U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement earmarked millions of dollars for a bulk order for 20 armoured vehicles from Canadian defence manufacturer Roshel that are built to resist bullets and bomb blasts.
U.S. government procurement records show the department laying out plans for a rush order worth the equivalent of about $10 million Cdn for 20 Senator STANG emergency response tactical vehicles.
The justification for the sole-source order was published in a partially redacted document on a U.S. federal procurement website on Nov. 26, and the site says a contract was awarded on Nov. 28.
The procurement document declares only Roshel, which is headquartered in Brampton, Ont., meets the department's requirements for the vehicles needed "to support agents in the field" and can complete the

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