March 17, 2010

Greatest Impact of 2009 False Claims Act Amendments--"Civil Investigative Demands"

Among the many 2009 changes to strengthen the False Claims Act is one whose impact is about to be experienced: greater use of "civil investigative demands" to gather evidence.

Civil investigative demands allow to government to require any person believed to have documents or information relevant to a False Claims Act investigation to do the following:

(A) to produce such documentary material for inspection and copying,

(B) to answer in writing written interrogatories with respect to such documentary material or information,

(C) to give oral testimony concerning such documentary material or information, or

(D) to furnish any combination of such material, answers, or testimony. (31 U.S.C. § 3733 (a)).

Until now, civil investigative demands were theoretically available, but seldom used, as they required authorization by the Attorney General. Now, as the 2009 amendments permit, the U.S. Attorney General has just delegated that authority to local U.S. Attorneys.

The result should be far greater use of these valuable investigative tools, which are now more available to the line prosecutors who investigate False Claims Act cases. Although reporting requirements apply, the change gives a leg up to aggressive investigators in gathering evidence.

Another significant 2009 change is that prosecutors are now authorized to share with qui tam relators or whistleblowers the information or documents obtained by CIDs, if they deem it necessary. This change will enhance the important "collaboration" between government counsel, the whistleblower, and the whistleblower's counsel that has proved extremely effective in prosecuting qui tam cases under the False Claims Act.

As time will tell, of all the 2009 amendments, this change may have the greatest impact on False Claims Act investigations. It should allow the government lawyers and investigators who actually work cases to take sworn testimony and require answers to interrogatories and document requests, before suit is commenced.

October 25, 2009

New False Claims Act Amendments Strengthen Enforcement of Health Care Fraud and Procurement Fraud Laws

Defrauding the government of taxpayer dollars has gotten tougher over the past five months.

Important changes to the nation's primary anti-fraud statute, the False Claims Act, took effect on May 20, 2009, when the Fraud Enforcement and Recovery Act of 2009 became law.

Among the most significant changes, Congress clarified and corrected the False Claims Act by legislatively overruling certain court decisions that sought to limit the scope of the Act, including Allison Engine Co. v. United States ex rel. Sanders, 128 S. Ct. 2123 (2008); United States ex rel. Totten v. Bombardier Corp., 380 F.3d 488 (D.C. Cir. 2004), cert. denied, 544 U.S. 1032 (2005); and United States ex rel. DRC, Inc. v. Custer Battles, LLC, 376 F. Supp. 2d 617 (E.D. Va. 2005), rev'd, 562 F.3d 295 (4th Cir. 2009).

These important 2009 changes to the False Claims Act include the following:

1. The amendments expand the definition of "claim," and fraud directed against government contractors, grantees and other recipients is now plainly covered by the law.

2. Funds administered by the United States government (such as in Iraq) are now protected.

3. Retaining overpayments of money from the government is now an explicit basis of liability, which will be a source of concern for health care providers, among others.

4. Liability for "conspiracy" to violate the Act is broader than before.

5. Protection of whistleblowers and others against "retaliation" now extends not only to "employees," but also to "contractors" and "agents"; and persons other than "employers" potentially may be liable for retaliation.

6. In investigating, the government now has authority to use "Civil Investigative Demands" more broadly, and to share information more with state and local authorities and with whistleblowers/relators.

7. A standard definition of what is "material" now applies in False Claims Act cases.

8. The statute of limitations has been clarified to allow the government to assert its own claims, after the whistleblower (or "relator") has filed a qui tam case under the False Claims Act.

Click here for a detailed discussion of the False Claims Act and the wave of new State False Claims Acts.

