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THE LATEST IN WHISTLEBLOWER LAW


 

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Special prosecutor to oversee coronavirus fraud investigations in Nevada

Trial is around the corner in the Scott Rose v. Stephens Institute college recruiter FCA case

Trial is around the corner in the Scott Rose v. Stephens Institute college recruiter FCA case

Nicholas A. Trutanich, the United States Attorney for the District of Nevada, has announced that his office will put in place a coordinator to help lead investigations and prosecutions of coronavirus fraud.   

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Trial is around the corner in the Scott Rose v. Stephens Institute college recruiter FCA case

Trial is around the corner in the Scott Rose v. Stephens Institute college recruiter FCA case

Trial is around the corner in the Scott Rose v. Stephens Institute college recruiter FCA case

Is Stephens Institute, a San Francisco art school, liable under the False Claims Act for improper student recruitment? After a long journey, an Oakland jury is set to answer that question in April.  

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CMS Internal Memorandum Explains Allina’s Impact on Enforcement

Trial is around the corner in the Scott Rose v. Stephens Institute college recruiter FCA case

Supreme Court Allina decision has potentially huge consequences for Medicare False Claims Act cases

 The Deputy General Counsel and Chief Legal Officers at CMS recently issued an internal HHS memorandum clarifying that the recent Supreme Court ruling in Allina may limit HHS’s enforcement practices.  

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Supreme Court Allina decision has potentially huge consequences for Medicare False Claims Act cases

Supreme Court Allina decision has potentially huge consequences for Medicare False Claims Act cases

Supreme Court Allina decision has potentially huge consequences for Medicare False Claims Act cases

Running a holiday sale or weekly special? Definitely promote it here to get customers excited about getting a sweet deal. Supreme Court’s recent Allina decision dooms FCA case based on Medicare guidance that didn’t go through notice and comment, and has a huge potential impact for all Medicare FCA cases. 

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False Claims Act settlements reach $750 million in first half of 2019

Supreme Court Allina decision has potentially huge consequences for Medicare False Claims Act cases

False Claims Act settlements reach $750 million in first half of 2019

The U.S. Department of Justice has announced more than $750 million in settlements under the False Claims Act in the first half of this year, Los Angeles-based Gibson Dunn & Crutcher LLP reported in its annual mid-year False Claims Act report.  

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Kansas Hospital Settles Whistleblower-Based False Attestation Claims

Supreme Court Allina decision has potentially huge consequences for Medicare False Claims Act cases

False Claims Act settlements reach $750 million in first half of 2019

A Kansas hospital settled a lawsuit initiated by two whistleblowers alleging that it had falsely attested that it satisfied the requirements for incentive payments under the Medicare and Medicaid Electronic Health Records Incentive Programs.   

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Circuit Split Widens On False Claims Act’s First-To-File Bar

Supreme Court Rules on the FCA’s “Government Knowledge” Statute of Limitations

Court Allows FCA Suit Based on Cybersecurity Regulations to Proceed

The First Circuit issued an opinion finding that the False Claims Act’s first-to-file rule is not jurisdictional. In doing so, the court flipped a $34 million award from one whistleblower to another, and deepened the divide among the circuits that have addressed the question.  

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Court Allows FCA Suit Based on Cybersecurity Regulations to Proceed

Supreme Court Rules on the FCA’s “Government Knowledge” Statute of Limitations

Court Allows FCA Suit Based on Cybersecurity Regulations to Proceed

Aerospace and defense manufacturer Aerojet Rocketdyne can’t avoid claims that it falsely claimed that it was in compliance with certain federal cybersecurity requirements to win government contracts, Judge Shubb of the Eastern District of California held. The case appears to be the first regarding False Claims Act liability for violation of cybersecurity standards under the Federal Acquisition Regulations.   

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Supreme Court Rules on the FCA’s “Government Knowledge” Statute of Limitations

Supreme Court Rules on the FCA’s “Government Knowledge” Statute of Limitations

Supreme Court Rules on the FCA’s “Government Knowledge” Statute of Limitations

 

Until Cochise, circuits were split on whether the FCA's three year “government knowledge” limitations period applied only to cases brought by the government, or if it applied to all suits brought under the False Claims Act, even where the government did not intervene. 

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Justice Department Releases New Guidance on Cooperation Credit

Defendant Tells Jury That Smuggling Allegations Are Based On Bad Blood

Supreme Court Rules on the FCA’s “Government Knowledge” Statute of Limitations

 

On May 6, 2019, the Justice Department issued new guidance on how False Claims Act defendants can earn leniency in return for voluntary self-disclosure, cooperation, and remediation.

