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"Blessed are those who are persecuted for righteousness' sake, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven." Matthew 5:10

If you're being punished for doing the right thing, Equal Justice Solutions stands with you.

Whistleblower Attorney for High-Stakes Truth-Telling

At Equal Justice Solutions, our whistleblower lawyers advocate for brave individuals who step up to expose financial deception, public resource mismanagement, and serious corporate violations. If you are preparing to alert authorities about unlawful Medicaid billing under the False Claims Act, tax evasion involving the IRS, or securities breaches brought before the SEC, our firm is fully prepared to assist you. Our experience includes addressing retaliation attempts, advising clients on confidential court submissions, handling subpoena requirements, and navigating the complexities of long term investigative actions.

We are not here as bystanders. This is the work we are dedicated to at the deepest level.

What Is a Whistleblower Attorney?

A whistleblower in Delaware is a person who reveals improper, illegal, or unethical activity occurring inside an organization, company, or agency, with the intention of halting wrongdoing and ensuring that the public interest is defended. At Equal Justice Solutions, our focus is on major forms of legally protected whistleblowing that relate to areas including:

  • Government contracts and public funds
  • Securities and financial markets
  • Tax fraud and evasion
  • Healthcare and pharmaceutical programs
  • Academic, research, and grant fraud
  • Retaliation for protected disclosures

The False Claims Act (FCA): Your Most Powerful Legal Tool

The False Claims Act (31 U.S.C. §§ 3729–3733) functions as the federal government’s leading enforcement mechanism for uncovering and addressing fraud tied to federal programs or funds. Individuals who report False Claims Act misconduct may be entitled to receive notable financial rewards, which generally fall within a 15% to 30% share of whatever amount the government recovers.

Many FCA matters proceed as qui tam lawsuits, which means the whistleblower, known legally as the relator, files the action on behalf of the United States. The Department of Justice can decide to step in or decline involvement. These filings frequently remain sealed for considerable periods that may extend into several months or multiple years.

Recurring forms of FCA violations include:

  • Billing Medicare or Medicaid for services not provided
  • Kickbacks to doctors or hospitals for referrals
  • False certifications to obtain federal loans or grants
  • Overbilling or price fixing on government contracts

Even remaining silent can function as a fraudulent act since the FCA imposes liability when a person knowingly fails to return an overpayment or deliberately hides noncompliance. In Universal Health Services, Inc. v. United States ex rel. Escobar, 579 U.S. 176 (2016), the Supreme Court ruled that omissions and incomplete disclosures can be treated as violations of the FCA when they are important to the government’s payment determination. The Court made clear that implied false certification, which includes failing to speak up about noncompliance, may be considered fraud when certain representations are made and those representations turn misleading because of missing information.

You Must Act First—and Fast

Any lawyer with substantial whistleblower experience will emphasize that timing often determines the outcome.

According to the First to File Rule in the False Claims Act (31 U.S.C. § 3730(b)(5)), only the earliest whistleblower to file a qui tam case is entitled to move forward and potentially share in the funds that the government recovers. If another person submits a filing even one day before you, you could be fully barred, even in circumstances where they learned the information directly from you. Courts enforce this rule with unwavering precision, as demonstrated in United States ex rel. Wood v. Allergan, Inc., 899 F.3d 163 (2d Cir. 2018).

The FCA also contains a Statute of Limitations, requiring you to file within six years of the underlying misconduct or within three years of when the government discovered or reasonably should have discovered the fraud, with an absolute limit of ten years from the date of violation. See Cochise Consultancy, Inc. v. United States ex rel. Hunt, 587 U.S., 139 S. Ct. 1507 (2019).

If filing is something you are seriously contemplating, consult a whistleblower attorney as soon as possible. Any hesitation could result in losing your right to recover.

What Counts as “Fraud”?

To properly construct a whistleblower action in Delaware under the FCA, you will need:

A false or fraudulent claim submitted to the government

This can involve presenting an untrue invoice for payment or knowingly encouraging another party to submit one. Examples include padding invoices, claiming services that were never performed, or falsely confirming that all contractual expectations were met when they were not.

