The framework

The rules that applied. The questions the record raises.

Federal contracts create a chain of obligations that flow from the government through prime contractors to subcontractors and their agents. This page maps that chain for the contract at the centre of this investigation — identifying the regulations that applied at each level and the open questions those regulations create in the context of what the court record now shows.

This page presents the regulatory framework and the questions the public record raises. It does not assert legal conclusions — those belong to the court. Every citation is to a public document.

1. The contract chain

Four levels of obligation, flowing downward. Each level inherited the regulatory requirements of the level above it.

Level 1 — U.S. Government
GSA OASIS Unrestricted Pool 1

Contract GS00Q14OADU109. A professional services IDIQ vehicle awarded to Alion Science and Technology in September 2014. Inherited by HII Mission Technologies Corp. through its 2021 Alion acquisition. OASIS Pool 1 is scoped to professional services — not unmanned aircraft manufacturing or defense article production.

Source: GSA OASIS contract GS00Q14OADU109 · Task Order 47QFCA22F0037/TDL 1-023
Open question
OASIS Pool 1's scope is professional services. The Cyberlux subcontract was for the manufacture and delivery of 2,000 K8 unmanned aircraft systems. Whether this work fell within the scope of the OASIS vehicle is a question the record raises but does not resolve.
Level 2 — HII Mission Technologies Corp.
Prime contractor

HII held the OASIS task order and awarded Subcontract P000043846 to Cyberlux on August 29, 2023. As prime contractor, HII had oversight responsibilities for subcontractor compliance and was the sole point of contact with the government contracting officer throughout the contract period — including during the Modification 4 termination settlement in February 2025.

HII received the final government payment of $23,012,114.64 on July 15, 2025, bringing total received to $25,769,369.03. After deducting garnishments and $587,888.36 in attorneys' fees recouped under Mod. 4 § 7, HII deposited $23,736,937.56 with the EDVA court on March 6, 2026.

Source: Subcontract P000043846 (Aug 29, 2023) · HII Amended Complaint, EDVA Doc 41 · HII Motion for Deposit, EDVA Doc 144 (Feb 3, 2026)
Open question
HII was the contracting officer's sole information source for the FAR 49.108-3 review that produced Modification 4. FAR 49.108-3 requires the CO to determine that a subcontract settlement is "fair and reasonable" before approving it. Whether that review included the commission arrangements, the Legalist assignment, or the Stop Work Order non-compliance period is not addressed in the public record.
Level 3 — Cyberlux Corporation
Subcontractor

Firm Fixed Price subcontract at $78,857,414.20, with a $38,700,600 advance payment received September 8, 2023. Period of performance: August 29, 2023 to July 24, 2024. Stop Work Order issued December 22, 2023. Contract terminated for convenience May 17, 2024. By December 31, 2023 — nine days after the Stop Work Order — the advance account held $3,198,280.

Source: Subcontract P000043846 · Cyberlux FY2023 Annual Report (OTC Markets) · Stop Work Order (Dec 22, 2023)
Level 4 — Third-party arrangements
Commission intermediaries, secured lender, supplier

Four commission arrangements and one secured lending facility are documented in court filings, each with a claim against the interpleader pool. A trade creditor (Thin Air Gear) also holds a final judgment. The nature and regulatory status of each arrangement is documented in the sections below.

Source: EDVA interpleader filings, Case 3:25-cv-00483-JAG (2025–2026)

2. Key federal regulations — what they required

The following provisions applied to this contract at the time of award.

