What government contracts has e3tek company had?
Executive summary
E3Tek Group is publicly presented as a private firm that markets EMP- and disaster‑hardened technology and continuity planning services and is widely reported in recent media to have had Department of Defense (DoD) and Department of Homeland Security (DHS) relationships; however, the documents supplied here do not include primary government contract awards or procurement records to verify exact contract numbers, values, or award dates [1] [2] [3]. Public reporting that links E3Tek (and predecessor names like GTeK/AZ‑Tech International) to Fort Huachuca testing and DoD/DHS work exists in secondary outlets, while government contracting databases such as GovWin are identified as the correct next step to locate formal contract records [1] [4] [5].
1. Corporate profile and marketed capabilities
E3Tek Group’s own materials and commercial profiles advertise the company as a provider of EMP‑hardened vehicles, light towers, control technologies and emergency continuity solutions for natural and man‑made disasters, and claim experience doing all‑hazard mitigation and continuity assessments for states, cities and communities [3] [2]. Business listings and partner pages further position E3Tek in networks of contractors and service providers, reinforcing the company’s public identity as a disaster‑resilience and infrastructure‑protection firm [6] [2].
2. Media reports claiming DoD/DHS ties and Fort Huachuca testing
Recent web reporting has reiterated statements that E3Tek (or its antecedents like GTeK/AZ‑Tech) secured DoD and Homeland Security work and that testing of EMP‑hardened technology occurred at Fort Huachuca, Arizona, citing family comments and archival video appearances as supporting context [1] [7]. These outlets specifically link Lori Frantzve, identified as E3Tek’s CEO in the reporting, to government‑oriented projects and to public presentations on grid vulnerabilities and EMP risks [1] [7].
3. What the supplied sources do not contain: contract award records
None of the provided items include formal government contract award documents, Federal Procurement Data System (FPDS) entries, contract numbers, or dollar amounts; the only direct pointer to where such records live is GovWin, a commercial government‑contracting intelligence platform identified in the material as the market resource for locating historical and planned government procurements [4] [5]. Because the supplied reporting is secondary and corporate summaries are promotional, the absence of FPDS or other procurement records in these sources means specific contracts, award dates and values cannot be asserted from the materials provided [4] [5] [2].
4. Misinformation, amplification and alternative readings
Some of the secondary outlets that discuss the company appear sensational or politically motivated and recycle family anecdotes and archival video to imply deeper “deep state” ties; at least one summary explicitly notes that related espionage‑style claims were debunked elsewhere and that misinformation proliferated after public events in 2025 [1]. That creates two plausible interpretations in the record supplied here: E3Tek markets to government clients and is reported to have worked with defense/homeland entities, while separate social narratives have amplified those facts into unverified conspiracy claims—an important distinction visible in the same set of sources [1] [7].
5. How to verify the contracts: recommended records and next steps
To answer definitively which government contracts E3Tek has had requires checking primary procurement databases—FPDS, USAspending.gov, and commercial aggregators like GovWin [4] [5]—and searching for vendor names and predecessor company names (GTeK, AZ‑Tech International) and for Fort Huachuca procurement histories. The supplied reporting points to potential DoD/DHS engagement and corporate capability claims but does not supply the procurement artifacts needed to list specific government contracts, dollars, or award timelines [1] [2] [3].