Stephanie L. Crawford
Overview
Stephanie Crawford is a trusted counselor to a broad range of industries facing reorganizations, transactions, national security issues, and questions of supply chain management. Stephanie provides related mergers and acquisitions, counseling, litigation, international arbitration, and investigations services to clients in the aerospace and defense, communications, energy, information technology, and consumer products sectors.
Career & Education
- Indiana University of Pennsylvania, Robert E. Cook Honors College, B.A., economics, international studies, and history, 2011
- University of Maryland School of Law, J.D., 2016
- District of Columbia
- Maryland
- U.S. Court of Federal Claims
- U.S. Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims
Stephanie's Insights
Client Alert | 2 min read | 06.21.24
DoD Expands Restrictions on Supply Chain for Certain Magnets, Tantalum, and Tungsten
On May 30, 2024, the Department of Defense (DoD) issued a final rule implementing Section 844 of the Fiscal Year (FY) 2021 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) and Section 854 of the FY 2024 NDAA by amending DFARS 225.7018-2 and accompanying DFARS clause 252.225-7052, which restrict DoD from acquiring certain metals and magnets from “covered countries” of Iran, North Korea, Russia, and China, to prohibit even earlier inputs in the supply chain from occurring in these countries. Despite comments discussing the infancy of the domestic market for many “covered materials”—defined as samarium-cobalt magnets, tantalum metals and alloys, tungsten metal powder, and tungsten heavy alloy or any finished or semi-finished component containing tungsten heavy alloy—the final rule expands the restrictions on sourcing covered materials from covered countries. Currently, the rule requires that covered materials not be melted or produced in covered countries but, effective January 1, 2027, the updated rule prohibits covered materials being mined, refined, separated, melted or produced in one of the covered countries. The expansion of the focus of the prohibition all the way back to where these materials were mined is consistent with the U.S. government’s effort to develop the domestic industrial base for and encourage on-shoring of critical minerals, magnets, and metals.
Client Alert | 4 min read | 06.06.24
Client Alert | 5 min read | 05.08.24
Representative Matters
- Leading buy-side government contractor acquisition diligence for private equity firms, including small businesses and carve-out acquisitions.
- Supporting sell-side government contractor transactions, including complex carve-out transactions.
- Representing a defense contractor in litigation and international arbitration facing a challenge to an offset contract relationship, including tortious interference claims.
- Conducting due diligence or compliance reviews for defense contractors, industrial and information technology equipment and component part manufacturers, a personal transportation consumer product manufacturer, and an international automotive parts manufacturer.
- Guiding government contractors through foreign ownership, control, or influence mitigation and facility clearance requests and reporting requirements.
- Counseling clients on compliance with the FY 2019 National Defense Authorization Act Section 889 and subsequent regulations (including sourcing restrictions on Huawei and other covered telecommunications and video surveillance equipment and services providers).
- Advising clients on emerging printed circuit board and microelectronics sourcing and supply chain risk management compliance requirements.
Stephanie's Insights
Client Alert | 2 min read | 06.21.24
DoD Expands Restrictions on Supply Chain for Certain Magnets, Tantalum, and Tungsten
On May 30, 2024, the Department of Defense (DoD) issued a final rule implementing Section 844 of the Fiscal Year (FY) 2021 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) and Section 854 of the FY 2024 NDAA by amending DFARS 225.7018-2 and accompanying DFARS clause 252.225-7052, which restrict DoD from acquiring certain metals and magnets from “covered countries” of Iran, North Korea, Russia, and China, to prohibit even earlier inputs in the supply chain from occurring in these countries. Despite comments discussing the infancy of the domestic market for many “covered materials”—defined as samarium-cobalt magnets, tantalum metals and alloys, tungsten metal powder, and tungsten heavy alloy or any finished or semi-finished component containing tungsten heavy alloy—the final rule expands the restrictions on sourcing covered materials from covered countries. Currently, the rule requires that covered materials not be melted or produced in covered countries but, effective January 1, 2027, the updated rule prohibits covered materials being mined, refined, separated, melted or produced in one of the covered countries. The expansion of the focus of the prohibition all the way back to where these materials were mined is consistent with the U.S. government’s effort to develop the domestic industrial base for and encourage on-shoring of critical minerals, magnets, and metals.
Client Alert | 4 min read | 06.06.24
Client Alert | 5 min read | 05.08.24
Stephanie's Insights
Client Alert | 2 min read | 06.21.24
DoD Expands Restrictions on Supply Chain for Certain Magnets, Tantalum, and Tungsten
On May 30, 2024, the Department of Defense (DoD) issued a final rule implementing Section 844 of the Fiscal Year (FY) 2021 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) and Section 854 of the FY 2024 NDAA by amending DFARS 225.7018-2 and accompanying DFARS clause 252.225-7052, which restrict DoD from acquiring certain metals and magnets from “covered countries” of Iran, North Korea, Russia, and China, to prohibit even earlier inputs in the supply chain from occurring in these countries. Despite comments discussing the infancy of the domestic market for many “covered materials”—defined as samarium-cobalt magnets, tantalum metals and alloys, tungsten metal powder, and tungsten heavy alloy or any finished or semi-finished component containing tungsten heavy alloy—the final rule expands the restrictions on sourcing covered materials from covered countries. Currently, the rule requires that covered materials not be melted or produced in covered countries but, effective January 1, 2027, the updated rule prohibits covered materials being mined, refined, separated, melted or produced in one of the covered countries. The expansion of the focus of the prohibition all the way back to where these materials were mined is consistent with the U.S. government’s effort to develop the domestic industrial base for and encourage on-shoring of critical minerals, magnets, and metals.
Client Alert | 4 min read | 06.06.24
Client Alert | 5 min read | 05.08.24