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Public-records evidence platform

Federal procurement, as the public record actually states it

Fonteum is a public-records evidence platform. This silo applies the same source-lineage engine that powers our healthcare data to US federal procurement: every fact is stamped with its source and extract date, reproducible from official open data, and reproducible as of any past date.

The federal government publishes who it has excluded from contracting (SAM.gov), every prime award it signs (USASpending.gov), and integrity records on large contractors (FAPIIS). These datasets are public and free, but they live in separate systems and are hard to cross-check against one another over time. This silo joins them on the Unique Entity ID (UEI) spine and keeps a dated history, so a fact can be re-derived exactly as it stood on the day it mattered.

We report exact regulatory facts only— a registration status, an exclusion's active window, an award's signed date. We never publish a derived “risk” score or label an entity, and every record carries a link to confirm current status at the official source.

What this silo is built on

SAM.gov
Federal exclusion / debarment registry (the spine)
USASpending
Prime award transactions (DATA Act, public domain)
FAPIIS
Contractor integrity & responsibility records
UEI
12-char Unique Entity ID — one entity, joined across sources

Studies

The State of Federal Contractor Integrity 2026 →

Fonteum's annual roundup of federal contractor integrity: 324,126 active SAM.gov exclusions (90.15% from three agencies), 112 prime contracts signed during an active exclusion window, and how a debarment ends 8(a) eligibility. Aggregate counts only; reproducible from published SQL.

The Anatomy of the Federal Healthcare Blacklist — 68,055 OIG Exclusions →

Of 68,055 parties currently barred from federal health programs on the HHS-OIG LEIE (snapshot 2026-05-08), 97.6% are individuals. License revocation (§1128(b)(4)) and program-related convictions (§1128(a)(1)) account for 71% of the list; only 10.3% carry an NPI. Aggregate counts only; no excluded party named.

Sanctioned Across Borders: The Excluded Parties Who Appear on More Than One List →

A cross-list overlap analysis of six U.S. and international sanctions and exclusion lists (OFAC SDN, the EU and UN consolidated lists, SAM.gov, OIG LEIE, and 13 state Medicaid registries). Of 11,093 NPI-identified excluded U.S. providers, 43.2% appear on more than one registry and 908 on all three at once; 84 EU designations carry a published UN cross-reference. Aggregate counts only; no party named.

FDA Enforcement Trends 2026: 56,777 Recalls, by the Numbers →

A full-database profile of 56,777 FDA recall reports and 89,553 enforcement actions. Medical devices account for 68.9% of recalls; 86.0% are Class II. Only 0.5% are FDA-mandated — firms initiate the rest themselves. Of 4,204 distinct firms, 109 each have 100+ recalls and together account for 46.8% of all recall records. Aggregate counts only; no individual named.

The Most-Recalled Vehicle Brands: 15,035 NHTSA Safety Recalls, Counted by Make →

A count of the U.S. vehicle safety-recall record by brand. Across 15,035 NHTSA recall campaigns reported 2010–2026 (691.5M potentially-affected units), Ford carries the most — 847 campaigns, 5.6% of the entire record — ahead of Mercedes-Benz (512) and Chevrolet (438). The 25 largest brands account for 38.4% of all recall campaigns. Aggregate counts only; brand names are the public NHTSA record.

EPA Top Violators 2026: Who Pollutes Most, by the Numbers →

A full-database profile of 3,135,553 facilities in the EPA's ECHO enforcement record. 44,112 (1.4%) carry a formal enforcement action in the last five years and 21,125 a monetary penalty, totalling $10.9 billion. 78,711 facilities are currently flagged in violation. Penalties are highly concentrated: the top 100 penalized facilities account for 39.4% of the total. Aggregate counts only; facility names are public EPA records with no derived score.

FMCSA Carrier Safety 2026: Who Is Operating With the Worst Records →

A full-database profile of 4.46M FMCSA-registered motor carriers, 3.59M crash records, and 3.10M roadside inspections. Half of registered carriers are inactive; only 1.2% carry any FMCSA safety rating, and 744 carriers FMCSA itself rated Unsatisfactory are still active. Crashes total 138,535 fatalities and 2.12M injuries; 18.7% of inspections end in an out-of-service order. Aggregate counts only; no individual named.

The Most-Recalled Product Brands: 9,862 CPSC Safety Recalls, Counted by Firm →

A count of the U.S. consumer-product safety-recall record by the firm named on each recall. Across 9,862 CPSC recalls (1973–2026), Sears carries the most named-firm recalls (81), ahead of Polaris (79) and Kmart (56). But no brand dominates: the 25 most-recalled firms account for just 8.4% of all brand-recall appearances — a very long tail. Aggregate counts only; brand names are the public CPSC record.

Who Polices the Banks: 4,954 Federal Enforcement Orders, Split Almost Evenly →

OCC EASearch CSV and Federal Reserve enforcement JSON split the federal banking-enforcement corpus almost evenly: 2,514 Federal Reserve rows and 2,440 OCC rows in the committed 2026-02-25 snapshot. Aggregate counts only, with no institution or individual named.

SEC Enforcement Peaked in 2023 — and Has Fallen Every Year Since →

SEC Litigation Releases plus Accounting and Auditing Enforcement Releases: 15,183 published actions, a 2023 peak of 425, and lower counts in 2024, 2025, and partial 2026. Aggregate counts only, with no respondent or release-level row named.

Software Is Now the Most-Recalled Vehicle Component →

In the NHTSA ODI recalls snapshot dated 2026-06-24, software is the largest recalled component bucket: 20,508 make-model-year-campaign recall records, ahead of tire markings at 19,460. Aggregate counts only — not unique campaigns, not affected vehicles, and no individual records.

