In December 2017, Definers Public Affairs was paid $120,000 in a
no-bid contract from the
United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) for services which included searching for "resistance figures" opposing the agenda of
Administrator Scott Pruitt, appointed to head the agency under President Donald Trump. During the bid Definers listed itself erroneously as a "small disadvantaged business", which was corrected after receiving the contract. Allan Blutstein, a lawyer for Definers Public Affairs, lodged FOI requests on low-level bureaucrats who were perceived to be hostile to Pruitt's agenda. Definers' work was incorrectly listed in the contract to perform “media monitoring” services. Definers cancelled the contract after receiving media scrutiny.
William K. Reilly, the EPA administrator under President George H.W. Bush, criticized the hiring of Definers Public Affairs, saying that: "Mr. Pruitt appears not to understand that the two most valuable assets EPA has is the country’s trust and a very committed professional work force. This shows complete insensitivity, complete tone-deafness, or something worse." John O’Grady, President of the
American Federation of Government Employees Council 238, which represents approximately 10,000 EPA employees, was the target of a Definers FOIA request, and called the firm a threat to EPA employees. Charles Tiefer of the
University of Baltimore argued that Definers is benefiting from politically motivated
crony capitalism. ==Allegations by Shervin Pishevar==