GREEN v. SERVICE CONTRACT EDUCATION AND TRAINING TRUST FUND et al
Filing
87
MEMORANDUM OPINION. Signed by Judge Richard W. Roberts on 2/13/2012. (lcrwr1)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
________________________________
)
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
)
ex rel. GORDON GREEN,
)
)
Plaintiff,
)
)
v.
) Civil Action No. 09-738 (RWR)
)
SERVICE CONTRACT EDUCATION
)
AND TRAINING TRUST FUND, et al., )
)
Defendants.
)
________________________________ )
MEMORANDUM OPINION
Gordon Green filed a complaint against the Service Contract
Education and Training Trust Fund (“SCETTF”), the Laborers’
International Union of North America (“LIUNA”), and twenty-nine
government contractors, alleging that the defendants violated the
False Claims Act (“FCA”), 31 U.S.C. §§ 3729-33, by engaging in a
scheme to defraud the United States by submitting false and
fraudulent claims concerning fringe benefit programs that SCETTF,
at the behest of LIUNA, provided to the contractor defendants in
connection with federal service contracts.
elected not to intervene in the action.
The United States
Following notice of that
decision, Green dismissed voluntarily his claims against twentyfour of the contractors.
SCETTF, LIUNA, and four of the five
remaining contractors –- Integrity Management Services, Inc.,
Crothall Healthcare, Inc., Kentucky Building Maintenance, Inc.,
and National Maintenance, Inc. (the “contractor defendants”) –-
- 2 moved to dismiss the complaint for lack of subject matter
jurisdiction and failure to state a claim.1
Green’s complaint
alleges two bases for concluding that defendants misrepresented
to government officials that training the defendants provided
qualified as a bona fide fringe benefit under applicable law:
first, because the contractor defendants were reimbursed for a
substantial portion of training costs, and second, because the
contractor defendants used on-the-job training funds to
compensate employees for work required under their government
contracts.
Because Green’s reimbursement claim is based upon the
public disclosure of transactions from the news media and Green
is not an original source of the information underlying his
allegations, that claim will be dismissed for lack of subject
matter jurisdiction.2
The on-the-job training claim will be
dismissed because Green fails to plead fraud with particularity.
1
A fifth contractor defendant, Hospital Klean, filed an
answer. The resolution of the other defendants’ motions to
dismiss disposes of the claims against Hospital Klean.
2
In the course of briefing the motions to dismiss, two
defendants filed motions to adopt their co-defendants’ motions.
Green opposed on grounds that his claims as to the contractor
defendants differ from those as to SCETTF and LIUNA and the
motions failed to specify which arguments the movants seek to
adopt. Because the applicability of the arguments to the
contractor and non-contractor defendants is sufficiently clear,
the motions to adopt co-defendants’ motions will be granted nunc
pro tunc.
- 3 BACKGROUND
The complaint and accompanying materials set forth the
following allegations and background.
Green was employed by
defendant LIUNA as its International Representative from 1999
through 2001 and employed by defendant SCETTF as its Director
from 2001 through 2004.
(Compl. ¶ 4.)
LIUNA is an international
labor union for workers in a variety of fields, including in the
service industries.
(Id. ¶ 7.)
SCETTF was established by LIUNA
in 1978 to provide training and educational opportunities for
LIUNA’s members.
(Id. ¶¶ 8-10.)
To join SCETTF, a contractor
must have a collective bargaining agreement (“CBA”) with LIUNA
representing its service employees.
(Id. ¶ 28.)
the two organizations thus is linked.
Membership in
When a contractor becomes
a member of LIUNA, it executes an agreement with LIUNA providing
that the contractor will submit contributions to SCETTF in
accordance with a set schedule and that both the contractor and
LIUNA will be bound by SCETTF’s Agreement and Declaration of
Trust.
(Id. ¶ 29.)
In addition, the contractor executes an
agreement with SCETTF that obligates it to contribute to SCETTF
the compensation from its government contracts that go toward the
costs of those fringe benefits financed by SCETTF.
(Id. ¶ 30.)
