SEC Cracking Down on Companies Trying to Silence Whistleblowers

The Securities and Exchange Commission announced on August 16 that California-based health insurance provider, Health Net Inc. agreed to pay a $340,000 penalty for illegally using severance agreements requiring outgoing employees to waive their ability to obtain monetary awards from the SEC’s whistleblower program.

According to the SEC, Health Net Inc. violated federal securities laws by taking away from departing employees who wanted to receive severance payments and other post-employment benefits the ability to file applications for SEC whistleblower awards. Health Net added the provision in August 2011 after the SEC adopted a rule to prohibit any action to impede someone from communicating with the SEC about possible securities law violations. Health Net removed the SEC-specific language from its severance agreements in June 2013, but retained restrictive language that removed the financial incentive for reporting information until finally amending the agreements to strike all such restrictive language last year.

This settlement comes less than a week after the SEC announced BlueLinx Holdings, an Atlanta-based building products distributer had agreed to pay $265,000 for similar securities law violations involving employee severance agreements.

“Financial incentives in the form of whistleblower awards, as Congress recognized, are integral to promoting whistleblowing to the Commission,” said Antonia Chion, Associate Director of the SEC Enforcement Division. “Health Net used its severance agreements with departing employees to strip away those financial incentives, directly targeting the Commission’s whistleblower program.”

Exit mobile version