By Tom McParland | February 2, 2018
A Delaware federal judge this week ordered a Delaware MRI provider to pay $16.2 million in a whistleblower case accusing the company of submitting thousands of false Medicare claims for MRIs that were conducted without a doctor present.
By Michael Booth | January 30, 2018
"The waiver provision in CEPA bars plaintiff from bring a parallel claim under New Jersey common law when both claims are based on the same conduct," U.S. District Judge John Vazquez said.
By Jenna Greene | January 29, 2018
Akin Gump experts talk FCA; Covington's big win for Bombadier at the ITC; Winston & Strawn scores for GolTV in suit against Fox;
By Jenna Greene | January 28, 2018
Two False Claims Act experts—Akin Gump partners Terence Lynam and Robert Salcido—talk about what's behind recent plaintiffs' losses and the rough road ahead for relators.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By P.J. D'Annunzio | January 26, 2018
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit upheld the dismissal of Colleen M. Bradley's case against her former boss Mark Mixner, West Chester University, and the Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education.
By R. Robin McDonald | January 25, 2018
An internal Justice Department memo that spells out specific, new criteria for federal prosecutors to use in determining whether to dismiss a whistleblower case may be more defense-oriented but, while a reason for caution, raises no immediate alarms.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Robert Storace | January 25, 2018
Although caught by surprise, Connecticut attorneys generally support an internal DOJ memo urging government attorneys to dismiss meritless False Claims Act cases.
By Cogan Schneier | January 24, 2018
One lawyer who represents qui tam relators said the memo represents a major "sea change" in how the agency handles FCA cases.
By Cogan Schneier | January 24, 2018
One lawyer who represents qui tam relators said the memo represents a major "sea change" in how the agency handles FCA cases.
New York Law Journal | In Brief
By Andrew Denney | January 19, 2018
A whistleblower has filed a suit accusing her former employer, a late Westchester County pathologist, of evading New York income and estate taxes in what is believed to be the state's first unsealed qui tam estate tax case.
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