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Defendant Tells Jury That Smuggling Allegations Are Based On Bad Blood

Defendant Tells Jury That Smuggling Allegations Are Based On Bad Blood

Defendant Tells Jury That Smuggling Allegations Are Based On Bad Blood

David Ji alleged that Chinese glycine was subject to an anti-dumping rate of more than 155 percent until 2011, and then more than 453 percent, but UniChem avoided over $11 million in duties by mislabeling its glycine in its customs documents as glucosamine.  UniChem's owner testified that this is just the latest episode in a long held grudge that Ji—his former employer—harbors against him   

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DOJ Challenges Illinois Federal Judge’s Denial of Dismissal Motion

Relator swap bars FCA claim under first-to-file bar; blocks original relator’s appeal

California Bill Would Fundamentally Change the State’s False Claims Act

The Department of Justice contends that Judge Staci Yandle in the Southern District of Illinois made several mistakes by refusing to end a False Claims Act case, U.S. ex rel. CIMZNHCA, LLC v. UCB, Inc. et al., 3:17-cv-00765 (S.D. Ill.). Judge Yandle’s ruling concluded that the government’s reason for seeking dismissal wasn’t sufficient to end the suit.  

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California Bill Would Fundamentally Change the State’s False Claims Act

Relator swap bars FCA claim under first-to-file bar; blocks original relator’s appeal

California Bill Would Fundamentally Change the State’s False Claims Act

 California legislators have introduced a bill (Assembly Bill 1270) that would amend the California False Claims Act to strike the tax bar, allow for prosecution of cases under the act by attorneys retained by the state or locality, and declare that the U.S. Supreme Court’s Universal Health Services, Inc. v. United States ex rel. Escobar, 136 S. Ct. 1989 (2016) decision regarding the materiality element of the federal False Claims Act does not apply to the state’s statute.  

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Relator swap bars FCA claim under first-to-file bar; blocks original relator’s appeal

Relator swap bars FCA claim under first-to-file bar; blocks original relator’s appeal

Relator swap bars FCA claim under first-to-file bar; blocks original relator’s appeal

 A relator can’t amend the complaint to swap in a new relator, not named in the original pleading. That’s what the Ninth Circuit held last month in United States ex rel. Volkhoff v. Janssen Pharmaceuticals, 945 F.3d 1237 (2020).   

HUD moves to ease banks’ False Claims Act lending liability

Whistleblower suit accuses largest Navy shipbuilder of putting American lives at risk

Relator swap bars FCA claim under first-to-file bar; blocks original relator’s appeal

Running a holiday sale or weekly special? Definitely promote it here to get customers excited about getting a sweet deal. Attorney General Barr and HUD Secretary Ben Carson announced a Memorandum of Understanding, which provides guidance for alleged FCA violations by lenders that provide mortgage loans insured by the Federal Housing Administration.  

DOJ Issues Guidance on Ability-to-Pay

Whistleblower suit accuses largest Navy shipbuilder of putting American lives at risk

Whistleblower suit accuses largest Navy shipbuilder of putting American lives at risk

Assistant Attorney General Brian Benczkowski of the Department of Justice’s Criminal Division announced new guidance for federal prosecutors evaluating a corporation’s ability to pay a proposed monetary penalty or fine.  

Whistleblower suit accuses largest Navy shipbuilder of putting American lives at risk

Whistleblower suit accuses largest Navy shipbuilder of putting American lives at risk

Whistleblower suit accuses largest Navy shipbuilder of putting American lives at risk

Whistleblower accuses America’s largest military shipbuilding company of using unqualified workers and taking unreasonable shortcuts in applying a Special Hull Treatment designed to shield Navy subs from sonar detection. 

Suit accusing DynCorp and AECOM of lying to land translation deals survives motion to dismiss

Suit accusing DynCorp and AECOM of lying to land translation deals survives motion to dismiss

Suit accusing DynCorp and AECOM of lying to land translation deals survives motion to dismiss

According to 29 relators, a DynCorp-AECOM joint venture called Global Linguist Solutions LLC falsely claimed it was not the true employer of workers to obtain two multibillion-dollar translation services contracts with the U.S. Army.  

Department of Justice’s genetic testing fraud case “one of the largest ever charged"

Suit accusing DynCorp and AECOM of lying to land translation deals survives motion to dismiss

Suit accusing DynCorp and AECOM of lying to land translation deals survives motion to dismiss

The Department of Justice’s Health Care Fraud division brought criminal charges against 35 defendants in what it called “one of the largest health care fraud schemes ever charged.”  

