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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 attorneys stand firmly with individuals who choose to reveal financial fraud, government waste, and unlawful corporate behavior. Whether you are stepping forward to report improper Medicaid billing through the False Claims Act, tax schemes to the IRS, or securities wrongdoing to the SEC, you can rely on our full support. Our team has confronted retaliation in many forms, and we have guided clients through sealed filings, demanding subpoena processes, and lengthy investigations that span years.

We are not casual participants in this work. This is our calling and our purpose.

What Is a Whistleblower Attorney?

A whistleblower in Pennsylvania is an individual who brings unlawful or unethical behavior to light, usually within a workplace, company, or institution, with the purpose of stopping the misconduct and safeguarding the broader public interest. At Equal Justice Solutions, we devote our practice to significant, legally protected whistleblowing efforts that involve matters such as:

  • 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) serves as the federal government’s central tool for combating fraud that involves federal dollars. Whistleblowers who come forward with information about violations of the False Claims Act may qualify for significant financial awards, typically ranging from 15% to 30% of the total amount the government ultimately recovers.

FCA actions are frequently filed as qui tam lawsuits, which means the whistleblower, referred to as the relator, initiates the case on the government’s behalf. The Department of Justice has the authority to intervene in the case or decline to do so. These matters frequently remain sealed for extended periods that can last months or even years.

Common examples 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 silence can amount to fraud because under the FCA, knowingly keeping overpayments or concealing violations can create liability. In Universal Health Services, Inc. v. United States ex rel. Escobar, 579 U.S. 176 (2016), the Supreme Court determined that omissions and partial truths may be treated as actionable misconduct when they are significant to the government’s decision to issue payment. The Court confirmed that implied false certification, including staying silent about noncompliance, may qualify as fraud when specific statements are made and those statements become misleading through what is left unsaid.

You Must Act First—and Fast

Any seasoned whistleblower attorney will explain that timing plays a decisive role in whether your case succeeds.

Under the First to File Rule of the False Claims Act (31 U.S.C. § 3730(b)(5)), only the first individual to submit a qui tam complaint is allowed to move forward and qualify for a portion of the government’s financial recovery. If another person files even a single day before you, you may be entirely barred, even when that person obtained the information directly from you. Courts apply this rule with strictness, as seen in United States ex rel. Wood v. Allergan, Inc., 899 F.3d 163 (2d Cir. 2018).

There is also a Statute of Limitations within the FCA, which requires that a filing occurs within six years of the violation or within three years of the point when the government discovered or reasonably should have discovered the fraudulent conduct, with a hard limit of no more than ten years after the violation took place. See Cochise Consultancy, Inc. v. United States ex rel. Hunt, 587 U.S., 139 S. Ct. 1507 (2019).

If the possibility of filing is even crossing your mind, you should speak with a whistleblower attorney immediately. Waiting too long could jeopardize everything.

What Counts as “Fraud”?

To successfully establish a whistleblower claim in Pennsylvania under the FCA, you must have:

A false or fraudulent claim submitted to the government

This may involve directly submitting a false request for payment or knowingly causing someone else to submit one. Such conduct can take many forms, including inflated billing practices, fabricated service charges, or falsely asserting compliance with contractual or regulatory obligations.

Knowledge

This includes actual awareness, reckless disregard, or deliberate avoidance of the truth. You do not need to show a clear intent to deceive. A whistleblower can rely on proof that the defendant ignored obvious warning signs or behaved with serious carelessness that rises to the level of willful blindness.

Materiality

The misrepresentation must be substantial enough to influence the government’s choice to pay a claim. As explained in Escobar, not every error or regulatory misstep will qualify. Routine administrative mistakes or minor lapses in compliance typically fall short. However, calculated deception, misuse of taxpayer funding, or major misstatements that affect payment decisions will satisfy this requirement.

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

Additionally, the FCA reaches:

  1. Conspiracy to defraud the government, which includes coordinated efforts between contractors, employees, or internal actors who work together to inflate charges, falsify records, or misrepresent compliance in order to obtain improper payments.
  2. Causing the government to overpay for goods or services, even when the defendant is not the party directly submitting the claim, so long as their conduct initiates or contributes to the fraudulent outcome. For instance, in the United States ex rel. Customs Fraud Investigations, LLC v. Victaulic Co., 839 F.3d 242 (3d Cir. 2016), the court permitted an FCA claim to advance where a company allegedly failed to label imported products with their country of origin, which resulted in the government unknowingly forgoing lawful tariffs. This case demonstrates that deception or omissions that indirectly increase the government’s financial burden can still create FCA exposure.

 

In short: the FCA is not designed to penalize genuine errors. But when the circumstances involve major mismanagement, reckless concealment, or intentional deceit, you are very likely dealing with conduct that falls within FCA boundaries.

IRS & SEC Whistleblowers

Apart from the False Claims Act, the federal government also runs substantial whistleblower reward and protection initiatives through the IRS and the SEC.

IRS Whistleblower Program

Pursuant to 26 U.S.C. § 7623, individuals who come forward with information about tax fraud exceeding $2 million may qualify to receive between 15 and 30 percent of the total amount the IRS recovers. The program focuses on uncovering substantial underpayments or fraudulent activity, often involving large corporations or wealthy individuals. These investigations are handled confidentially, can last several years, and while the process may be lengthy, the potential financial rewards for whistleblowers can be considerable.