Knowledge

This encompasses actual knowledge, reckless disregard for the truth, or deliberate ignorance. There is no need to prove a direct intent to cheat the government. Evidence showing that the defendant ignored obvious red flags or acted with extreme negligence is sufficient to meet this element.

Materiality

The inaccuracy must be important enough to affect the government’s determination to pay a claim. As clarified in Escobar, small mistakes or insignificant compliance issues are not enough. Ordinary clerical errors or technical missteps usually do not trigger FCA consequences. Large scale deception, purposeful misuse of federal funds, or substantial misleading statements that shape payment decisions will meet the threshold.

To build a whistleblower claim under the FCA, you need:

Additionally, the FCA reaches:

  1. Conspiracy to commit fraud against the government, which includes situations in which contractors or insiders join forces to exaggerate costs, fabricate compliance certifications, or manipulate documentation for financial gain.
  2. Actions that cause the government to pay more than it should, even if the defendant does not personally file the payment request, provided their behavior sets the fraudulent process in motion. As seen in United States ex rel. Customs Fraud Investigations, LLC v. Victaulic Co., 839 F.3d 242 (3d Cir. 2016), the court allowed an FCA suit where the defendant allegedly failed to include country of origin markings on imported goods, causing the government to miss tariff revenue it was legally owed. The ruling highlights that conduct which indirectly raises federal costs through deceptive acts or omissions can still qualify as FCA fraud.

In short: the FCA is not aimed at simple slip-ups or harmless clerical mistakes. But when the facts show systemic failures, reckless evasion, or intentional misconduct, you are almost certainly in the realm of FCA liability.

IRS & SEC Whistleblowers

In addition to what the False Claims Act provides, federal authorities have established significant compensation and safeguard programs operated by the IRS and the SEC.

IRS Whistleblower Program

According to 26 U.S.C. § 7623, anyone who exposes tax fraud cases involving amounts over $2 million could be entitled to 15 to 30 percent of the recovery achieved by the IRS. This initiative is aimed at detecting significant noncompliance, underpayment, or fraudulent practices, typically by corporations or individuals with high net worth. Cases remain confidential throughout the investigative process, often taking years to conclude, but the financial incentives for eligible whistleblowers are substantial.

SEC Whistleblower Program

As established under 15 U.S.C. § 78u-6, whistleblowers who disclose violations of securities regulations, such as insider trading, accounting manipulation, or false reporting, may receive 10 to 30 percent of collected fines or penalties. The SEC allows anonymous submissions through attorneys and maintains rigorous anti-retaliation rules to protect whistleblowers. Over time, this program has generated some of the most significant whistleblower payouts ever awarded in the United States.

Case Citations: Proof Over Promises

Across America, courageous whistleblowers have helped the government recover billions in public funds and have, on occasion, been granted awards that transform their financial futures. These examples demonstrate the extraordinary results that are possible when truth-tellers take action with both bravery and legal guidance:

  • Bradley Birkenfeld was awarded $104 million by the IRS after uncovering offshore banking fraud conducted by UBS. For supporting documentation, see Birkenfeld v. Comm’r, 117 T.C. 259 (2001) and U.S. Senate Report No. 110-70 (2007).
  • Cheryl Eckard, a quality control manager at GlaxoSmithKline, received $96 million under the False Claims Act for reporting contamination issues and safety violations at a Puerto Rico facility. Her actions ultimately contributed to a $750 million federal settlement. See United States ex rel. Eckard v. GlaxoSmithKline, No. 1:07-cv-10388 (D. Mass. 2010).
  • Joseph Thomas, employed as a laboratory analyst at Duke University, was granted a $33.75 million FCA award after exposing fraudulent research practices. See United States ex rel. Thomas v. Duke University, No. 1:13-cv-00098 (M.D.N.C.) for more information.
  • In 2023, a whistleblower received $279 million from the SEC, establishing the largest payout in U.S. whistleblower history. See SEC Release No. 34-97493 (May 5, 2023).