If relators want a hearing on the government’s motion to dismiss their case, they need to ask

Suit accusing DynCorp and AECOM of lying to land translation deals survives motion to dismiss

If relators want a hearing on the government’s motion to dismiss their case, they need to ask

 

The Third Circuit held that the district court can dismiss a qui tam complaint without a hearing, rejecting that argument that the False Claims Act requires an in-person hearing before a court can grant governmental motions to dismiss qui tam claims.  

The hits keep coming in “Section 8” housing False Claims Act case

Heritage Pharmaceuticals Will Pay Over $7 Million to Settle FCA and Antitrust Charges

If relators want a hearing on the government’s motion to dismiss their case, they need to ask

Nevada Legal Services prevailed on a False Claims Act suit, brought on a pro bono basis, alleging that their clients’ landlord was committing fraud by charging their low-income “Section 8” program tenants illegal side payments. And last week the Court held that the plaintiffs could recover attorney’s fees as well, even though their attorneys worked for free.  

Court kicks Kasowitz’s FCA claims

Heritage Pharmaceuticals Will Pay Over $7 Million to Settle FCA and Antitrust Charges

Heritage Pharmaceuticals Will Pay Over $7 Million to Settle FCA and Antitrust Charges

 On July 5, 2019, the D.C. Circuit rejected law firm Kasowitz Benson Torres LLP’s whistleblower lawsuit, which alleged that four chemical manufacturers cheated the Environmental Protection Agency out of billions in fines by repeatedly failing to inform the agency about the risk of injuries posed by isocyanate, a common chemical used in a variety of consumer products.   

Heritage Pharmaceuticals Will Pay Over $7 Million to Settle FCA and Antitrust Charges

Heritage Pharmaceuticals Will Pay Over $7 Million to Settle FCA and Antitrust Charges

Heritage Pharmaceuticals Will Pay Over $7 Million to Settle FCA and Antitrust Charges

Heritage Pharmaceuticals Inc.—a New Jersey generic pharmaceutical company—has agreed to pay more than $7 million, enter a three-year deferred prosecution agreement, and cooperate with ongoing investigations into the generic industry to resolve allegations that it violated the False Claims Act and antitrust laws, the government announced.  

New Jersey Files State False Claims Act Suit Against Makers of Opioid Painkillers

New Jersey Files State False Claims Act Suit Against Makers of Opioid Painkillers

New Jersey Files State False Claims Act Suit Against Makers of Opioid Painkillers

New Jersey filed a false claims lawsuit against owners of Purdue Pharma, accusing them of lying and pressuring doctors to increase sales of OxyContin and other addictive opioids, and targeting groups like the elderly. The suit was filed in Essex County Superior Court and names eight members of the Sackler family, Purdue’s founding family. 

SEC Awards Whistleblower $4.5 Million In First Ever Internal Reporting Action

New Jersey Files State False Claims Act Suit Against Makers of Opioid Painkillers

New Jersey Files State False Claims Act Suit Against Makers of Opioid Painkillers

 On May 24, 2019, the Securities and Exchange Commission awarded more than $4.5 million to a whistleblower for his role in uncovering a kickback scheme run by a subsidiary of medical device manufacturer Zimmer Biomet Holdings, Inc.   

Circuit Split Emerges On The False Claims Act’s Original Source Standard

New Jersey Files State False Claims Act Suit Against Makers of Opioid Painkillers

Circuit Split Emerges On The False Claims Act’s Original Source Standard

The False Claims Act’s public disclosure bar prevents relators from pursuing allegations that are in the public domain unless the relator is an “original source," i.e., a person that has knowledge that is (1) “independent of” and (2) “materially adds” to public information. The Tenth Circuit recently issued an opinion that shines considerable light on what constitutes a “material” addition.   

CFTC’s First-Ever Enforcement Manual Discusses Its Whistleblower Program

Natural Gas Firm Settles Charges Over Scheme to Defraud U.S. Government of Royalties

Circuit Split Emerges On The False Claims Act’s Original Source Standard

 For the first time ever, the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission’s Division of Enforcement publicly issued the agency’s Enforcement Manual, which includes a summary of its whistleblower program.  

Natural Gas Firm Settles Charges Over Scheme to Defraud U.S. Government of Royalties

Natural Gas Firm Settles Charges Over Scheme to Defraud U.S. Government of Royalties

Natural Gas Firm Settles Charges Over Scheme to Defraud U.S. Government of Royalties

 A Texas-based natural gas marketer agreed to pay more than $3.5 million to resolve False Claims Act allegations that they engaged in mineral royalty fraud, the Department of Justice reported in a news release.  

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