Top Five Predictions For Whistleblower Programs; Blockbuster Year Expected Despite Intense Corporate Opposition
The increased reach of U.S. whistleblower laws and a growing interest overseas in whistleblower programs will make 2012 the Year of the Whistleblower, predicts Phillips & Cohen LLP, a law firm that has specialized in representing whistleblowers for nearly 25 years.
A harbinger of the year to come can be seen in the flood of whistleblower submissions the Securities and Exchange Commission received in the first seven weeks after it adopted the final rules for its new program whistleblower reward program created by the Dodd-Frank Act. From August 12 to Sept. 30, the SEC received 334 whistleblower submissions.
As a result of Dodd-Frank, the U.S. now has four robust whistleblower programs that offer substantial rewards to private citizens who expose fraud against the government, investor fraud and foreign bribery by corporations: The SEC’s and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission’s programs created by Dodd-Frank; the Internal Revenue Service’s whistleblower reward program for claims exceeding $2 million; and one for Medicare fraud, defense contractor fraud and other types of fraud through the “qui tam” (whistleblower) provisions of the False Claims Act.
“The SEC and CFTC quickly recognized the value of whistleblowers and are very responsive to the information whistleblowers provide,” said Erika A. Kelton, a whistleblower attorney with Phillips & Cohen in Washington, DC. “These new programs, which are attracting high-quality information from insiders around the world, combined with the responsiveness of government agencies, will make 2012 a blockbuster year for securities and fraud enforcement. Early success also will make it difficult for Congressional opponents to dilute the highly effective SEC whistleblower program.”
Eric R. Havian, a whistleblower attorney with Phillips & Cohen in San Francisco, said he expects the five-year-old IRS program, which so far has yielded few results, to get back on track in 2012.
“The IRS has indicated that it expects to make a number of awards in 2012 and make its program more transparent so that it’s clearer whether the IRS is following up on whistleblower information,” Havian said. “Those developments, combined with the outstanding track record the IRS for protecting the identity of whistleblowers, will encourage more high-level executives to come forward with information about substantial tax law violations.”
Phillips & Cohen pioneered the use of “qui tam” whistleblower cases under the modern-day False Claims Act and is a leader in whistleblower cases brought under the False Claims Act as well as the IRS, SEC and CFTC whistleblower reward programs. Whistleblower cases brought by the firm have resulted in governments recovering more than $7 billion in civil settlements and criminal fines, making it the nation’s most successful whistleblower firm. (See www.phillipsandcohen.com.)
To read Phillips & Cohen’s Top Five predictions about whistleblower programs in 2012, see its website.
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