Integrity Management Services, Crothall Healthcare, Kentucky
Building Maintenance, National Maintenance, and Hospital Klean
are each commercial contractors that, at relevant times, were
- 4 members of LIUNA, were members of SCETTF, and contracted with
government agencies to provide services.
(Id. ¶ 12.)3
Green’s
complaint alleges that SCETTF, LIUNA, and the defendant
contractors defrauded the federal government by providing and
conspiring to provide claims, records, and statements that
falsely or fraudulently represented that fringe benefits provided
to the contractor’s employees complied with the standards of the
McNamara-O’Hara Service Contract Act of 1965, Pub. L. 89-286, 79
Stat. 1034, 41 U.S.C. § 351 et seq. (the “SCA”)4 and related
Department of Labor (“DOL”) regulations.
The SCA applies to certain contracts between an employer and
the United States that have the principal purpose of furnishing
services by service employees.
The DOL administers the SCA, and
is responsible for determining wage standards for workers in the
services industries.
(Id. ¶¶ 14-17.)
The SCA provides, in
relevant part:
Every contract . . . entered into by the United States
or the District of Columbia in excess of $2,500 . . .
the principal purpose of which is to furnish services
in the United States through the use of service
3
In a table, the complaint provides a “Principal Offices”
location and “Contact Person” for each of the defendant
contractors. (Compl. ¶ 12.) In a separate table, the complaint
provides a list of the federal agencies with which the defendant
contractors had service contracts. (Id. ¶ 33.)
4
In 2011, the SCA was recodified at 41 U.S.C.A. § 6702 et
seq, and the relevant provisions were subject to stylistic
revision. This opinion cites to the previous version relied on
by Green in his complaint.
- 5 employees, shall contain . . . [a] provision specifying
the fringe benefits to be furnished in the various
classes of service employees, engaged in the
performance of the contract or any subcontract
thereunder[.]
41 U.S.C.A. § 351(a)(2) (2010).
The SCA treats the provision of
fringe benefits to employees covered by a CBA in a distinct
manner.
“[W]here a collective-bargaining agreement covers any
such service employees,” the provision specifying the fringe
benefits to be furnished is “to be provided for in such
[collective-bargaining] agreement, including prospective fringe
benefits increases provided for in such agreement as a result of
arm’s-length negotiations.”
Id.
The SCA defines fringe benefits
non-exhaustively as follows:
Such fringe benefits shall include medical or hospital
care, pensions on retirement or death, compensation for
injuries or illness resulting from occupational
activity, or insurance to provide any of the foregoing,
unemployment benefits, life insurance, disability and
sickness insurance, accident insurance, vacation and
holiday pay, costs of apprenticeship or other similar
programs and other bona fide fringe benefits not
otherwise required by Federal, State, or local law to
be provided by the contractor or subcontractor.
Id.
In addition, the SCA permits the federal government to
reimburse a government contractor for a plan providing fringe
benefits to its employees negotiated with its unions under a CBA.
(Compl. ¶ 19.)
Additional regulations require that “the
contractor’s contributions for the benefits must be paid
irrevocably to a trust fund or third person pursuant to an
insurance agreement, trust or other funded arrangement,” and that
- 6 “the trust or fund must be set up such that the contractor will
not be able to (i) recapture any of the contributions paid, nor
(ii) in any way divert the funds to its own use or benefit.”
(Id. ¶ 21 (citing 29 C.F.R. 4.171(a)(4)).)
A contractor with a CBA presents the information regarding
the fringe benefits to be provided by submitting a form known as
an “Addendum A” to a federal agency from which it seeks a
services contract.
(Id. ¶¶ 23-24.)
When the federal agency
awards a contract, that contract includes a provision specifying
the fringe benefits to be furnished, and the contractor is
compensated for the cost of the fringe benefits as part of the
contract.
(Id. ¶ 25.)
The DOL Division of Wage Determinations
maintains information regarding the terms of the service
contract, including the fringe benefits agreed upon in a CBA.
(Id. ¶ 26.)
Green alleges that the defendants engaged in a fraudulent
scheme whereby each of the defendant contractors made
contributions to SCETTF in the amounts paid to the contractors by
the federal agencies with which they contracted and then SCETTF
returned to the defendant contractors ninety percent of those
contributions.
