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What is the False Claims Act
& Why is it Important?
The False Claims Act is
the single most important tool U.S. taxpayers
have to recover the billions of dollars stolen
through fraud by U.S. government contractors
every year.
Under the False Claims
Act, 31 U.S.C. §§ 3729-3733, those who knowingly
submit, or cause another person or entity to
submit, false claims for payment of government
funds are liable for three times the
governments damages plus civil penalties of
$5,500 to $11,000 per false claim.
The False Claims Act
explicitly excludes tax fraud. Section
3729(e) states that the Act does not apply
to claims, records, or statements made under the
Internal Revenue Code. That said,
there is a new
IRS Whistleblower law, separate from the Federal False
Claims Act, which provides for up to triple damages and
whistleblower awards of 15 to 30 percent of the amount
recovered. To file under this section of the law, however,
the
tax, penalties, interest, and
additions in dispute must total a sum
in excess of
$2,000,000. To report tax fraud for sums
less than this amount, call the IRS Fraud
Hotline at 1-800-366-4484 or see the
IRS web site form.
Qui Tam
Whistleblower Provisions
The False Claims Act
contains qui tam, or whistleblower,
provisions. Qui tam is a unique mechanism
in the law that allows citizens with evidence of
fraud against government contracts and programs
to sue, on behalf of the government, in order to
recover the stolen funds. In compensation for the
risk and effort of filing a qui tam case,
the citizen whistleblower or "relator"
may be awarded a portion of the funds recovered,
typically between 15 and 25 percent. A qui
tam suit initially remains under seal for at
least 60 days during which the Department of
Justice can investigate and decide whether to
join the action
A Public-Private
Partnership
Congress recognized that
the Government alone, with its limited resources,
was overmatched in the fight against rampant
fraud. In response to widespread reports that the
U.S. Treasury was being repeatedly bilked, in
1986 Congress rejuvenated a Civil War-era
lawthe False Claims Act. The 1986
amendments strengthened the False Claims
Acts qui tam provisions, creating
incentives for private citizens with evidence of
fraud to commit their time and resources to
supplement the Governments efforts. By
doing so, Congress put into play a powerful
public-private partnership for uncovering fraud
against the federal fisc and obtaining the
maximum recovery for American taxpayers.
Changing the Culture
of Fraud
The False Claims Act is
about more than money. It is also about
discouraging fraud and changing the culture of
corporate America. As Sen. Charles Grassley
(R-IA) and Rep. Howard Berman (D-CA) have noted:
"Studies
estimate the fraud deterred thus far by the qui
tam provisions runs into the hundreds of
billions of dollars. Instead of encouraging
or rewarding a culture of deceit,
corporations now spend substantial sums on
sophisticated and meaningful compliance
programs. That change in the corporate
culture -- and in the values-based decisions
that ordinary Americans make daily in the
workplace -- may be the law's most durable
legacy."
Who the Law Applies To
In general, the False
Claims Act covers fraud involving any federally
funded contract or program, with the exception of
tax fraud.
While many qui tam
actions in the late 1980s and early 1990s
involved Department of Defense contracts, in
recent years most qui tam actions have
been used to fight Medicare fraud and fraud
against other federally funded health care
programs. A broad array of scenarios can
constitute FCA violations. Some examples include
the following:
- A
contractor falsifies test results or
other information regarding the quality
or cost of products it sells to the
Government;
- A health
care provider bills Medicare for services
that were not performed or were
unnecessary, or;
- A grant
recipient charges the Government for
costs not related to the grant.
Types of
Fraud Prosecuted Under the FCA
It is impossible
to list all of the frauds that have been
prosecuted under the False Claims Act, but the
following list gives some idea of the scope of
the false claims on the Government that have been
uncovered to date:
- Billing for goods
and services that were never delivered or
rendered.
- Billing for
marketing, lobbying or other non-contract
related corporate activities.
- Submitting false
service records or samples in order to
show better-than-actual performance.
- Presenting broken
or untested equipment as operational and
tested.
- Performing
inappropriate or unnecessary medical
procedures in order to increase Medicare
reimbursement.
- Billing for work
or tests not performed.
- Billing for
premium equipment but actually providing
inferior equipment.
- Automatically
running a lab test whenever the results
of some other test fall within a certain
range, even though the second test was
not specifically requested.
- Defective testing
- Certifying that something has passed a
test, when in fact it has not.
- "Lick and
stick" prescription rebate fraud and
"marketing the spread"
prescription fraud, both of which involve
lying to the government about the true
wholesale price of prescription drugs.
- Unbundling -
Using multiple billing codes instead of
one billing code for a drug panel test in
order to increase remuneration.
- Bundling --
Billing more for a panel of tests when a
single test was asked for.
- Double billing -
Charging more than once for the same
goods or service.
- Upcoding -
Inflating bills by using diagnosis
billing codes that suggest a more
expensive illness or treatment.
- Billing for brand
-- Billing for brand-named drugs when
generic drugs are actually provided.
- Phantom employees
and doctored time slips: Charging for
employees that were not actually on the
job, or billing for made-up hours in
order to maximize reimbursements.
- Upcoding employee
work: Billing at doctor rates for work
that was actually conducted by a nurse or
resident intern.
- Yield burning --
skimming off the profits from the sale of
municipal bonds.
- Falsifying
natural resource production records --
Pumping, mining or harvesting more
natural resources from public lands that
is actually reported to the government.
- Being over-paid
by the government for sale of a good or
service, and then not reporting that
overpayment.
- Misrepresenting
the value of imported goods or their
country of origin for tariff purposes.
- False
certification that a contract falls
within certain guidelines (i.e. the
contractor is a minority or veteran).
- Billing in order
to increase revenue instead of billing to
reflect actual work performed.
- Failing to report
known product defects in order to be able
to continue to sell or bill the
government for the product.
- Billing for
research that was never conducted;
falsifying research data that was paid
for by the U.S. government.
- Winning a
contract through kickbacks or bribes.
- Prescribing a
medicine or recommending a type of
treatment or diagnosis regimen in order
to win kickbacks from hospitals, labs or
pharmaceutical companies.
- Billing for
unlicensed or unapproved drugs.
- Forging physician
signatures when such signatures are
required for reimbursement from Medicare
or Medicaid.
Limits on the False
Claims Act
Though the False Claims
Act is a powerful tool to combat fraud, it is a
tool that is sharply constrained by both the law
and economics of litigation.
- Tax issues
are not covered by the False Claims Act.
- For a civil
case to be filed, the fraud has to reach
a certain size, otherwise it is generally
not worth it for the relator to risk his
or her career to file suit, nor is it
worth it for a law firm to take on the
case and risk the loss of the enormous
time and expense that a False Claims Act
represents.
- A defendant
in a False Claims Act has to have
relatively deep pockets. Many of the
smaller companies that may be defrauding
the government are liable to declare
bankruptcy if faced with the triple
damages that can be levied under the
False Claims Act.
- A law firm
that take on a False Claims Act case must
believe it has a very strong case in
order to proceed. Not only can a firm be
out time and money, but if the government
does not take the case and the
whistleblower proceeds, he or she can be
forced to pay the defendants attorney's
fees if the court finds that the claim
was frivolous or brought primarily for
purposes of harassment.
State False
Claims Acts
In addition to the
Federal False Claims Act, a number of states also
have False Claims Acts that work to discourage frauds
perpetrated against state governments. States
with False Claims Acts include: California,
Delaware, the District of Columbia, Florida,
Hawaii, Illinois, Louisiana, Massachusetts,
Nevada, New Mexico, Tennessee, Texas, and Virginia.
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