FAR 32.402(b)
FAR 32.409-3
Advance Payment — Segregated Account
Required
Advance payments must be deposited into and disbursed from a special account maintained separately from the contractor's general operating funds — to ensure advance payments are used only for contract purposes and remain auditable as government funds.
What the record shows
The $38,700,600 advance was deposited into the Cyberlux Main Operating Account — a general operating account with a prior balance of $2,297.01. No segregated advance payment account is identified in any public filing. An allegation in a pending federal proceeding states that HII approved a waiver that deleted contractual language identifying the advance as Government property held in trust, contrary to FAR 32.402(b). That allegation has not been adjudicated.
Mod. 4 § 9
FAR 52.203-19
Communications Blackout
What § 9 says verbatim
"Cyberlux shall not communicate with the U.S. Navy or the General Services Administration regarding the performance or termination of the Subcontract. HII shall be the sole point of contact for such communications with the U.S. Navy or the General Services Administration, including but not limited to communications regarding the Government Contracting Officer's review of the Agreement." This provision was in force during the FAR 49.108-3 CO approval process.
The structural problem
FAR 49.108-3 requires the CO to independently determine that a subcontract settlement is fair and reasonable — a determination that depends on the CO having accurate information. Section 9 was operative during that review. HII — which drafted § 9, held a financial interest in minimising the settlement amount, and was entitled to recoup legal fees under § 7 — was simultaneously the sole information source to the CO. Cyberlux, the party with direct knowledge of the commission arrangements, the Legalist assignment, the SWO compliance period, and the advance account, was contractually prohibited from communicating with the government about any of it. FAR 52.203-19 prohibits contractors from implementing policies that restrict disclosures to federal oversight officials. Whether § 9 constitutes such a restriction is a question the record raises.
FAR 52.203-5
Covenant Against Contingent Fees
Required
The contractor must warrant that no person or agency has been employed or retained to solicit or obtain the contract on a contingent fee basis, except for bona fide employees or commercial selling agencies. Violation is grounds for annulment of the contract or deduction of fees from the contract price.
What the record shows
Four parties — ARG Group (20%), Montague Capital Partners (~5%), WeShield, and Fairwinds Technologies (8%) — have filed claims totalling approximately $22.5M on the basis of contingent fee arrangements tied to the contract proceeds. Whether these arrangements were disclosed to and accepted by the government before contract award is a question the public record does not address.
ITAR Part 130
22 C.F.R. § 130.9
Political Contributions, Fees and Commissions
Required
For sales of defense articles and services valued above $500,000, ITAR Part 130 requires disclosure to the State Department of fees and commissions paid or offered to any person in connection with the sale. The K8 UAS are defense articles under the USML.
What the record shows
The subcontract was $78.8M for defense articles. Court filings document four commission arrangements. Whether any required State Department disclosures were made is not addressed in any document available in the public record.
FAR 32.802
31 U.S.C. § 3727
Assignment of Claims Act
Required
Assignment of a federal contract or claim requires written notice to the contracting officer and disbursing officer, an instrument of assignment, and acknowledgment by the contracting officer. The Act protects the government from assignments it has not consented to or recognised.
What the record shows
Legalist SPV III's Financing Agreement Exhibit C states: "The parties confirm that this instrument is intended to function as an 'instrument of assignment' within the meaning of 48 CFR § 32.805." UCC-1 financing statements were filed April 1, 2024 — 97 days after the Stop Work Order. Whether the procedural requirements of the Assignment of Claims Act were satisfied is before the court in the interpleader proceeding.
FAR 49.108-3
Termination Settlement — CO Review
Required
FAR 49.108-3 requires the contracting officer to review and approve subcontract termination settlements to determine they are "fair and reasonable." Upon termination for convenience, FAR 52.249-6(c) provides that title to work performed and materials acquired passes to the government.
What the record shows
Modification 4 — the termination settlement — was executed February 26, 2025, nine months after contract termination, subject to government contracting officer approval. HII was the CO's primary source of information for that review. Whether the CO's review encompassed the commission arrangements, the Legalist assignment, and post-SWO cost incurrence is not addressed in the public record.
Subcontract § 27
Anti-Assignment Clause
Required
Section 27 of the HII–Cyberlux subcontract prohibited Cyberlux from assigning any rights or interests without prior written consent of HII. Assignment without the required consent is void.
What the record shows
Legalist's UCC-1 statements were filed April 1, 2024 — approximately four months after the Stop Work Order. Whether the written consent required by § 27 was obtained from HII before the Legalist assignment was executed is a threshold question before the court in the priority dispute.
Legalist FA § 17
Consent to Settle
Required
Section 17 of the Legalist Financing Agreement required Cyberlux to obtain Legalist's prior written consent before settling any Eligible Purchase Order. Modification 4 is precisely such a settlement.
What the record shows
No Legalist consent to Modification 4 appears in any public filing. Legalist's own contract language required that consent. If Cyberlux settled without it, the enforceability of Legalist's claim against Mod. 4 proceeds — irrespective of its security interest priority — is a live legal question.