(Id. ¶¶ 34-35.)
While the purported purpose of
the refund was to finance the contractors’ provision of on-thejob training, classroom training, and third party training (id.
¶¶ 36, 45), the complaint alleges:
- 7 At all times pertinent to this Complaint, those
portions of above described recaptured contributions
allocated by the Participating Contractors for on-thejob training were, in truth and in fact, used to
compensate employees for performing tasks required by
the contractors’ service contracts, and thus were
diverted by the Participating Contractors to their own
use and benefit[.]
(Id. ¶ 46.)
The complaint further alleges that purported fringe
benefits described as on-the-job training and class room training
“did not meet the definition of ‘fringe benefits,’ and did not
provide any effective or substantial benefit to the contractors’
employees,” regardless of whether those benefits were financed by
the “recaptured contributions.”
(Id. ¶ 47.)
In support of these claims, the complaint describes an
SCETTF promotional website, established around 2003 and
accessible until the date the complaint was filed, that allegedly
demonstrated that the purpose of the trust fund was to enable
participants to recapture and divert ninety percent of their
contributions for training.
(Id. ¶¶ 37-43.)
The website
compares two hypothetical companies, one of which is an SCETTF
participant and one of which is not.
The non-participant,
Company A, is listed as having specified hourly costs for an
employee’s “wages,” “health insurance,” “pension,” and
“training,” and does not receive “government reimbursement” or
“trust fund reimbursement.”
Company B has the same costs, but is
reimbursed twenty cents by the government and eighteen cents by
the trust fund, SCETTF.
Green alleges that the promotional
- 8 website illustrates that the goal of SCETTF was to enable a
contractor to recapture ninety percent -- eighteen cents in the
hypothetical -- of the contractors’ contributions to SCETTF,
which are represented in the hypothetical by the twenty cents of
government reimbursement for those contributions.
(Id. ¶ 43.)
Green alleges that, as a result, SCETTF enabled the contractors
“to incur no expenses whatsoever for fringe benefits, by allowing
them to provide no real or effective training.”
(Id. ¶ 44.)
In sum, Green alleges that the defendant contractors
fraudulently induced federal agencies to enter contracts by
submitting records in the form of the “Addendum A” to federal
agencies containing statements that the defendant contractors had
CBAs with LIUNA and that the contractors’ service employees were
to receive fringe benefits financed by SCETTF of specified costs.
Green contends that such representations were “false and
fraudulent when so submitted as these [defendant contractors]
then knew that they did not intend to provide such fringe
benefits.”
(Id. ¶ 48.)
Further, Green alleges that the
defendants negotiated service contracts with federal agencies
that included compensation for the provision of the abovedescribed fringe benefits, knowingly presented under the
contracts claims for payment in the form of periodic “Vouchers
for Services” to federal agencies that included compensation for
the provision of such fringe benefits, and knowingly and
- 9 deliberately failed to provide such fringe benefits to their
service employees under the service contracts.
Green
(Id.)
alleges that the federal agencies that negotiated, awarded, and
made payments under service contracts with the defendants “relied
upon the Addendum A records and the statements within such
records” in determining whether to award the contracts and the
compensation for the contracts.
(Id. ¶ 49.)
Green’s complaint
lists several high-level individuals at LIUNA and SCETTF “who
were aware of, approved of, and participated in the fraudulent
activity described in th[e] Complaint.”
(Id. ¶ 11.)
He alleges
that a “Contact Person” for each defendant contractor “knowingly
participated in, or knowingly executed the agreement whereby his
Contractor participated in the SCETT Fund, including its
specified provision for on-the-job training, classroom training,
and third party training.”
(Id. ¶¶ 12-13.)
The complaint alleges that the defendants concealed the
scheme by forwarding to the DOL’s Division of Wage Determinations
information about the service contracts that contained false
representations about fringe benefits.
(Id. ¶¶ 50-51.)
The
information provided to the DOL was allegedly “material” to the
decisions of the federal agency to award contracts, “in that such
contracts become valid and enforceable only where the Secretary
of Labor . . . determines that the dollar value of the fringe
benefits included is that prevailing in the locality for the
- 10 classification in which the service employees are working.”
