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Perspectives From Experienced Government Counsel,

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Title: Perspectives From Experienced Government Counsel,


1
QUI TAM - QUI WHAT?
  • Perspectives From Experienced Government Counsel,
  • Relators Counsel Defense Counsel

17th Annual FLABOTA Convention Friday, July
18th, 2014 The Breakers Palm Beach, Florida
2
SPEAKERS
  • Government Counsel
  • Jeffrey W. Dickstein, Esq.
  • Assistant United States Attorney, United States
    Attorneys Office for the Southern District of
    Florida
  • (jeffrey.dickstein_at_usdoj.gov)
  • Relators Counsel
  • Marc S. Raspanti, Esq.
  • Partner, Pietragallo Gordon Alfano Bosick
    Raspanti, LLP in Philadelphia, PA
  • (www.Pietragallo.com / www.FalseClaimsAct.com /
    www.FraudWhistleblowersBlog.com)
  • Defense Counsel
  • Meredith S. Auten, Esq.
  • Partner, Morgan Lewis Bockius, LLP in
    Philadelphia, PA
  • (www.MorganLewis.com)

3
THE FALSE CLAIMS ACT OVERVIEW
1863 - 2014
  • Enacted during the Civil War by Abraham Lincoln
    to combat Defense Contractor fraud
  • Also called the Qui Tam Statute, the
    Whistleblower Law or the Lincoln Law
  • Strengthened in 1986 during the Cold War
  • Expansive reach all goods/services provided
    with any federal funds, now heavily focused on
    fraud in Healthcare programs
  • Vibrant Future Recently amended substantially
    by Congress
  • Can affect any institution, entity or individuals
    doing business directly or indirectly with the
    government

4
THE FALSE CLAIMS ACT
  • False Claims Acts apply to all types of goods,
    services and Government contracting, and have
    been particularly effective in combating
  • Healthcare (Medicare and Medicaid) Fraud
  • Pharmaceutical Fraud
  • Financial Industry Fraud
  • Defense Contracting Fraud
  • Energy (Oil and Gas) Contracting Fraud
  • Iraq Reconstruction Fraud
  • Environmental Fraud
  • Disaster Relief Fraud
  • Construction and Procurement Fraud
  • Research Fraud

5
STATE FALSE CLAIMS ACT
  • 29 states currently have their own False Claims
    Act
  • The Florida FCA was passed in 1994 and amended in
    2007
  • Morgan Lewis partner Bobby Brochin was a drafter

6
STATE FALSE CLAIMS ACT
29 States now have their own FCAs
  • California
  • Colorado
  • Connecticut
  • Delaware
  • Florida
  • Georgia
  • Hawaii
  • Illinois
  • Indiana
  • Iowa
  • Louisiana
  • Maryland
  • Massachusetts
  • Michigan
  • Minnesota
  • Montana
  • Nevada
  • New Hampshire
  • New Jersey
  • New Mexico
  • New York
  • North Carolina
  • Oklahoma
  • Rhode Island
  • Tennessee
  • Texas
  • Virginia
  • Washington
  • Wisconsin

7
MUNICIPALITY FALSE CLAIMS ACT
The following municipalities have their own False
Claims Acts
  • Chicago
  • New York City
  • District of Columbia
  • Philadelphia
  • Allegheny County, PA

8
FEDERAL FALSE CLAIMS ACT
  • Qui tam cases produced 39 billion in settlements
    - hundreds of millions to over 1 billion in some
    cases
  • Examples of top civil recoveries
  • GlaxoSmithKline - 2 billion
  • Johnson Johnson - 1.7 billion
  • Pfizer - 1 billion
  • Bank of America - 1 billion
  • Tenet Health - 900 million
  • Abbott - 800 million
  • Home America Mortgage - 320 million

9
FEDERAL FALSE CLAIMS ACT
  • What it does NOT cover
  • FCA does NOT cover tax fraud
  • New IRS Whistleblower Provision
  • 26 U.S.C. 7623
  • New SEC Whistleblower Program
  • 15 U.S.C. 78a et seq.