It should be noted that these cases are not typical. Still, they show that individuals who report wrongdoing through the correct procedures can earn substantial rewards that have the potential to change their lives dramatically.

Protections Against Retaliation

Regardless of whether your case involves the FCA, IRS, or SEC, federal law offers safeguards to ensure that whistleblowers are shielded from any form of retaliation, including:

  • Firing, demotion, or blacklisting
  • Harassment or threats
  • Loss of income or benefits
  •  

You may be entitled to:

  • Double back pay
  • Reinstatement or front pay
  • Attorneys’ fees and litigation costs
  • Emotional distress damages

Payment Structure: Transparent and Aligned with Justice

At Equal Justice Solutions, we arrange our fees in a way that reflects our core purpose while taking your financial situation into account.

False Claims Act (FCA) Cases

Most FCA matters we handle are taken on a complete contingency basis, meaning there is no cost to you unless your case is successful and results in recovery.

IRS & SEC Whistleblower Cases

For IRS and SEC claims, we typically employ either a full contingency arrangement or a hybrid structure, which includes a flat fee for investigative or strategic services, followed by a contingency fee for any recovered funds. Our advice is always honest and tailored to the details of your case.
Additionally, we assess all cases for potential state and local whistleblower protections. These laws can provide parallel safeguards and recovery options that are frequently missed by other firms, offering an extra layer of advantage for clients.

Top Whistleblower Protection Attorneys in Delaware

This is not something you can handle on your own. FCA and whistleblower cases are notoriously complex and involve highly unusual federal procedures. Claims must be submitted under seal, require detailed material specificity, and a single misstep, even one made in good faith, can result in the dismissal of a case before it is ever heard.

Common mistakes include:

Filing without sealing the complaint

Failing to submit a complaint under seal is a common and critical error that frequently results in immediate dismissal of the case before it can be evaluated on the merits.

Publicly disclosing the allegations

Making the contents of your claim public can invoke the public disclosure bar. In the United States ex rel. Schindler Elevator Corp. v. United States ex rel. Kirk, 563 U.S. 401 (2011), information obtained through FOIA requests was deemed public and barred the whistleblower’s suit from moving forward.

Breaking the seal

Improperly revealing a sealed complaint can lead to penalties or sanctions. The Supreme Court addressed this in State Farm Fire & Casualty Co. v. United States ex rel. Rigsby, 580 U.S. 39 (2016), noting that while dismissal was not required in that situation, breaching the seal carries potentially severe consequences.

Hiring a generalist lawyer

Many lawyers do not have the expertise required to navigate FCA, IRS, or SEC rules, and as a result, they often make mistakes that can derail a whistleblower claim.

We also analyze every case for potential claims under state and local whistleblower laws, many of which provide additional protections and opportunities for recovery that are frequently overlooked by generalist firms.

An illustrative example is People v. Sprint Communications, Inc., where the New York Attorney General successfully secured a $330 million recovery under the state’s False Claims Act. The allegations involved Sprint’s deliberate failure to collect and remit state taxes on certain wireless services, demonstrating the powerful role state whistleblower laws can play in enforcing accountability and securing compensation.

  • Failing to preserve retaliation claims or letting key deadlines lapse

At Equal Justice Solutions, we offer: At Equal Justice Solutions, we offer:

  • Confidential attorney intake (no call centers)
  • Experience across FCA, IRS, SEC, and DOL
  • Trial-readiness from day one
  • Strategy grounded in faith and moral clarity

Real Talk: Is This the Right Move?

Do not come forward as a whistleblower simply because of frustration or anger. Come forward because you cannot tolerate the wrongdoing you have witnessed. If you have already spoken up and faced pushback, you are exactly why we are here.

 

For Delaware clients, our experienced team works closely with the nationwide law firm Wade Kilpela Slade to provide comprehensive support on FCA and whistleblower matters. Most cases in Delaware are staffed with three to four attorneys, bringing federal expertise, trial preparedness, and a client-focused approach that prioritizes your protection and recovery.

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