(Id.
¶ 52.)5
Green filed his complaint on April 22, 2009, asserting
claims against SCETTF and LIUNA for FCA violations involving
presenting fraudulent claims (Count One), claims against twentynine contractors for FCA violations involving presenting
fraudulent claims (Count Two), claims against SCETTF and LIUNA
for making false statements (Count Three), claims against the
twenty-nine contractors for making false statements (Count Four),
and claims against all defendants for conspiracy (Count Five).
With regard to each count, Green alleges that the activity giving
rise to liability occurred “[d]uring the period beginning in or
about 1978 and continuing until the date of th[e] Complaint.”
(Compl. ¶¶ 57, 61, 65, 71, 77.)
Green claims “direct and
independent knowledge” of the information on which his
allegations are based due to his employment with LIUNA and
SCETTF, and asserts that none of the allegations in the complaint
is “based upon a public disclosure.”
(Id. ¶ 5.)
In 2011, the
United States filed a notice of its election to decline
5
Green’s allegation regarding the role of the DOL misstates
the statutory requirement. The requirement that the Secretary of
Labor or his authorized representative determine that “fringe
benefits to be furnished in the various classes of service
employees . . . be prevailing for such employees in the locality”
applies to service employees not covered by a CBA. 41 U.S.C.A.
§ 351(a)(2) (2010). Where a CBA covers service employees, as is
discussed supra, the fringe benefits to be furnished are “to be
provided for in such [collective-bargaining] agreement[.]” Id.
- 11 intervention in the case.
Green later voluntarily dismissed his
claims against twenty-four of the contractors.
SCETTF, LIUNA, Integrity Management Services, Crothall
Healthcare, Kentucky Building Maintenance, and National
Maintenance moved to dismiss under Federal Rule of Civil
Procedure 12(b)(1), arguing that the FCA’s public disclosure bar
eliminates subject matter jurisdiction over the action, and under
Rule 12(b)(6), arguing that Green failed to plead fraud with
particularity as required by Rule 9(b) and failed to plead
factual allegations that any of the defendants presented a false
claim for payment, made any false statements, or conspired to get
the United States to pay a false claim.
In opposition, Green
argued that the public disclosure bar does not preclude
jurisdiction because Green falls within the FCA’s original source
exception and that his pleadings are adequate.
In support of his
jurisdictional argument, Green submitted a declaration in which
he states that “[a]s Director of the Fund, I became aware of the
manner and means of its operation [sic] the fraudulent conduct of
the Fund, LIUNA, and the contractors named as defendants in the
case, which is the basis of the allegations in my Complaint.”
(Docket 70, Decl. of Gordon N. Green (“Green Decl.”) ¶ 4.)
He
lists his employment responsibilities at SCETTF as “includ[ing]
the development of literature and other documents for the Fund,
and facilitating card-check elections for the organization of
- 12 unions (as opposed to voting elections),” as well as “also
conduct[ing] training sessions for shop stewards, supervis[ing]
staff, and assist[ing] in contract negotiations.”
(Id. ¶ 3.)
Further, he states that he provided the information underlying
his allegations to the government by a submission dated April 2,
2009, before he filed his suit.
(Id. ¶ 4.)
DISCUSSION
Under the FCA, a private individual, termed a relator, may
bring a qui tam suit for penalties and treble damages against
anyone who knowingly presents, or causes to be presented, to an
officer or employee of the United States Government, a false or
fraudulent claim for payment or approval, or who knowingly makes,
uses, or causes to be made or used, a false record or statement
material to a false or fraudulent claim.
§ 3729(a)(1)(A)-(B) (2006).
31 U.S.C.
A relator may also bring suit for a
conspiracy to violate the FCA.
Id. § 3729(a)(1)(C).
If the
action is successful, the relator is entitled to share in the
proceeds recovered.
