Respironics is to pay $34.8 million for alleged False Claims Act violations related to the sale of sleep masks designed to treat sleep apnea. Allegedly Respironics, a Murrysville, PA based company, paid kickbacks in the form of free call center services to durable medical equipment (DME) companies that purchased the masks.
On Monday, February 29, 2016, the Justice Department announced that the Lockheed Martin Corporation and its subsidiaries Lockheed Martin Energy Systems and Lockheed Martin Utility Services (collectively, Lockheed Martin) agreed to pay the United States $5 million to resolve allegations that they violated the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA).
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit reversed a district court order dismissing the False Claims Act (“FCA”) lawsuit brought by Relator Steven Mateski against his former employer, Raytheon. The suit, which potentially exposes Raytheon to more than $1 billion in damages, is based on allegations that the company failed to comply with provisions of its contract with the government to develop a sensor for a meteorological satellite,
Ameri-Source International, Inc.; Ameri-Source Specialty Products, Inc.; Ameri-Source Holdings, Inc. and SMC Machining, LLC are Pennsylvania-based importers. Arjay Goel and Thomas Diener owned the first three companies while SMC Machining, Inc. was incorporated at Goel’s direction. The businesses and Goel and Diener were named as defendants in a False Claims Act lawsuit alleging that that they had schemed to avoid customs duties for the import of small-diameter graphic electrodes which were manufactured in the Peoples Republic of China.
On Tuesday, February 9, 2016, President Barack Obama announced that he was seeking $29 billion in funding for the U.S. Department of Justice (“DOJ”) in his budget for fiscal year 2017. The requested funds will support federal law enforcement priorities and includes increases in funding for countering violent extremism and other national security areas,
Last week, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit interpreted the False Claims Act’s (“FCA’s”) public disclosure bar, as modified by the 2010 amendments, in a manner favorable to potential relators. The bar, added to the FCA in 1986, precludes a would-be relator from filing suit based on allegations of fraud that were publicly disclosed in certain sources,
The United States has secured a $9 million settlement from URS E&C Holdings, Inc., a successor in interest to Washington Group International, Inc., to resolve False Claims Act allegations. According to the settlement, Washington Group International, Inc., a global design and construction company, was awarded contracts in the 1990s by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) for the construction of water and wastewater infrastructure projects in the Arab Republic of Egypt.
Novum Structures LLC, a Wisconsin based construction company, has agreed to pay a $3 million fine and enter a guilty plea for violating the “Buy America” provisions of contracts for federally funded construction projects. This includes a $500,000 criminal fine and $2.5 million to resolve civil allegations under the FCA that it submitted false claims for payment on several projects between January 1,
On Wednesday, December 9, 2015, The Department of Justice announced that Bollinger Shipyards agreed to settle a False Claims Act suit in the Eastern District of Louisiana. The suit alleges that Bollinger misrepresented the longitudinal strength of patrol boats it was contracted to deliver to the Coast Guard. This misrepresentation resulted in the Coast Guard patrol boats buckling and failing while in service.
New York State Supreme Court Judge Joan Madden recently ruled that a former Vanguard Group tax lawyer’s qui tam complaint, filed in 2013 and made public a year later, must be dismissed and cannot be re-filed because it was brought in violation of New York State attorney ethic rules.