3. Third-party arrangements — regulatory analysis by party

ARG Group, LLC
Commission intermediary
$14,118,618.61+
20% profit-sharing / distribution agreement on contract proceeds. ARG claims an equitable lien and constructive trust with a priority date of February 28, 2022 — predating all other claimants. ARG's summary judgment brief (EDVA Doc 165, Apr 15, 2026) argues priority over all parties including Legalist.
Regulatory questions
  • FAR 52.203-5: Was this contingent arrangement disclosed to the government before contract award?
  • ITAR Part 130: Was the arrangement disclosed to the State Department?
ARG summary judgment brief, EDVA Doc 165 (Apr 15, 2026)
Legalist SPV III, LP
Secured lender
$11,944,795.52+
Amended and Restated Government Purchase Order Financing Agreement, dated March 27, 2024 — 97 days after the Stop Work Order. Up to $7,000,000 revolving facility against the HII subcontract as primary collateral. Default rate 19.25% per annum. UCC-1 filings in North Carolina and California, April 1, 2024.
Legal and contractual questions
  • Assignment of Claims Act: Were the required procedural steps — including contracting officer acknowledgment — completed?
  • Subcontract § 27: Was HII's written consent obtained before or at closing?
  • FA § 9.1: Was the SWO-frozen subcontract eligible collateral at closing?
  • FA § 17: Was Legalist's prior written consent obtained before Cyberlux executed Modification 4?
  • FA § 18(b): Cyberlux warranted the subcontract was "genuine, bona fide, and collectable." The subcontract had been frozen for 97 days at the date of that warranty.
Legalist Financing Agreement, EDVA Doc 89-1 · UCC-1 filings, NC and CA (Apr 1, 2024)
WeShield (Assure Global LLC)
Commission intermediary + secured lender (two distinct claims)
$2,500,000+
WeShield holds two legally distinct claims. First: a commission claim under the July 12, 2022 Letter Agreement. Second: a secured lender claim under a Security Agreement executed in September 2025 — after Modification 4, after contract termination, and after the interpleader was filed.
Regulatory questions
  • FAR 52.203-5 / ITAR Part 130: Was the July 2022 commission arrangement disclosed before contract award?
  • Security Agreement validity: Can a security interest created in September 2025 attach to funds arising from a contract terminated in May 2024?
WeShield motion, EDVA Doc 54 (Aug 6, 2025) · WeShield Joint Notice, EDVA Doc 110 (Oct 30, 2025)
Fairwinds Technologies LLC
Commission intermediary
$2,348,542.00
8% contingent fee on the first 1,000 drones delivered under the subcontract. The fee amount was personally calculated by Mark Schmidt, per the intervention motion.
Regulatory questions
  • FAR 52.203-5: Was this contingent arrangement disclosed before contract award?
  • ITAR Part 130: Was the arrangement disclosed to the State Department?
Fairwinds intervention motion, EDVA Doc 70 (Aug 20, 2025)
Montague Capital Partners, LLC
Commission intermediary
~$3,500,000
Approximately 5% broker / intermediary fee, documented in Signal chat records and in Montague's state court proceeding. Montague has not actively pursued its claim in the federal interpleader.
Regulatory questions
  • FAR 52.203-5: Was this contingent arrangement disclosed before contract award?
  • ITAR Part 130: Was the arrangement disclosed to the State Department?
Montague Capital Partners v Cyberlux, SDTX 4:25-cv-00626 (June 23, 2025) · Schmidt Signal chat records
Thin Air Gear, LLC (TAG)
Trade creditor — final judgment
$1,385,489.46
Manufactured 1,722 wheeled drone kit bags for Cyberlux / Catalyst Machineworks. Final judgment from the U.S. District Court for the District of Colorado ($1,224,275.14), plus pre- and post-judgment interest at 8% through April 15, 2026 ($161,214.32). TAG is the only claimant with a final, certified federal court judgment.
Status
TAG's summary judgment brief (EDVA Doc 165, Apr 15, 2026) argues its equitable lien and constructive trust, with a priority date of September 5, 2023, places it ahead of Legalist, WeShield, Fairwinds, and the commission intermediaries.
TAG summary judgment brief, EDVA Doc 165 (Apr 15, 2026) · Colorado judgment (Aug 29, 2025)