The amended False Claims Act is reprinted below, in its entirety:

Continue reading "New False Claims Act Amendments Strengthen Enforcement of Health Care Fraud and Procurement Fraud Laws " »

September 3, 2009

Protecting Whistleblowers from Criminal Prosecution: The Mystery of the UBS Whistleblower's Prison Sentence

In one of two prominent whistleblower cases in the news this week, whistleblower John Kopchinski will be awarded more than $50 million for his role in exposing improper "off-label marketing" of the drug Bextra by Pfizer. Other whistleblowers also will be rewarded because of this settlement. That settlement of $2.3 billion is the largest in history ($1 billion to settle False Claims Act allegations, and $1.3 billion in criminal fine and forfeiture).

As large as the Pfizer settlement is, the other whistleblower's actions seem likely to lead to recovery of dollars that could dwarf this $2.3 billion settlement. UBS whistleblower Bradley Birkenfeld has lifted the shroud of secrecy from thousands of American taxpayers' offshore accounts at UBS. He has given the IRS a foothold into recovering potentially many billions in unpaid taxes owed.

Yet Birkenfeld was recently sentenced to serve 40 months in federal prison for conspiracy to defraud the United States in a tax fraud scheme while at UBS. His conviction also calls into question his ability to receive a reward under the IRS Whistleblower Program from the billions to be collected by the IRS.

How could this happen?

There are tried and true steps lawyers representing whistleblowers must take to protect their clients from the risk of prosecution. This was one of the topics of the "IRS Whistleblower Boot Camp" panel discussion that I led this past March, with panelists including IRS Whistleblower Office Director Steve Whitlock--how to protect the whistleblower who has potential criminal liability, but who has valuable information.

If adequate protection cannot be obtained, often the whistleblower with real criminal exposure should choose not to go forward. If the information is important enough to the government, however, protection for the whistleblower often can be negotiated, so long as the whistleblower is truthful and forthcoming. As former federal prosecutors who have also defended clients in white collar criminal prosecutions, we have represented many clients in obtaining this type of protection.

Continue reading "Protecting Whistleblowers from Criminal Prosecution: The Mystery of the UBS Whistleblower's Prison Sentence" »

August 9, 2009

The "Program Fraud Civil Remedies Act"--A "Mini-False Claims Act"

For a "webinar" on August 11, 2009, I have been asked to discuss not only potential liability under the False Claims Act for false or fraudulent claims to the federal government, but also what has been called the "Mini-False Claims Act": the "Program Fraud Civil Remedies Act," 31 U.S.C. §§ 3801-12,

Because it is not feasible for the government to handle under the False Claims Act every conceivable case of a false claim in procurement, the PFCRA was enacted so that smaller claims could be handled in an administrative process.

A major provision of the PFCRA, section 3802, is reprinted below:

Chapter 38. Administrative Remedies for False Claims and Statements

§ 3802. False claims and statements; liability

(a)(1) Any person who makes, presents, or submits, or causes to be made, presented, or submitted, a claim that the person knows or has reason to know--

(A) is false, fictitious, or fraudulent;

(B) includes or is supported by any written statement which asserts a material fact which is false, fictitious, or fraudulent;

(C) includes or is supported by any written statement that--

(i) omits a material fact;

(ii) is false, fictitious, or fraudulent as a result of such omission; and

(iii) is a statement in which the person making, presenting, or submitting such statement has a duty to include such material fact; or

(D) is for payment for the provision of property or services which the person has not provided as claimed,

shall be subject to, in addition to any other remedy that may be prescribed by law, a civil penalty of not more than $5,000 for each such claim. Except as provided in paragraph (3) of this subsection, such person shall also be subject to an assessment, in lieu of damages sustained by the United States because of such claim, of not more than twice the amount of such claim, or the portion of such claim, which is determined under this chapter to be in violation of the preceding sentence.

Continue reading "The "Program Fraud Civil Remedies Act"--A "Mini-False Claims Act" " »

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July 12, 2009

Whistleblower Attorneys Discuss False Claims Act Amendments & "The Most Pressing Issues in Representing Whistleblowers"

At the 20th Annual Convention of NELA, the National Employment Lawyers Association, I recently had the pleasure of moderating a panel discussion of some of the country's top "whistleblower" lawyers. The topic was "The Most Pressing Issues in Representing Whistleblowers."