6
Id. § 3730(d)(2).6
As is noted above, Green alleges that he was among the
perpetrators of the alleged fraud. (Compl. ¶ 11.) The FCA does
not prohibit a qui tam suit “brought by a person who planned and
initiated the violation of section 3729 upon which the action was
brought.” 31 U.S.C. § 3730(d)(3). Rather, “the court may, to
the extent the court considers appropriate, reduce the share of
the proceeds of the action which the person would otherwise
receive . . . , taking into account the role of that person in
advancing the case to litigation and any relevant circumstances
pertaining to the violation.” Id. A qui tam suit is barred,
however, “[i]f the person bringing the action is convicted of
- 13 I.
SUBJECT MATTER JURISDICTION
The FCA grants federal courts subject matter jurisdiction to
hear a limited category of suits brought by relators.
U.S.C.A. § 3730(e)(4)(A) (2009).
31
A private individual may not
sue alleging facts that were publicly disclosed before the suit
was filed, where the individual is not an “original source” of
the information.
The version of the Act in effect when Green
filed his complaint provided:
No court shall have jurisdiction over an action . . .
based upon the public disclosure of allegations or
transactions in a criminal, civil, or administrative
hearing, in a congressional, administrative, or
Government Accounting Office report, hearing, audit, or
investigation, or from the news media, unless the
action is brought by the Attorney General or the
personbringing the action is an original source of the
information.
31 U.S.C.A. § 3730(e)(4)(A) (2009).7
criminal conduct arising from his or her role in the violation of
section 3729.” Id. Green pled guilty in 2004 to charges of
bribery relating to an employee benefit fund and theft of
employee benefit fund property arising from actions he took while
serving with LIUNA and SCETTF, see United States v. Gordon N.
Green, 2:04-cr-00062-CMR-1 (E.D. Pa. filed Feb. 11, 2004), and
the public record of his conviction is subject to judicial
notice. Covad Commc’ns. Co. v. Bell Atlantic Corp., 407 F.3d
1220, 1222 (D.C. Cir. 2005). There is no indication that his
criminal conduct related to the FCA violations he now alleges.
7
The public disclosure provisions were amended on March 23,
2010, but the Supreme Court held that the amendments were not
retroactive. Graham Cnty. Soil & Water Conservation Dist. v.
United States ex rel. Wilson, 30 S. Ct. 1396, 1400 n.1 (2010).
The version of 31 U.S.C. § 3730(e)(4) in effect at the time
plaintiff’s complaint was filed applies to the present action.
- 14 Jurisdiction is a threshold issue that must be resolved
before the merits of the case may be considered.
Rockwell, 549
U.S. at 470 (recognizing that “[w]hether the point was conceded
or not, . . . we may, and indeed must, decide whether [relator]
met the jurisdictional requirement of being an original source”);
Vt. Agency of Nat’l Resources v. United States ex rel. Stevens,
529 U.S. 765, 778 (2000) (noting that “[q]uestions of
jurisdiction, of course, should be given priority –- since if
there is no jurisdiction there is no authority to sit in judgment
of anything else”).
The plaintiff bears the burden of
establishing that the court has jurisdiction to consider his
case.
Moms Against Mercury v. Food & Drug Admin., 483 F.3d 824,
828 (D.C. Cir. 2007); see also Georgiades v. Martin-Trigona, 729
F.2d 831, 833 n.4 (D.C. Cir. 1984) (“It is the burden of the
party claiming subject matter jurisdiction to demonstrate that it
exists.”)
A suit is jurisdictionally barred under § 3730(e)(4)(A) if
“either the allegation of fraud or the critical elements of the
fraudulent transaction themselves were in the public domain.”
United States ex rel. Springfield Terminal Ry. Co. v. Quinn, 14
F.3d 645, 654 (D.C. Cir. 1994).
An “allegation” is a “conclusory
statement implying the existence of provable supporting facts,”
while a “transaction” is “an exchange between two parties or
- 15 things that reciprocally affect or influence one another.”
at 653-54.
Id.
The D.C. Circuit represented the inquiry as follows:
[I]f X + Y = Z, Z represents the allegation of fraud
and X and Y represent its essential elements. In order
to disclose the fraudulent transaction publicly, the
combination of X and Y must be revealed, from which
readers or listeners may infer Z, i.e., the conclusion
that fraud has been committed.
Id. at 654 (emphasis in original).
