The document summarizes recent developments in whistleblower law, including jury verdicts awarding millions of dollars in damages in Sarbanes-Oxley (SOX) retaliation cases. It discusses expansions to the types of conduct protected under SOX, Dodd-Frank, the False Claims Act, and the National Defense Authorization Act. It also notes increased enforcement by the SEC of Dodd-Frank's anti-gag provision and compares the differences between protections offered under the various whistleblower statutes.
3. Jury Verdicts
• No cap on compensatory damages in SOX and
FCA retaliation cases
• Recent jury verdicts in SOX cases:
– $6M Zulfer v. Playboy Enterprises Inc., JVR No.
1405010041, 2014 WL 1891246 (C.D.Cal. 2014)
– $2.2M in damages and $2.4M in fees Van Asdale
v. Int'l Game Tech., 549 F. App'x 611, 614 (9th Cir.
2013)
– $1.6M in compensatory damages in Perez v.
Progenics Pharmaceuticals (S.D.N.Y. 2015)
5. SOX Protected Conduct
• Sylvester v. Parexel Int’l, WL 2165854 (ARB May 25, 2011)
– Disclosure of potential violation protected
– A complaint need not allege shareholder fraud to receive SOX’s
protection
– Reasonable belief standard does not require complainants to
have told management or the authorities why their beliefs are
reasonable
– SOX complainants no longer need to show that their disclosures
“definitively and specifically” relate to the relevant laws
– SOX complainants need not establish criminal fraud
6. Sarbanes-Oxley Protected Conduct
• Federal courts adopting Sylvester
– Nielsen v. AECOM Tech. Corp., No. 13-235-cv (2d
Cir. 2014)
– Weist v. Lynch, 710 F.3d 121 (3rd Cir. 2013)
– Villanueva v. U.S. Dep’t of Labor, 743 F.3d 103,
109 (5th Cir. 2014)
– Rhinehimer v. U.S. Bancorp Investments, Inc., No.
13-6641 (6th Cir. 2015)
7. Sarbanes-Oxley Protected Conduct
Wallace v. Tesoro Corp., No. 13-51010 (5th Cir.
7-31-2015)
• “[P]roviding information about potential fraud
or assisting in a nascent fraud investigation” is
protected even though the complainant
“might not know who is making the false
representations or what that person is
obtaining by the fraud”
• Richard Renner represented Wallace
9. Dodd-Frank
Whistleblower Protection
• Protected activity if:
• Provided information to the SEC ;
• Initiating, testifying in, or assisting in SEC
investigation; or
• Disclosing information required or protected by
SOX, the 1934 Act, and any other law, rule, or
regulation subject to the jurisdiction of the SEC.
10. Dodd-Frank
Whistleblower Protection
• Does it cover internal whistleblowing?
–Second Circuit says yes in Berman
–Fifth Circuit says no in Asadi
–Most district courts say yes
–SEC Interpretive Guidance says yes. See
Release No. 34-75592 (Aug. 4, 2015).
• SEC is enforcing anti-retaliation provision of
Dodd-Frank
15. SEC Enforcement of Dodd-Frank
Anti-Gag Provision
• Rule 21F-17(a) under the Exchange Act
provides that “[n]o person may take any
action to impede an individual from
communicating directly with the Commission
staff about a possible securities law violation,
including enforcing, or threatening to enforce,
a confidentiality agreement…with respect to
such communications.”
16. SEC Enforcement of Dodd-Frank
Anti-Gag Provision
• April 2015 administrative action against KBR.
See Exchange Act Release No. 74619 (April 1,
2015).
• No evidence that agreement prevented a KBR
employee from communicating directly with
SEC
• $130,000 penalty
• Companies are amending confidentiality
policies and agreements
17. SEC Enforcement of Dodd-Frank
Anti-Gag Provision
• Increased scrutiny of gag clauses in
settlement agreements and
confidentiality policies at other federal
agencies:
–OSHA
–NLRB
–EEOC
18. Ask Questions Before
Accepting Documents
• State v. Saavedra, N.J. No. A-68-13
(June 23, 2015)
• Factors to consider
• Are documents being retained to
make a disclosure to a government
agency or instead for a retal claim?
• Are the documents relevant?
• Is any of the material privileged?
• Were the documents acquired
unlawfully?
• Did the employee obtain the
documents in the course of
performing ordinary job duties?
20. Halliburton v. Admin. Review Bd
• Merely “outing” a whistleblower is an adverse action under
SOX. Halliburton, Inc. v. Admin. Review Bd., 771 F.3d 254, 259
(5th Cir. 2014).
• “[The] targeted creation of an environment in which the
whistleblower is ostracized is . . . in effect, a potential
deprivation of opportunities for future advancement.”
• Whistleblower need not demonstrate the existence of a
retaliatory motive
• Great article about the case:The Whistleblower’s Tale: How
An Accountant Took on Halliburton
21. Protection for Employees of Government
Contractors and Grantees
– False Claims Act, 31 §USC 3730(h)
– NDAA, 41 U.S. Code § 4712 and 10 U.S. Code §
2409
22. FCA Protected Conduct
• Broader scope of protected conduct post-2009 FCA
amendments
• Protects actions in furtherance of a qui tam action and
“other efforts to stop 1 or more violations of [the FCA]”
• Young v. CHS Middle E., LLC, 2015 WL 3396790 (4th Cir. May
27, 2015)
– protect[s] employees while they are collecting information
about a possible fraud, before they have put all the pieces of the
puzzle together
• Need not prove actual FCA violation
• Higher burden for “duty speech” claims
23. NDAA Protected Conduct
• Covers employees of nearly all government contractors
• Excludes contractors of Intelligence agencies
• Broad scope of protected conduct
• Violation of law, rule, or regulation relating to federal
contracts, including competition for or negotiation of a
contract;
• Gross mismanagement, gross waste of federal funds,
abuse of authority; or
• Substantial and specific danger to public health or safety
24. Distinctions Between FCA and NDAA
FCA Anti-Retaliation Provision Sections 827 and 828 of NDAA
Coverage Employee, contractor, or agent Employee of a contractor,
subcontractor, or grantee
Protected
Conduct
Lawful acts done by the
employee, contractor, agent or
associated others 1) in
furtherance of an action under
the FCA or 2) other efforts to
stop 1 or more violations
-Violation of law, rule, or
regulation related to a federal
contract
-Gross mismanagement of a
federal contract or grant
-Gross waste of federal funds
-Abuse of authority relating to a
federal contract or grant
-Substantial and specific danger to
public health or safety
Administrative
Exhaustion
File directly in federal court Must file initially at OIG; can
remove to federal court after 210
days
Causation
Standard
“But for” causation Contributing Factor
Jury Trial Y Y
Damages Double back pay, reinstatement,
special damages (emotional
distress damages and harm to
reputation), attorney fees
Back pay, reinstatement, special
damages, attorney fees
Statute of
Limitations
3 years 3 years