SEC Whistleblower Program

Under 15 U.S.C. § 78u-6, those who report violations of securities laws, including insider trading, accounting fraud, or misleading corporate filings, may be eligible for 10 to 30 percent of the monetary penalties collected by the SEC. The agency permits whistleblowers to submit reports anonymously through legal counsel and enforces strict anti-retaliation protections. This program has produced some of the largest whistleblower awards in the history of the United States.

Case Citations: Proof Over Promises

Throughout the United States, whistleblowers have played a crucial role in reclaiming billions of taxpayer dollars and, in certain instances, have received awards that dramatically change their lives. These cases illustrate the remarkable outcomes that can occur when individuals step forward with honesty and are supported by the law:

  • Bradley Birkenfeld received a $104 million award from the IRS after exposing extensive offshore banking fraud at UBS. For further reference, see Birkenfeld v. Comm’r, 117 T.C. 259 (2001) and U.S. Senate Report No. 110-70 (2007).
  • Cheryl Eckard, who worked as a quality manager at GlaxoSmithKline, was granted a $96 million FCA award after reporting contamination and serious safety violations at a Puerto Rico manufacturing facility. Her disclosures led to a $750 million settlement with the federal government. See United States ex rel. Eckard v. GlaxoSmithKline, No. 1:07-cv-10388 (D. Mass. 2010).
  • Joseph Thomas, a laboratory analyst at Duke University, obtained a $33.75 million FCA award for revealing falsified research practices. For additional details, see United States ex rel. Thomas v. Duke University, No. 1:13-cv-00098 (M.D.N.C.).
  • In 2023, the SEC issued $279 million to a whistleblower, marking the largest whistleblower award in history. See SEC Release No. 34-97493 (May 5, 2023).

To be clear, these examples are exceptional. Nevertheless, they demonstrate that whistleblowers who adhere to the proper legal channels can receive significant awards that may have a transformative impact on their lives.

Protections Against Retaliation

Whether your matter falls under the FCA, the IRS, or the SEC, federal statutes provide protection for whistleblowers against retaliation, which may include:

 

  • 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, our fee structure is designed to align with both our mission and your individual circumstances.

False Claims Act (FCA) Cases

We handle nearly every FCA case on a full contingency basis, which means you are not responsible for any fees unless we achieve a successful outcome on your behalf.

IRS & SEC Whistleblower Cases

These matters are usually managed either entirely on contingency or through a hybrid approach, which may involve a flat fee for investigative or strategic work, followed by contingency fees for any recovery. We provide candid guidance based on the specifics of your situation.

We also review every potential case for applicable state and local whistleblower statutes, many of which provide additional protections and opportunities for recovery. These laws are often overlooked by general practice firms but can significantly benefit your claim.

Top Whistleblower Protection Attorneys in Delaware

This is not a do-it-yourself process. Cases under the False Claims Act and other whistleblower statutes are among the most procedurally intricate and legally demanding matters in federal practice. Submissions must be filed under seal, claims must include materially specific details, and even a seemingly minor error can cause a case to fail before it reaches the courtroom.

Common mistakes include:

Filing without sealing the complaint

Submitting a complaint without the required seal can result in automatic dismissal of the case, as courts treat this as a fundamental procedural error.

Publicly disclosing the allegations

Revealing your claims publicly can trigger the public disclosure bar. For example, in the United States ex rel. Schindler Elevator Corp. v. United States ex rel. Kirk, 563 U.S. 401 (2011), documents obtained through FOIA were considered public disclosures that prevented the relator from proceeding.

Breaking the seal

Violating the confidentiality of a sealed complaint can carry serious repercussions, potentially leading to sanctions. The Supreme Court emphasized this in State Farm Fire & Casualty Co. v. United States ex rel. Rigsby, 580 U.S. 39 (2016). While the Court did not require dismissal in that instance, it made clear that breaches of the seal may have significant consequences.

Hiring a generalist lawyer

Many attorneys lack specialized training in FCA, IRS, or SEC procedures, which often leads to critical mistakes that can jeopardize a whistleblower’s case.

We also review every matter for applicable state and local whistleblower statutes. These laws frequently provide parallel protections and additional opportunities for recovery that are commonly missed by general practice firms.

For example, in People v. Sprint Communications, Inc., the New York Attorney General recovered $330 million under the state False Claims Act after allegations that Sprint knowingly failed to collect and remit required state taxes on certain wireless services. This case highlights how state-level statutes can create powerful avenues for financial recovery and hold wrongdoers accountable.

  • 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 step forward as a whistleblower out of anger. Step forward because dishonesty or wrongdoing is something you cannot ignore. If you have already raised concerns and faced retaliation, you are precisely why we exist.

For our clients in Pennsylvania, our multi-lawyer team ensures that your FCA or whistleblower matter receives the depth and attention it deserves. We also partner with the nationwide law firm Wade Kilpela Slade, so every case is fully supported. Typically, Pennsylvania clients’ FCA matters are handled by a team of three to four attorneys who combine trial readiness, federal expertise, and a commitment to protecting your rights and interests.

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