(Reuters) -
Whistleblowers earned more than $532 million in 2011 through lawsuits alleging
fraud against the U.S. government, a record for such payouts, according to a
law firm study published on Friday.
Private
parties suing on the behalf of the government collected $140 million more than
they did the previous year, even as the Justice Department's total civil fraud
sanctions remained consistent, the law firm Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher said.
The DOJ
recovered some $3.02 billion last year through cases under the False Claims Act
- the third-largest recovery ever, just shy of the $3.09 billion it won through
cases in 2010.
But for the
whistleblowers that helped bring them, 2011 was an even better year.
"The
bounty provisions are so attractive," said Andrew Tulumello, who helps
lead Gibson Dunn's Washington office and worked on the report. "When you
look at $540 million going to basically the plaintiffs bar, that is going to
attract more and more interest."
The Justice
Department has used the Civil War-era law, designed to root out unscrupulous
contractors, to aggressively go after healthcare providers and pharmaceutical
companies for overcharging Medicare and Medicaid.
The law
provides for whistleblowers to earn up to 30 percent of any recovery and in
recent years such tipsters - referred to as relators in False Claims parlance -
have helped bring an increasing number of the government's cases.
Eighty-four
percent of such cases opened last year were brought by whistleblowers, up from
75 percent the year before. Twenty-five years ago, only 8 percent of the
government's cases were based on lawsuits from relators.
The record
payouts in 2011 come amid the ramp-up of a new whistleblower bounty program
created by the Dodd-Frank financial regulatory overhaul to encourage
individuals with information about securities law violations to come forward.
That program has yet to provide its first award.
The 2011
numbers - based on the government's fiscal year from October through September
- are helped by one of the largest payouts ever, to a former GlaxoSmithKline
Plc employee.
In October
2010, a GSK quality manager won $96 million for exposing manufacturing defects
at a plant in Puerto Rico. The company paid $750 million to settle the charges.
Whistleblowers
earn a cut based on how far they advance a case before the government takes
over. In cases where the Justice Department declines to intervene, they can win
an even greater share of any eventual settlement.
The vast
majority of the 2011 awards - some $490 million - came in cases where the
Justice Department joined the case. Another $42 million came from cases the
government declined to pursue.

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