“Allegations or transactions”
that are sufficient to trigger the jurisdictional bar “raise[]
the specter of ‘foul play’” so as to reveal the “questionable
legality” of an allegedly fraudulent practice.
United States ex
rel. Findley v. FPC-Boron Employees’ Club, 105 F.3d 675, 687
(D.C. Cir. 1997).
The key question is “whether the publicly
disclosed information ‘could have formed the basis for a
governmental decision on prosecution, or could at least have
alerted law-enforcement authorities to the likelihood of
wrongdoing.’”
United States ex rel. Settlemire v. District of
Columbia, 198 F.3d 913, 918 (D.C. Cir. 1999) (quoting Springfield
Terminal, 14 F.3d at 654 (internal quotations omitted)).
If the
public disclosure could have alerted the government to the fraud,
there is little value in permitting a private individual to sue,
and the FCA accordingly deprives courts of jurisdiction to hear a
qui tam action.
To be subject to the jurisdictional bar, an action must be
“based upon” a public disclosure through the statutorily
specified means.
31 U.S.C.A. § 3730(e)(4)(A) (2009).
“[T]he
- 16 statutory phrase ‘based upon’ means ‘supported by,’ not ‘derived
from.’”
United States ex rel. Schwedt v. Planning Research
Corp., Inc., 39 F. Supp. 2d 28, 33 (D.D.C. 1999) (quoting
Findley, 105 F.3d at 682).
The D.C. Circuit thus has
“constru[ed] . . . the jurisdictional bar to encompass situations
in which the relator’s complaint repeats what the public already
knows, even though [the relator] learned about the fraud
independent of the public disclosures.”
Findley, 105 F.3d at
683; see also United States ex rel. Hockett v. Columbia/HCA
Healthcare Corp., 498 F. Supp. 2d 25, 47 (D.D.C. 2007) (quoting
Findley, 105 F.3d at 682) (explaining that “[t]he courts of this
Circuit have . . . [held] that a relator’s lawsuit is ‘based
upon’ a public disclosure if it is ‘supported by’ or is
‘substantially similar’ to the allegations or transactions
contained in the disclosure”).
An exception to the public disclosure jurisdictional bar
exists where a relator qualifies as an “original source.”
The
FCA defines an “original source” to be “an individual who has
direct and independent knowledge of the information on which the
allegations are based and has voluntarily provided the
information to the Government before filing an action . . . which
is based on the information.”
(2009).
31 U.S.C.A. § 3730(e)(4)(B)
Under the original source provision, the relevant
“allegations,” which must be supported by information that the
- 17 relator directly and independently knows, are the ones made by
the relator in the complaint, not either the publicly disclosed
“allegations or transactions” referred to in subparagraph (A).
See Rockwell Int’l Corp. v. United States, 549 U.S. 457, 471
(2007).
Subparagraph B grants an individual original-source
status where, first, he has “direct and independent knowledge of
the information” on which his own allegations are based, and,
second, he has provided that information to the government before
filing suit.
Id. at 470-71.
The D.C. Circuit has defined
“direct” knowledge as knowledge “marked by absence of an
intervening agency,” Springfield Terminal, 14 F.3d at 656
(internal quotations omitted), or “first-hand knowledge.”
Findley, 105 F.3d at 690.
“[I]ndependent” knowledge is
“knowledge that is not itself dependent on public disclosure.”
Springfield Terminal, 14 F.3d at 656 (internal quotations
omitted).
In tandem, the public disclosure bar and original
source exception seek an optimal balance between encouraging
suits by “whistle-blowing insiders with genuinely valuable
information” and discouraging claims by “opportunistic plaintiffs
who have no significant information to contribute of their own.”
Id. at 649.
In addition to the statutory requirements of direct and
independent knowledge of the information underlying a relator’s
allegations and provision of that information to the government
- 18 before filing suit, the D.C. Circuit has inferred a third
requirement for an individual to qualify as an original source:
the individual must also “provide the information to the
government prior to any public disclosure.”
691.
Findley, 105 F.3d at
The Findley Court reasoned that a relator is not a whistle
blower, entitled to sue, unless he alerts the government to the
alleged fraud before the information is out in the public domain.