Joining me in this panel discussion were Richard Renner and David J. Marshall. Richard is an attorney with Kohn & Colapinto in Washington, DC. and also serves as Legal Director of the National Whistleblowers Center. David is a partner with Katz, Marshall & Banks, LLP in DC.

The discussion included:

(1) the brand new Amendments to the False Claims Act that became law on May 20, 2009;

(2) "winning" cases and clients;

(3) what documents and other evidence may lawfully be gathered;

(4) protecting clients who may have been forced to participate in unlawful acts, and who therefore may face liability or prosecution themselves; and

(5) presenting cases most effectively to capture the government's interest.

In addition, we discussed the new IRS Whistleblower Program, in this second consecutive year that NELA invited me to participate in its national convention's panel discussion of whistleblower issues. Audience members had many excellent questions during and after the discussion.

After our session, my friend Mark Kleiman led a discussion of whistleblower issues entitled "The California False Claims Act & Other Whistleblower Cases." Joining Mark were J. Bernard Alexander III and Wilmer J. Harris.

Much thanks to NELA's fine Board and Executive Director Teri Chaw in arranging this terrific conference in Rancho Mirage, California.

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May 6, 2009

Major Whistleblower Law Development--False Claims Act Amendments Pass House of Representatives, As Part of the "Fraud Enforcement and Recovery Act of 2009"

Today is an historic day--the House of Representatives has passed the Fraud Enforcement and Recovery Act of 2009 by a vote of 367-59. The Act includes long-needed amendments to the nation's primary anti-fraud law, the False Claims Act, about which we have written often.

The amendments are designed to protect the hundreds of billions in taxpayer funds now being spent from fraud affecting TARP, other "stimulus" measures, Medicare and Medicaid, national defense including the Iraq and Afghanistan wars and reconstruction efforts, and countless other government programs.

The Senate approved the Act by a vote of 92-4 on April 28th. A conference committee now will consider reconciling differences in the versions of the bill.

The new law closes a series of "loopholes" that allowed dishonest contractors to cheat the American public, and is intended to restore the False Claims Act to its original intent.

Our whistleblower lawyer blog has provided previously a detailed explanation of how the False Claims Act works by allowing private citizen "whistleblowers" (also known as qui tam "relators") to report fraud and share in the government's recovery. The False Claims Act also protects whistleblowers from retaliation.

Much will be written about the new amendments, which will greatly strengthen the Act's effectiveness in combating fraud. We congratulate those in Congress with the wisdom to pass the amendments, as well as all involved in this effort!

Continue reading "Major Whistleblower Law Development--False Claims Act Amendments Pass House of Representatives, As Part of the "Fraud Enforcement and Recovery Act of 2009" " »

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April 21, 2009

False Claims Act Amendments Gain Momentum In Bill to Combat Financial Fraud

New legislation to combat financial institution fraud, securities fraud, mortgage fraud, and other fraud and abuse is gaining momentum, and brings closer long-needed amendments to restore to its intended strength the nation's major "whistleblower" law, the False Claims Act.

The Fraud Enforcement and Recovery Act of 2009 (S. 386) received support yesterday in a statement from the Administration:

The Administration strongly supports enactment of S. 386. Its provisions would provide Federal investigators and prosecutors with significant new criminal and civil tools and resources that would assist in holding accountable those who have committed financial fraud.

