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Steampunk

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Steampunk, Inc.

Steampunk, Inc.

Industry Information technology; digital services; government contracting
Country United States
Founded 2019
Headquarters McLean, Virginia, United States
Parent company
Status Active
Verification

Verified

Verification status: Verified

Overview

Steampunk, Inc. is a United States–based information-technology and digital services contractor focused on federal government clients. Public reporting describes the company as supporting DHS components, including Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), Customs and Border Protection (CBP), and U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS).[1][2][3] Reporting on Steampunk’s ICE work notes the company began supporting ICE in 2017 under the name Strategic Enterprise Solutions before rebranding as Steampunk, Inc. in 2019.[1][4]

Boycott

Steampunk is listed for boycott due to documented work supporting DHS immigration enforcement and immigration-program systems, including ICE and CBP.

Public reporting and company announcements describe Steampunk as the awardee of ICE’s Security Assurance Support Services (SASS) II task order, described as a base plus four-year effort with a total task order value reported at $174 million, providing security assurance/ISSO support across ICE systems and related cybersecurity and risk-management framework activities.[1][4][5] Procurement summaries also list Steampunk as the recipient of an ICE delivery order for security assurance support and services (SASS).[6][7]

In addition, reporting describes Steampunk winning a DHS/CBP Office of Human Resources IT services task order (reported as $125 million) to support modernization and enhancement of CBP human resources systems.[2]

Reporting also describes Steampunk as the awardee of a DHS/USCIS contract (reported as $108.5 million) to provide platform support for myUSCIS under the RAPID initiative, supporting an online system used in the U.S. immigration process.[3]

Background

DHS components, including ICE, CBP, and USCIS, rely on contractors for technology, cybersecurity, digital platforms, and modernization programs that can increase capacity for enforcement, screening, and related operations. ICE List documents and, where applicable, boycotts companies whose contract work materially supports these functions.

Sources