10
FEDERAL FALSE CLAIMS ACTPROHIBITED CONDUCT
  • FCA prohibits
  • Knowing submission or causing submission of false
    or fraudulent claims for payment
  • Knowing submission or causing submission of false
    or fraudulently records in support of a false
    claim
  • Conspiracy to submit a false claim
  • Submission of false records to reduce money owed
    to the United States
  • 31 U.S.C. 3729

11
FEDERAL FALSE CLAIMS ACTPROHIBITED CONDUCT
  • Not limited to classic fraud
  • Knowing falsity broadly defined
  • Actual knowledge
  • Reckless disregard / deliberate ignorance of the
    truth or falsity of the information ostrich
    with its head in the sand
  • Regulatory / contractual violations can be recast
    as knowing falsity

12
WHAT IS A CLAIM UNDER FCA?
  • Any request or demand, whether under a contract
    or otherwise, for money or property which is made
    to a contractor, grantee, or other recipient if
    the U.S. provides or reimburses any portion of
    the money or property
  • Examples of Claims Under the Act
  • Direct requests for payment
  • Indirect requests for payment
  • Obligations owed to the Government
  • Bids
  • Loan applications
  • Grant documents
  • Cost reports

13
FEDERAL FALSE CLAIMS ACT
  • What Defendants can owe if held liable
  • Defendant liable for mandatory treble damages
    sustained by the Government
  • Defendant also liable for penalty of between
    5,500 and 11,000 per claim for each false claim
    to the Government
  • Defendant liable for attorneys fees and
    litigation costs
  • Joint and several liability with no right of
    contribution or indemnity

14
FEDERAL FALSE CLAIMS ACT
  • Who can be a relator?
  • A relator can be any person, including
    individuals, entities, and companies

15
QUI TAM LITIGATION
  • How will investigation generally proceed?
  • Civil Investigative Demands
  • Inspector General Subpoenas
  • Search Warrants
  • Grand Jury
  • Interviews voluntary
  • Criminal HIPAA Subpoenas

16
HOT BUTTON SECTIONS OF LAW
  • First to File Bar - 31 U.S.C. 3730(b)(5)
  • Public Disclosure Bar - 31 U.S.C. 3730(e)(4)(A)
  • Original Source - 31 U.S.C. 3730(e)(4)(B)
  • Fair, Adequate Reasonable - 31 U.S.C.
    3730(c)(2)(B)
  • Relator Share Award - 31 U.S.C. 3730(d)(1)
  • Attorney Fees Award - 31 U.S.C. 3730(d)(1)
  • Anti-Retaliation Provision - 31 U.S.C. 3730(h)

17
FEDERAL FALSE CLAIMS ACT
  • Attorneys Fees and Costs
  • If found liable, Defendant must pay the Relators
    reasonable attorneys fees and costs
  • Attorneys fees and costs are in addition to
    Relators share of the recovery by the Government

18
FEDERAL FALSE CLAIMS ACT
  • Whistleblower Protection 3730(h)
  • FCA protects any employee, contractor or agent
    discriminated against because of lawful acts done
    in furtherance of an FCA action
  • Entitled to all relief necessary to be made
    whole, including two times back pay, special
    damages, attorneys fees and costs

19
FEDERAL FCA ANTI-RETALIATION PROVISION31 U.S.C.
3730(h)(1)
  • Relief From Retaliatory Actions
  • (1) In general Any employee, contractor, or
    agent shall be entitled to all relief necessary
    to make that employee, contractor, or agent
    whole, if that employee, contractor, or agent is
    discharged, demoted, suspended, threatened,
    harassed, or in any other manner discriminated
    against in the terms and conditions of employment
    because of lawful acts done by the employee,
    contractor, agent or associated others in
    furtherance of other efforts to stop 1 or more
    violations of this subchapter

20
RELATORS PRIVATE CAUSES OF ACTION
  • Under Common Law
  • Intentional torts
  • Breach of Contract
  • State Statutes
  • New Jersey Conscientious Employee Protection Act
  • Watch preemption issues

21
FEDERAL FALSE CLAIMS ACT
  • Important Legal Issues
  • 6-year statute of limitations, but can be
    extended to 10 years in certain cases
  • Only the Relator who is the First-to-File
    eligible to share in the recovery