Specifically, the legislative enhancements would help the Department of Justice to combat mortgage fraud, securities and commodities fraud, money laundering and related offenses, and to protect taxpayer money that has been expended on recent economic stimulus and rescue packages. Further, the legislation would amend the False Claims Act (FCA) in several important respects so that the FCA remains a potent and useful weapon against the misuse of taxpayer funds. In general, this legislation would benefit U.S. taxpayers by both addressing existing fraud and deterring waste, fraud, and abuse of public funds. Moreover, S. 386 would provide needed resources to strained law enforcement agencies and prosecutors that would enable the Department and its partners to advance the pace and reach of the enforcement response to the current economic crisis. These additional resources will provide a return on investment through additional fines, penalties, restitution, damages, and forfeitures. With the tools and resources that S. 386 provides, the Department of Justice and others would be better equipped to address the challenges that face this Nation in difficult economic times and to do their part to help the Nation respond to this challenge.

We have written previously about the amendments to restore the False Claims Act to full strength, by clarifying various provisions that led some courts to weaken this important anti-fraud law.

The abuses now being exposed in the financial industry join the list of many other types of fraud designed to steal taxpayer funds--health care fraud,defense procurement fraud (especially in Iraq and Afghanistan), Hurricane Katrina fraud, and many other species of fraud and false claims.

With hundreds on billions of new federal spending underway in the TARP program and other "bailout" and "stimulus" efforts, the need is urgent to protect these funds with the most effective anti-fraud measures. That protection begins with the amendments to the False Claims Act, and we applaud this bipartisan effort to restore that critical law to its original intent.

March 1, 2009

Whistleblower Attorneys to Discuss Qui Tam Cases Under False Claims Act, IRS Whistleblower Program, and Sarbanes-Oxley Whistleblower Cases at Annual "Whistleblower Law Symposium"

I am very excited about co-chairing the Annual "Whistleblower Law Symposium" once again this week.

From Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, New Orleans, San Antonio, and Washington, D.C., many of the country's leading attorneys in whistleblower cases under the "qui tam" statute, the False Claims Act, the Sarbanes-Oxley statute, and the IRS Whistleblower Program will gather in Atlanta on March 4 to discuss some of the more challenging aspects of representing whistleblowers (or defending against whistleblower claims) under these laws.

We are honored to have one of the officials of the IRS Whistleblower Office, Dawn Applebaum, join us in person to discuss the progress of the new IRS Whistleblower Rewards Program. The IRS Whistleblower Office has just celebrated its second anniversary.

We are also privileged to have the top state enforcement officials in health care fraud cases from Texas, Florida, and Georgia, to explain how they coordinate state and federal health care fraud whistleblower cases under the federal and state False Claims Acts.

Also joining us is Rep. Edward Lindsey, the Legislative Sponsor both of the Georgia State False Medicaid Claims Act, and recent legislation to solidify Georgia’s Office of State Inspector General.

Because of the wave of new whistleblower statutes that have been inspired by the successes of the False Claims Act, our firm instituted the Whistleblower Law Symposium. Once again, top-notch speakers will address a broad variety of issues that arise under these whistleblower laws, including:

--Whistleblowers in Health Care: Recent Cases and Strategies for Healthcare Providers and Counsel When a Whistleblower Calls

--Recent Developments in Qui Tam Cases Under the False Claims Act—The Relator’s Perspective

--Current Issues in Defending Qui Tam Claims

--Coordinating State and Federal Whistleblower Cases Under the State and Federal False Claims Acts—Current Priorities and Recent Results

--Federal Priorities and Procedures in Qui Tam Cases

--Plaintiffs’ & Defendants’ Approaches to Sarbanes-Oxley Claims

--Update on the IRS Whistleblower Program

We are fortunate to have such excellent faculty members from around the country join us. Our faculty members and their topics are listed below.

Continue reading "Whistleblower Attorneys to Discuss Qui Tam Cases Under False Claims Act, IRS Whistleblower Program, and Sarbanes-Oxley Whistleblower Cases at Annual "Whistleblower Law Symposium"" »

November 11, 2008

Justice Department Announces 2008 Fraud & "Qui Tam" False Claims Act Recoveries, with Medicare, Medicaid, and Other Health Care Fraud Alone Topping $1 Billion in Recoveries of Taxpayer Funds

Will Wall Street Bailout Produce the Next Round of Whistleblowers Reporting Fraud?