License Transparency 2026: Which States Make It Hardest to Check a License →

A 50-state (plus DC) index of how hard it is to check whether a professional is licensed. In the only primary-source bulk-accessibility recon covering every state, just 3 of 51 jurisdictions publish a bulk-downloadable contractor-license file and 44 are lookup-only; a further five states' professional or health boards publish a bulk roll. Disciplinary history is published even more rarely — an obtainable feed exists for only 4 states. Where a consolidated roll is published, field depth varies sharply, and no state exposes a home street address. Aggregate counts only; no licensee named.

Contracts Awarded During Active Exclusion Periods →

The Leakage Report: federal prime contracts whose signed date fell inside an active SAM.gov exclusion window for the same confirmed recipient. Reproducible from published SQL; exact dated facts only.

Federal Suspension & Debarment Scorecard →

Every active federal exclusion in SAM.gov, ranked by the agency that issued it - a clean per-agency scorecard of the active debarment registry. Reproducible from published SQL; aggregate counts only.

The US + EU Sanctions Universe: 25,954 active designations, and the post-2022 surge →

How much of the active US and EU sanctions map is new? An aggregate, reproducible breakdown of 25,954 active designations across the OFAC SDN list and the EU Consolidated Financial Sanctions list by party type, designation year, and program. Counts only; no party named.

The Name-Only Exclusion List: 72% of federal exclusions carry no contracting ID →

Of the 324,126 active records on the SAM.gov federal exclusion list, 72.0% carry neither a UEI nor a CAGE code - the keys the contracting system runs on. Only 28.0% are machine-matchable. Aggregate counts only; no party named.

The Federal Blacklist Is Mostly People - and Three Agencies Run It →

Of 324,126 active SAM.gov exclusion records, 258,536 are individuals (79.8%). HHS, OPM, and OFAC together account for 292,197 records, or 90.1% of the active federal exclusion list. Aggregate counts only; no party named.

1,290 People Are Running for President: Anatomy of the Federal Candidate Registry →

A committed aggregate profile of 8,079 records in the FEC Candidate Master File: 1,290 presidential candidate records, a 20-record gap between Democrats and Republicans, and challengers outnumbering incumbents 6.7 to 1.

Six in Ten Federal Committees Answer to No Candidate →

FEC Committee Master File snapshot 2026-06-22: 11,988 of 19,954 registered federal committees (60.1%) are non-candidate PAC, lobbyist/registrant PAC, leadership PAC, or joint fundraising committees. Aggregate counts only.

The UN Consolidated Sanctions List, Profiled: 92.8% of it predates 2020 →

A composition and cadence profile of the United Nations Security Council Consolidated Sanctions List: 1,002 active designations, 72.9% individuals, across 14 sanctions committees. Unlike the post-2022 OFAC and EU surge, 92.8% of the UN list predates 2020. Aggregate counts only; no party named.

Browse by agency

Federal agencies — debarments & contracting, agency by agency →

One profile per federal agency: how many parties it has excluded from federal contracting (SAM.gov) and the prime awards it has signed (USASpending.gov), ranked and source-stamped. The debarment side is complete today; the award side fills in as the federal backfill runs.

Browse by industry

Federal spend by NAICS industry code — top contractors & agencies →

One profile per NAICS industry code with federal award activity: how much the government has obligated under it, the contractors who win the work, the agencies that buy it, the set-aside mix, and the fiscal-year trend. Exact USASpending.gov facts, source-stamped; coverage grows as the federal award backfill runs.

Look up a contractor

Federal contractor records — exclusions & awards by entity →

One canonical record per entity, keyed to its 12-character Unique Entity ID (UEI) — the SAM.gov exclusion records and USASpending.gov prime awards on file, as dated facts. For programmatic checks, the procurement screening API returns the same source-stamped facts by UEI or CAGE.

Set-aside certifications

Federal set-aside certified firms — 8(a), HUBZone, WOSB, SDVOSB →

SBA small-business set-aside certifications joined to federal award history on the same UEI spine. Browse certified firms by program and state, each an exact SBA certification fact sitting next to the firm's prime-award record. Sourced to the SBA (data.sba.gov / Dynamic Small Business Search) — U.S. Government works, public domain.

Federal contracting reference & lookups

Plain, source-stamped reference pages for the terms people search before they screen a contractor — each answer-first, with a link to the official source and into the silo's record.

  • Top federal contractors by obligated dollars →
  • The SAM exclusion list — what it is & how to check it →
  • CAGE code lookup →
  • UEI lookup →
  • FPDS — what it is & where its data went →
  • Sole-source contracts, explained →

Program guides

8(a) certification, explained →

The plain rules of the SBA's 8(a) Business Development program — who qualifies, how to apply, the nine-year term, and how a SAM.gov exclusion or debarment ends eligibility. Sourced to sba.gov and 13 CFR Part 124, and dated.

Federal contracting questions, answered

Federal contracting questions, answered from the public record →

Plain, source-stamped answers to the questions people ask about federal contractors — who is excluded, what a UEI or CAGE code is, how suspension differs from debarment, and whether a debarred company can still win an award. Each answer is built from SAM.gov, USASpending, and the FAR, with a source and date on every fact.

Data sourced from US federal public records (US Government Works). Confirm any current status at sam.gov and usaspending.gov. Part of Fonteum (fonteum.com).

Fonteum is a public-records evidence platform. This Government Procurement Evidence silo reports exact regulatory facts from federal public records (SAM.gov, USASpending.gov, FAPIIS). It assigns no risk score and makes no determination of wrongdoing; confirm current status at the official source.

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