DHS Watchdog Probes Noem‑Era Contracting and Lewandowski’s Vendor Contacts
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An expansive investigation by the Department of Homeland Security’s inspector general is scrutinizing how contracts were handled under former DHS Secretary Kristi Noem, with a particular focus on senior adviser Corey Lewandowski’s interactions with companies seeking federal business, according to multiple people familiar with the probe. The inquiry appears to center on whether Lewandowski’s access and political ties influenced procurement decisions or created improper pressure on DHS officials and vendors during Noem’s tenure. While details of specific contracts under review have not been publicly disclosed, the fact that the IG has opened such a wide‑ranging case signals serious concern inside the department about potential favoritism or abuse in awarding taxpayer‑funded work. Ethics and watchdog circles online are already drawing parallels to past influence‑peddling scandals and warning that, in wartime and amid a partial DHS shutdown, steering contracts to politically connected firms could carry both financial and national‑security costs. The investigation’s findings could fuel broader fights in Congress over Trump‑era DHS governance and the role of campaign operatives inside federal agencies.