• AML
  • Qui Tam
  • SEC
  • CFTC
  • FCPA
  • FAQS
Subscribe
Donate
Get Help
No Result
View All Result
Whistleblower Network News
The Truth at Any Cost.
Qui Tam, Compliance and Anti-Corruption News.
Whistleblower Network News
No Result
View All Result
Home False Claims-Qui Tam

Senate Judiciary Committee Passes Essential FCA Amendments, Whistleblower Advocates Express Support

Peter BriccettibyPeter Briccetti
October 28, 2021
in False Claims-Qui Tam
Reading Time: 6 mins read
FCA

Washington D.C, USA – January 18, 2017: The United States Senate podium in the Washington D.C. capitol building also known as Capitol Hill. The podium is where U.S. senators speak about upcoming bills and hearings, but the podium is empty because congress is not in session due to the inauguration of Donald J Trump for US president.

Share on TwitterShare on FacebookShare on LinkedInEmail

At 9:00am Eastern Time on October 28, the Senate Judiciary Committee voted to advance a bipartisan False Claims Act amendments bill onto the floor of the U.S. Senate. The bill passed with 15 yes votes and 7 votes of no. Senator Chuck Grassley (R-IA), a co-sponsor of the bill, took the lead on making the case for what he said were “essential fixes” to the False Claims Act, calling it “a well-oiled machine” that “just needed some tuning.” Watch the full Committee meeting here.

The amendments would tweak a number of issues with current use of the False Claims Act, mostly stemming from recent court interpretations of Act. The central current issue is a misunderstanding of the concept of materiality. As Grassley explained during the meeting, materiality boils down to whether the government had any knowledge of the fraud while it continued, and whether or not the government decided to stop payment on the contract. Recently, lower court interpretations of the 2015 U.S. Supreme Court case United Health Services v. United States ex rel. Escobar resulted in defendants who were subject to extremely strong cases having those cases dropped.

The Committee previously held a mark-up of the bill on October 21, but did not proceed to a vote, allegedly because of intense pressure and lobbying by the American Hospital Association.

Register for National Whistleblower Day

While not all lower courts have followed the particular interpretation featured in the United Health Services case, enough lower courts have to significantly change the landscape of the False Claims Act. These changes have discouraged others from taking cases out of fear of the case being dropped due to this materiality defense. If the defendant corporation can prove that someone, somewhere in the government, had knowledge that some aspect of the contract was fraudulent, and the government did not make the decision to halt payment of the contract, the defendant can argue for the case to be thrown out.

Grassley said during the meeting that due to this current defense, the fate of many current False Claims Act cases now counts on unknown bureaucrats in many branches of the federal government to report fraud as soon as they see it, something that most federal workers are not incentivized to do. He framed this discrepancy as fundamentally hurting the American taxpayers, asking “Why should taxpayers suffer for bureaucrats failing to expose fraud inside the government?”

Grassley also justified his amendments by making the point that many of the contracts in question exist on a massive scale and are essential to the wellbeing and health of millions of Americans. He brought up the example of the many healthcare-related contracts that the federal government currently funds to help with the COVID-19 pandemic, questioning why a fraudulent multi-million (or billion) dollar contract should be entirely safe from after-the-fact prosecution if even a single person in the government knew that a small part of the contract was fraudulent and decided to continue paying the contract so that a majority of Americans could continue to receive essential care.

After laying out the essential characteristics of the bill, the floor was opened up to comments and proposed amendments to the bill from other senators on the Committee. Senators Cotton (R-AR) and Tillis (R-NC) both introduced amendments to the proposed bill. Both amendments were argued and rejected. Cotton’s amendment would have scrapped the entire bill and instead commissioned a U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) study to report on the effects of the proposed changes. Grassley responded in no uncertain terms that this would allow more fraudsters to get away through the materiality argument, costing American taxpayers millions more. Cotton elaborated, saying that he believed the amendments could raise healthcare costs for Americans and concluding that more information was needed for a decision to be made.

Grassley responded by saying, “Yesterday was the 35th anniversary of this legislation…We don’t need a study for a law that works. I mean, are you going to find any fault with bringing in $64 billion dollars of taxpayers’ money? I guess I’d say I don’t understand your position based on what we know about [the bill].”

Stephen M. Kohn, a leading whistleblower lawyer at Kohn, Kohn & Colapinto, weighed in on the Cotton and Tillis amendments. “The arguments raised by Senators Cotton and Tillis in opposition to the bill are dangerous and would encourage collusion between special interests that profit from government contracts and government officials seeking jobs and benefits from these contractors. The Cotton and Tillis amendments would have immunized from liability government contractors who cultivate ‘friends’ in government willing to continue to pay on claims once whistleblowers report fraud. They would have opened the door to collusion, kickbacks and favoritism. The Cotton and Tillis amendments would reward government officials and their contractor friends who were complicit in misconduct.”

“Fraud is fraud. Fraud does not become legitimate because a contractor has a friend in the government willing to turn his or her back on the violations. The Committee wisely rejected the amendments offered by Cotton and Tillis,” Kohn stated.