In support of its conclusion, the Findley Court interpreted the
“information” of which an original source must have direct and
independent knowledge to be that on which the public disclosure
is based.
As is discussed above, the Supreme Court in Rockwell
later held that the relevant “information” is that on which the
relator’s own allegations are based, seemingly foreclosing
Findley’s interpretation of the term.
72.
Rockwell, 549 U.S. at 470-
The D.C. Circuit has noted that the Rockwell decision “may
call into question the implicit requirement we identified in
Findley.”
Davis v. District of Columbia, 413 Fed. Appx. 308, 310
(D.C. Cir. 2011) (per curiam).
Nonetheless, “neither the Supreme
Court nor the D.C. Circuit has purported to overrule Findley’s
pre-public disclosure notification requirement,” United States ex
rel. Davis v. District of Columbia, 773 F. Supp. 2d 21, 33
(D.D.C. 2011), and “the central reason for Findley’s holding,
that ‘[o]nce the information has been publicly disclosed . . .
there is little need for the incentive provided by a qui tam
- 19 action,’ still has force[.]”
United States ex rel. McBride v.
Halliburton Co., Civil Action No. 05-00828 (HHK), 2007 WL
1954441, at *7 n.16 (D.D.C. July 5, 2007) (quoting Findley, 105
F.3d at 691).
As Findley remains the law of this Circuit, Green
is subject to its pre-public disclosure notification requirement.
On a motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter
jurisdiction under Rule 12(b)(1), the plaintiff’s factual
allegations are subject to closer scrutiny than they would be on
a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim.
Flynn v.
Veazey Constr. Corp., 310 F. Supp. 2d 186, 190 (D.D.C. 2004); see
also 5B Charles Alan Wright, Arthur R. Miller, Mary Kay Kane &
Richard L. Marcus, Federal Practice and Procedure § 1350 (3d ed.
2011).
In addition, “[i]n 12(b)(1) proceedings, it has been long
accepted that the [court] may make appropriate inquiry beyond the
pleadings to satisfy itself [that it has] authority to entertain
the case.”
Haase v. Sessions, 835 F.2d 902, 906 (D.C. Cir. 1987)
(internal quotations omitted).
A.
Public disclosure bar
The defendants argue that the “allegations or transactions”
upon which Green’s suit is based were the subject of “public
disclosure . . . from the news media” within the meaning of
§ 3730(e)(4)(A) because the SCETTF website published in 2003
placed in the public domain information about the operation of
SCETTF and its training program.
They also point out that all of
- 20 the SCETTF contractors are listed on the SCETTF website and the
fact that the defendant contractors had service contracts with
federal agencies is readily available on the Internet.
Green
contends that the website “was nothing more than a self-promoting
advertisement directed to a select audience, and was not in the
nature of any traditional news source.”
(Pl.’s Reply to Defs.’
Joint Resp. in Opp’n to Relator’s Mot. to Amend Exhibit E to his
Opp’n to SCETTF’s Mot. to Dismiss at 4.)8
Because “[s]ection
3730(e)(4) does not permit jurisdiction in gross,” Rockwell, 549
U.S. at 476, the applicability of the public disclosure bar must
be evaluated as to both Green’s reimbursement claim and his
improper on-the-job training claim.
8
In opposing the motions to dismiss, Green did not dispute
the defendants’ proposition that the promotional website is a
public disclosure with regard to all of his claims under the
statute, but contended that jurisdiction is proper because he is
an “original source” of the information upon which the
allegations in the complaint are based. (Pl.’s Consolidated
Opp’n to Defendant Contractors’ Mots. to Dismiss (“Pl.’s
Consolidated Opp’n”) at 6-8; Pl.’s Opp’n to Def. SCETTF’s Mot. to
Dismiss at 18-20.) Some two months after filing his oppositions,
however, in his reply in support of his motion to amend Exhibit E
to his opposition to SCETTF’s motion to dismiss, Green disputed
the proposition that the website was “news media” within the
meaning of the statute and that it constituted a public
disclosure, providing no explanation for his failure to do so
earlier. (Pl.’s Reply to Defs.’ Joint Resp. in Opp’n to
Relator’s Mot. to Amend Exhibit E to his Opp’n to SCETTF’s Mot.
to Dismiss at 4-5.) Even were Green’s belated challenge to be
disregarded, the court “must satisfy [itself] that the parties’
position is correct” because “§ 3730(e)(4) is jurisdictional.”
