issues unique to the specific
discipline being proposed; (b) the soundness of the approach. The
offeror shall present sound reasons for the selection of the
application and a reasonable schedule for program execution; (c)
probability of success. The offeror shall establish a realistic
estimate for successful insertion of the proposed project into routine
laboratory efforts; (3) The offerors capabilities, related experience,
facilities, techniques, or unique combinations of these which are
integral factors for achieving the proposed objective; (4) The
qualifications, capabilities, and experience of the proposed principal
investigator, team member or key personnel who are critical to
achieving the proposed objectives; and (5) Realism of proposed cost.
Multiple awards by CTAC or its designated contracting agent may result
from this BAA. The number of proposals funded will depend upon the
technical merits of the proposals received and available funding. One
year to eighteen month baseline projects addressing collaborative
partnerships between forensic laboratories, universities, research
institutes or commercial firms are preferred; however, multi-year
development projects will be considered provided the offeror can
structure a baseline demonstration phase followed by phases to develop
fielded prototypes. Full cost estimates should be provided for the
baseline and any follow-on phases. The Government may negotiate the
complete effort including the phases, but will initially provide funds
only for the baseline project. Cost-plus type awards are anticipated.
Government laboratories are prohibited from direct competition. There
will be no formal Request for Proposals or other solicitation with
regard to this BAA nor does the issuance of the BAA obligate the
Government to fund any subsequently invited proposals nor pay any
proposal preparation costs. Although no portion of this announcement is
set-aside for Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU) or
Minority Institutions (MI) participation, proposals from all
responsible sources capable of satisfying the Governments needs may be
submitted and shall be considered. This notice constitutes a BAA as
authorized by FAR 6.102 (d) (2) (I). This BAA will remain open through
30 December 1997. (0206) Loren Data Corp. http://www.ld.com (SYN# 0019 19970729\A-0019.SOL)
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