The U.S. Department of Justice this week announced its FY 2008 recoveries in fraud and False Claims Act cases, with more than $1 billion in health care fraud recoveries alone, and a total of more than $1.3 billion. (As explained below, we believe the $1.3 billion figure is low and understates the actual fraud recoveries this year.)

Cases brought by "relators" or whistleblowers under the nation's primary whistleblower statute, the False Claims Act, accounted for 78% of the money recovered. Since the False Claims Act took its current form in 1986, this law has recovered more than $21 billion of taxpayer funds from those who defraud the government.

As health care costs have grown as a percentage of the federal budget, so have recoveries for health care fraud. Recoveries of federal dollars were made because of fraud not only in Medicare and Medicaid, but also other federal programs such as Tricare and the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program.

The largest recoveries were from pharmaceutical companies--Cephalon Inc., Merck & Co. and CVS Caremark Corp. paid more than $640 million. Pharmaceutical fraud cases also repaid $430 million to state Medicaid programs.

DOJ also cited recoveries in cases of fraud affecting defense procurement contracts, disaster assistance loans and agricultural subsidies.

The actual recoveries were greater if you compare DOJ's announcements of its settlements, as well as include dollars recovered under the various State False Claims Acts. (We have written extensively about why states are enacting their own State False Claims Acts to mirror the federal False Claims Act, given the federal law's successes.)

With whistleblowers reporting fraud infecting in the Wall Street bailout funds (because no federal program is immune), it will be interesting to see how these billions of federal dollars show up in future statistics of fraud recoveries.

We have reprinted below DOJ's "fact sheet" about its FY 2008 significant recoveries. We congratulate Justice on another very successful year in fighting fraud and false claims.

Continue reading "Justice Department Announces 2008 Fraud & "Qui Tam" False Claims Act Recoveries, with Medicare, Medicaid, and Other Health Care Fraud Alone Topping $1 Billion in Recoveries of Taxpayer Funds" »

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December 31, 2007

IRS Tax Whistleblowers & False Claims Act Qui Tam Cases--2007 Year in Review by Whistleblower Lawyer Blog

2007 has been a most significant year for whistleblowers. The whistleblower lawyer blog attorneys look back on some of the milestones:

1. As soon as Congress authorized the first meaningful IRS Whistleblower Rewards Program to pay tax whistleblowers 15-30% of IRS recoveries from those who violate the tax laws by statue effective on December 20, 2006, beginning in January our whistleblower lawyers submitted some of the first IRS Whistleblower claims in the nation under the new law. Our IRS Whistleblower cases have continued to grow throughout the year.

2. Our IRS whistleblower submissions have led to criminal and civil investigations over tax cheating, and our whistleblower clients are in a position to receive 15-30% of the amount of collected proceeds (including penalties, interest, additions to tax, and additional amounts) recovered by the IRS.

3. This Spring, legislative officials requested that one of our whistleblower lawyer blog co-authors help draft a state False Claims Act for Georgia, and then invited him as the only private attorney to testify at the legislative hearings to explain the federal False Claims Act, and how the new state False Claims Act will operate. The new Georgia State False Medicaid Claims Act was signed into law on May 24, 2007, and early results show that it already has been effective in uncovering and stopping Medicaid fraud.
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Participating in the signing ceremony with Governor Sonny Perdue were (shown above from left to right) Carrie Downing, Director of Legislative and External Affairs of the Georgia Department of Community Health; Dr. Rhonda Medows, Commissioner of the Georgia Department of Community Health; Inspector General Doug Colburn; Governor Perdue; Rep. Edward Lindsey, sponsor of the State False Medicaid Claims Act; whistleblower lawyer blog author Michael A. Sullivan of Finch McCranie, LLP; and Philip Consuegra, Legislative Assistant to Rep. Lindsey.