22
QUI TAM LITIGATION
  • Whistleblower a.k.a. Relator
  • Files in the name of the Government
  • Complaint filed under seal
  • United States has 60 days to investigate and
    decide whether to intervene or not declination
    is 75 - 80 of cases
  • Decline and allow the private person to pursue
    the case on their own
  • File a notice of non-intervention at this time
  • Relator shares in recovery (15 - 30)
  • Relator recoveries are currently higher in
    DOJ-intervened cases

23
QUI TAM LITIGATION
  • Relator and his information
  • Employee or ex-employee of defendant
  • May have been involved in fraud to limited extent
  • May be Government employee
  • Cannot be a member of the Armed Services for
    actions arising out of military service
  • Second qui tam on same facts is barred
  • Public disclosure bar unless original source
  • Now government discretion to oppose dismissal

24
QUI TAM LITIGATION
  • Intervention
  • Government may elect to intervene or decline
  • In some or all of allegations
  • Can file an amended complaint / common law causes
    of action
  • Seal is lifted
  • If Government declines, it still remains real
    party in interest
  • Relators may pursue case on behalf of the
    government unless government moves to dismiss

25
QUI TAM LITIGATION
  • Relators shares
  • If Government intervenes, 15 - 25 plus attorney
    fees and costs
  • If Government declines, 25 - 30 plus attorney
    fees and costs
  • Awards reduced for relators who planned and
    initiated fraud no recovery if criminally
    convicted of fraud

26
THE MODERN FEDERAL FCA
  • Two separate Causes of Action
  • Fraud Cause of Action Whistleblower essentially
    shares with the Government
  • 31 U.S.C. 3730(h) allegation Relators Cause
    of Action only

27
HEALTH CARE FRAUD
  • Since the 1986 amendments to the federal FCA, the
    federal Government has recovered over 30 Billion
    from False Claims Act cases.
  • More than 67 of qui tam cases in the last decade
    have been health care fraud qui tam cases.
  • Typical health care defendants pharmaceutical
    companies medical device companies hospitals
    durable medical equipment physicians medical
    suppliers

28
TYPICAL QUI TAM HEALTH CARE FRAUD WHISTLEBLOWERS
  • Pharma Sales Reps Managers
  • Medical Device Sales Reps
  • Any Sales Reps
  • Medical Directors
  • Physicians
  • Hospital Executives
  • Quality Control Personnel
  • Pharmacists
  • Nurses
  • Accountants
  • Contractors
  • Compliance Officers
  • Counsel

29
TYPICAL HEALTH CARE FRAUD ALLEGATIONS
  • Drugs (off label marketing kickbacks inflated
    pricing PRM fraud)
  • Upcoding
  • Excessive or unnecessary medical / diagnostic
    tests being performed on patients
  • No health care services actually provided to the
    patient
  • Kickback to illegally induce physician referrals
  • All types of hospital based fraud
  • Stark Violations
  • Ghost patients billed
  • Quality of health care services provided
  • Overcharging Government health programs for DME,
    services
  • Unlawful sales and promotion
  • Research grant fraud

30
TYPICAL HEALTH CARE FRAUD ALLEGATIONS
  • Regulatory violations any will do?
  • Conflicts of interest, violations of industry
    codes of ethics, state laws
  • Various certifications of compliance

31
TYPICAL ALLEGATIONS AGAINST MEDICAL DEVICE AND
DRUG MANUFACTURERS
  • Cozy financial relationships between and among
    owners
  • Aggressive off-label marketing practices
  • Inappropriate marketing efforts
  • Unapproved or adulterated devices and drugs
  • Safety issues
  • Industry sponsoring and paying for research
  • Clinical trial issues
  • FDA indications
  • Direct consumer advertising issues
  • Shortcuts in quality of care
  • KICKBACKSKICKBACKSKICKBACKS

32
ENFORCEMENT LANDSCAPE
  • Skewed industry focus on one industry sector
    health care
  • Other industries ripe for focus financial
    services, technology, retail, defense
    contractors, energy, educational institutions
  • Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force
  • Procurement Fraud Task Force
  • Well over 1,000 qui tams currently under seal
    majority are health care, but many financial
    institution defense contractors as well