Before the vote, Kohn published an article making the case for the passage of Grassley’s amendments in the National Law Review. The article further breaks down the issues with the current interpretation of materiality and dives into other important changes that the amendments would make, such as expanding protections from retaliation to past employees of a company. The changes in Grassley’s amendment would make it harder for powerful companies to retaliate against whistleblowers. As of now, all they have to do to end legal protections for a whistleblower that works for them is fire the employee in question.

Kohn continued to say that this was an extremely encouraging sign for future False Claims Act whistleblowers, and the continued success of the law in general. “This is a major victory for accountability and a blow to the efforts of special interests led by the Chamber of Commerce and American Hospital Association to undermine whistleblower rights. The AHA and Chamber fought hard to defeat this bill. Today they lost. Now the fight moves to the full Senate. A good day for whistleblowers.” The amendments will now move to the Senate floor, where the bill will be voted on.

Watch the recording of the Committee meeting here.

Read WNN coverage of the October 21 mark-up here.

Read Kohn’s National Law Review article here.

Read WNN’s article about a previous attempt to stonewall FCA amendments.

Read more False Claims Act news on WNN.

Tags: False Claims/Qui TamLegislationTop Stories 2021
Previous Post

Recap: OSHA’s Meeting on Whistleblower Program and Rights of Migrant Workers

Next Post

Shields Up: Peru’s New Effort to Defend the Defenders

Peter Briccetti

Peter Briccetti

Peter Briccetti is a contributing editor with Whistleblower Network News. He writes about breaking whistleblower news, and False Claims Act whistleblowers, FCPA whistleblowers, and tax fraud whistleblowers. Peter is a graduate of Hamilton College with a degree in History and an interest in politics and anti-corruption law. At Hamilton, he wrote for the Hamilton College Spectator as an editor and contributor.

Next Post
Credit: Mark Worth

Shields Up: Peru’s New Effort to Defend the Defenders

Receive Daily Alerts

Subscribe to receive daily breaking news and legislative developments sent to your inbox.

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Most Popular

Boeing Settles Wrongful Death Lawsuit with Family of Deceased Whistleblower

Congress Introduces “Urgently Needed” AI Whistleblower Bill

Dr. Toni Savage’s Groundbreaking Win for Whistleblowers

New York’s Proposed RAISE Act Includes Employee Protections for AI Whistleblowers

Calls Grow for Law Protecting AI Whistleblowers

Advocates Detail Need for SEC Whistleblower Reform

Whistleblower Poll

Whistleblower Poll
Whistleblower Poll

Exclusive Marist Poll: Overwhelming Public Support Among Likely Voters For Increased Whistleblower Protections

byGeoff Schweller
October 6, 2020

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

STAY INFORMED.
Subscribe to receive breaking whistleblower updates.

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

About Us

  • About
  • Contact Us
  • Donate
  • Careers

Subscribe

  • Daily Mail
  • Follow us on Twitter
  • YouTube Channel

Contribute

  • Letter to the Editor
  • Submission Guidelines
  • Reprint Guidelines

Your Experience

  • Accessibility Statement
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use

Help

  • Rules for Whistleblowers
  • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Advertise
Whistleblower Network News

Whistleblower Network News is an independent online newspaper providing our readers with up-to-date information on whistleblowing. Our goal is to be the best source of information on important qui tam, anti-corruption, compliance, and whistleblower law developments. 

Submit an Article

Copyright © 2025, Whistleblower Network News. All Rights Reserved.

This Newspaper/Web Site is made available by the publisher for educational purposes only as well as to give you general information and a general understanding of the law, not to provide specific legal advice. By using this website, you understand that there is no attorney-client relationship between you and the Newspaper/Web Site publisher. The Newspaper/Web Site should not be used as a substitute for competent legal advice from a licensed professional attorney in your state.

Become a Whistleblower Network News Subscriber

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Subscribe to WNN

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Subscribe to WNN
RSVP to National Whistleblower Day 2025! July 30, 2025 on Capitol Hill
RSVP NOW

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • Exclusives
  • Government
    • False Claims-Qui Tam
    • Federal Employees
    • Intelligence
  • Corporate
    • CFTC & Commodities
    • Dodd-Frank
    • IRS & Tax
    • SEC & Securities
  • Features
  • Legislation
  • International
    • Foreign Corruption
  • Rewards
  • Whistleblower of the Week
  • Environment & Climate
  • Opinion
  • Editorial
  • Employment
    • Sarbanes-Oxley Whistleblowers
    • Retaliation
    • OSHA
  • Make National Whistleblower Day Permanent
  • Media
    • Podcasts
    • Videos
    • Webinars
    • National Whistleblower Day
  • Whistleblower Poll
  • Whistleblower Resources
    • Frequently Asked Questions
    • Resources for Locating An Attorney
    • The New Whistleblowers Handbook

Copyright © 2024, Whistleblower Network News. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version