4. As the new IRS Whistleblower Program took shape during 2007, our whistleblower lawyer blog followed each development to educate the public and other attorneys about the new IRS Whistleblower Rewards.

5. At a national conference sponsored by Taxpayers Against Fraud in September, whistleblower lawyer blog author Michael A. Sullivan joined IRS Whistleblower Office Director Stephen Whitlock, Professor Dennis Ventry, and fellow IRS whistleblower attorneys Paul Scott and Erika Kelton for a panel discussion to explain how the new IRS Whistleblower Program will operate.

6. To educate other professionals about developments with the False Claims Act and the wave of new state False Claims Acts, whistleblower lawyer blog attorneys published articles in journals that included Compliance Today, a publication of the Health Care Compliance Association. Our whistleblower lawyer blog attorneys also chaired the Whistleblower Law Symposium, and were invited to lead panel discussions and give presentations at the Southeastern Health Care Fraud Conference and various other conferences.

7. Of course, like other whistleblower law attorneys, our firm has continued to represent whistleblowers to recover damages for fraud in health care programs inclluding Medicare and Medicaid, Hurricane Katrina federal disaster relief, government procurement, and other matters affecting federal and state tax dollars.

We are continually inspired by our clients for their commitment to honesty and integrity in the use of government funds. We look forward to another successful year keeping you informed with this whistleblower lawyer blog!

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September 18, 2007

Whistleblower Law Attorneys to Gather for Symposium on False Claims Act, State False Medicaid Claims Act, and New IRS Whistleblower Rewards Program

Some of the country's leading attorneys in qui tam whistleblower cases and IRS Whistleblower cases will gather for the "First Annual Whistleblower Law Symposium," which will take place at the Georgia State Bar Headquarters on Thursday, September 20, beginning at 9:00 a.m. (See Agenda below). This Whistleblower Law Symposium is organized and co-chaired by the authors of this whistleblower lawyer blog, Michael A. Sullivan and Richard W. Hendrix.

The presenters will include the very successful Pat O’Connell of the Texas Attorney General’s Office, whose group has recovered more than $216 million in health care fraud cases since 1999; and Jim Breen, who has represented relator Ven-A-Care of the Florida Keys Inc. in many very substantial qui tam cases, including the action that led to last week’s announcement by DOJ of a settlement with Aventis Pharmaceuticals Inc.

In addition, Steve Cowen of King & Spalding, LLP will chair a discussion of issues in defending False Claims Act cases; Marlan Wilbanks and other relators’ counsel will speak as well; and Charlie Richards of the Georgia Attorney General's Office and Georgia’s Inspector General Doug Colburn will discuss the new Georgia State False Medicaid Claims Act.

We will also discuss the bill introduced last week by Senators Grassley, Durbin, Specter, and Leahy to make substantial modifications to the federal False Claims Act, the “False Claims Act Correction Act of 2007.” (See http://grassley.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=PressReleases.Detail&PressRelease_id=fac0a482-1321-0e36-ba6f-0150b8a2b182&Month=9&Year=2007).

Further, my partner Richard Hendrix and I will explain and discuss the new IRS Whistleblower Program created by Congress in December 2006. I spent several hours this past week in Washington with the Director of the new IRS Whistleblower Office, Stephen Whitlock, to prepare for and appear in a panel discussion to explain the new IRS Whistleblower Program. I also enjoyed lunch with the lead IRS official responsible for IRS Whistleblower claims in the financial services industry, Stuart Mann, and with Nicole Cammarota, an IRS official who is working on the new regulations. There is a great deal of excitement about this new IRS Whistleblower program, which rewards citizens who report large tax fraud, tax evasion, and other tax law violations to the IRS. (Our firm is pursuing a variety of IRS Whistleblower cases across the country.)

For anyone who believes that taxpayers pay too much to allow fraud against the federal and state governments, these exciting new developments in the law are important.

We are excited to be hosting this Whistleblower Law Symposium, and to discuss recent developments in the False Claims Act, the new state False Claims Acts, and the new IRS Whistleblower Program. The Agenda for the Symposium is below.