33
ENFORCEMENT LANDSCAPE
  • Most civil and criminal cases have been and will
    continue to be driven by qui tam plaintiffs and
    their counsel
  • 3.8 billion recovered in 2013
  • 752 qui tam filed in 2013- 2.9 million in
    recoveries
  • 2.6 billion of 3.8 billion recovered from health
    care matters
  • Much better coordination between Feds and many
    State AGs
  • High Level of coordination between civil and
    criminal prosecutors
  • Over 160 federal qui tam actions spread across
    many judicial districts against medical device
    and pharmaceutical manufacturers
  • 385 million to whistleblowers in 2013

34
ENFORCEMENT LANDSCAPE
  • Judicial impatience with length of DOJ
    investigations under seal in some jurisdictions
    internal DOJ 9-month rule
  • Consortiums of relator counsel banding together
  • Professional whistleblowers
  • More sophisticated attorneys, more aggressive,
    more willing to fight at all levels
  • More cases going through discovery to the
    courthouse steps

35
HEALTH CARE FRAUD INVESTIGATIONS UNIQUE
CHALLENGES
  • Complex regulatory framework
  • Complex payment and reimbursement system
  • Medicare, 49 Medicaid programs, other health care
    programs SCHIP, TRICARE, FEHB, VHA, HIS
  • Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, i.e.
    CMS/OIG/FDA
  • CMS policies and the FCA law dont always
    interact
  • Knowing where to find the answer is not always
    easy

36
HEALTH CARE FRAUD INVESTIGATIONS UNIQUE ASPECTS
  • Health care first or second largest expenditure
    of funds in the country
  • Relators / whistleblowers are everywhere from the
    lunch room to the board room
  • Nature of health care is interaction with all
    aspects of society
  • Lots of claims / millions of submissions /
    billions of dollars
  • Many disgruntled, downsized, displaced or demoted
    employees
  • Exclusion from the Medicare and Medicaid program
    is a powerful deterrent

37
KEY STATUTES
  • Federal False Claims Act 31 USC 3729 et seq.
  • False Claims Act Anti-Retaliation Provisions 31
    USC 3730(h)
  • 29 State False Claims Acts
  • Anti-Kickback Statutes State and Federal
  • The Stark Law, 42 USC 1395nn
  • FERA (2009) and PPACA (2010) amendments

38
DEFENSE PERSPECTIVES
  • Well-developed body of case law favorable to
    defense significant battlegrounds
  • Scienter standard negligent, innocent mistakes
    not enough ambiguous regulations not rise to
    level of knowing violations
  • Public disclosure and first-to-file bar series
    of defense-favorable recent decisions to prevent
    parasitic suit
  • Proper measure of damages good recent decisions
    that proper measure damages takes into account
    benefit government received
  • Penalties can violate 8th Amendment maybe not
    per claims, but per act
  • Enforceability of releases more courts
    enforcing
  • Rule 9(b) requirement to plead fraud with
    particularity

39
DEFENSE PERSPECTIVES
  • Goal 1 manage companys credibility in all
    communications and strategic actions from first
    call to government forward
  • Define strategy early
  • Determine what to fight about substantively on
    legal issues not on document production unless
    abuse through CID process
  • Goal is always DOJ declination as well as relator
    dismissal

40
DEFENSE PERSPECTIVES
  • Recent FCA amendments confirm proactive
    strategies are necessary before intervention
  • CIDS and information sharing with relators and
    states may require defense interaction with the
    court
  • Robust compliance programs remain the best
    defense
  • Encourage employees, agents and contractors to
    use internal channels to address concerns
  • Investigate all of those calls

41
QUI TAM LITIGATION ITS COMPLICATED!
  • Intricacies of Federal Programs/Agencies
  • Complexity of Liability and/or Damages Creates
    Difficulties
  • Relationships/Reputation with Government and
    Other Relators Counsel
  • Qui Tam Litigation Relator Government
    Defendant Complicated³

42
COMPLEXITY CREATES OPPORTUNITIES
  • The process of a qui tam lawsuit
  • A potential whistleblowers first consideration
  • False Claims Act lawyers screening of the
    Relators evidence
  • Special aspects in drafting the FCA Complaint and
    statutory disclosures
  • Filing the case and presenting the matter to the
    Government
  • Companys response to an investigation
  • Governments determination of whether to join the
    case
  • Relators involvement during the seal period and
    beyond
  • Settlement and/or litigation phase of the action

43
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