Continue reading "Whistleblower Law Attorneys to Gather for Symposium on False Claims Act, State False Medicaid Claims Act, and New IRS Whistleblower Rewards Program" »

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March 7, 2007

News in Government Procurement Fraud and False Claims

We found a very interesting article from last week's Legal Times, with an excerpt of interest to whistleblower lawyers as follows:

"Last fall, the Justice Department launched a National Procurement Fraud Task Force to focus "resources at all levels of government to increase criminal enforcement" in areas of procurement fraud. The stepped-up attention to this area throughout the government may signal that the $3.1 billion record in federal fraud recoveries in 2006 could soon be broken. More than 50 inspectors general from across all government departments and agencies also are actively pursuing thousands of investigations."

"In addition, powerful newly installed Democratic committee and subcommittee chairs in Congress are launching dozens of oversight investigations of alleged government and contractor abuses, focusing on the reconstruction effort in Iraq and in the U.S. Gulf Coast following Hurricane Katrina, numerous areas of military and homeland-security procurement, the pricing of pharmaceuticals and other significant areas of federal contracting. For instance, House Oversight and Government Reform Committee Chairman Henry Waxman, D-Calif., in the first week of February began one set of hearings on alleged waste, fraud and abuse by government contractors in Iraq and another set of hearings on alleged overcharging by drug companies in federal health programs."

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January 31, 2007

Progress with the New IRS Rewards Program for Tax Whistleblower Cases

We have been working with the IRS to bring information about large tax cheating to the IRS's attention, so that clients can participate in the new IRS Whistleblower rewards. The IRS officials sound excited to have this new tool at their disposal, and we are happy to help our whistleblower clients obtain the new rewards. Our latest one deals with fraud in the Hurricane Katrina relief effort, where the public and government have been cheated out of what appears to be many millions of dollars.

We find it especially exciting when a qui tam whistleblower client also has information that qualifies the client to participate in the new IRS whistleblower rewards. This new IRS law enacted in late December 2006 provides for rewards to the whistleblower of 15 to 30% of the government's recovery of taxes, interest, and penalties when income has been under-reported or underpaid.

You might be interested to know that the new IRS whistleblower program is different than the qui tam provisions of the False Claims Act, the main tool the government has had to date for combating fraud. The IRS whistleblower program permits payments of up to 10% of the government's recovery, even when the whistleblower is not an "original source" of the information.

We are excited to offer this service to our whistleblower clients and potential clients. We already feel like we have a "leg up" in helping clients because, as former federal prosecutors, we use that experience to advise our whistleblower clients on criminal law issues. After all, many times our clients have been uncomfortably close to the fraud they are reporting. Now, we can offer this third area of experience-the IRS whistleblower rewards program.

We think the increase in rewards to IRS whistleblowers is an excellent change in the law, which we will use to benefit our clients.

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January 26, 2007

Hurricane Katrina Fraud: The Government's Inspectors General Continue to Investigate Fraud and Whistleblower Reports

We all remember how Hurricane Katrina and Hurricane Rita left the Gulf Coast devastated. As government agencies began to provide disaster relief with public dollars, dishonest contractors saw a huge opportunity for fraud against the government. Too many FEMA contracts have been the targets of dishonest contractors.

The "watchdogs" of the federal government agencies--the various Inspectors General of the many agencies involved in Katrina relief--have combined their efforts and sent hundreds of auditors to the Gulf region to examine fraud and mismanagement of Katrina contracts. The Inspectors General website on Hurricane Katrina fraud describes these efforts.

We learn more about Hurricane Katrina fraud each time we are contacted by a potential whistleblower client who has something new to report. Many whistleblowers have acted to help the government stop this fraud by filing qui tam lawsuits under the False Claims Act, which can provide the whistleblower a share of the government's recovery of money damages and penalties, as well as attorney's fees and expenses.

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