Rockwell, 549 U.S. at 470.
- 21 1.
Website as news media
The FCA does not define “news media,” and courts that have
considered the issue have construed the term to include readily
accessible websites.
See United States ex rel. Brown v. Walt
Disney World Co., No. 6:06-cv-1943-Orl-22KRS, 2008 WL 2561975, at
*4 (M.D. Fla. June 24, 2008) (finding that a Wikipedia website
qualifies as “news media”), aff’d, 361 Fed. Appx. 66 (11th Cir.
2010) (per curiam); United States ex rel. Unite Here v. Cintas
Corp., No. C 06-2413 PJH, 2007 WL 4557788, at *14 (N.D. Cal.
Dec. 21, 2007) (finding that “[t]he ‘fact’ of the contracts
between [defendant] and the federal government was publicly
disclosed in the news media, as that information was available on
the Internet”); see also United States ex rel. Rosner v.
WB/Stellar IP Owner, L.L.C., 739 F. Supp. 2d 396, 407 (S.D.N.Y.
2010) (holding that a publicly-searchable database on a city
agency’s website was an administrative report subject to public
disclosure bar).
In addition, the Supreme Court emphasized
recently that the specified channels of public disclosure
sufficient to trigger the jurisdictional bar should be construed
broadly.
See Schindler Elevator Corp. v. United States ex rel.
Kirk, 131 S. Ct. 1885, 1891 (2011).
In Schindler, the Supreme
Court interpreted the term “report” inclusively for the purpose
of triggering the statutory bar based on public disclosure by
means of “a congressional, administrative, or Government
- 22 Accounting Office report.”
Id.
In so doing, the Court noted
that “[t]he other sources of public disclosure in
§ 3730(e)(4)(A), especially ‘news media,’ suggest that the public
disclosure bar provides ‘a broa[d] sweep.’”
Id.
(quoting Graham
Cnty. Soil & Water Conservation Dist. v. United States ex rel.
Wilson, 130 S. Ct. 1396, 1404 (2010)).
The promotional page at issue here was readily accessible to
the public on SCETTF’s external website.
According to the
complaint, the website was designed specifically to advertise
participation in SCETTF.
(Compl. ¶ 38.)
A screen shot of the
website shows a simple Internet address9 and there is no evidence
or contention that access to the website was limited to SCETTF or
LIUNA members or that the website was in any other way
restricted.
Cf. United States ex rel. Liotine v. CDW Gov’t,
Inc., No. 05-33-DRH, 2009 WL 3156704, at *6 n.5 (S.D. Ill.
Sept. 29, 2009) (finding that where several steps had to be taken
to locate an article archived on a University’s purchasing
services website, the publication was not a public disclosure by
the “news media”); see also United States ex rel. Radcliffe v.
Purdue Pharma, L.P., 582 F. Supp. 2d 766, 772 (W.D. Va. 2008)
(declining “to conclude that anything posted online would
9
An exhibit submitted by Green shows a screen shot of the
website accessed on March 24, 2009 reflecting an Internet address
of http://www.scettf.org/pages/companyAB.htm. (Green Decl., Ex.
9.)
- 23 automatically constitute a public disclosure”).
That the SCETTF
website may have been “directed to a select audience” (Pl.’s
Reply to Defs.’ Joint Resp. in Opp’n to Relator’s Mot. to Amend
Exhibit E to His Opp’n to SCETTF’s Mot. to Dismiss at 4),
presumably because of its subject matter, does not detract from
its ready accessibility.
It remained unchanged, accessible at
the same Internet address, for approximately six years before
Green filed this suit.
(Green Decl. ¶¶ 5-6.)
Over this period
of time, thousands of professionals in the government services
industries and other visitors to the main SCETTF website could
have come upon it.
While a website may not be a “traditional
news source” (Pl.’s Reply to Defs.’ Joint Resp. in Opp’n to
Relator’s Mot. to Amend Exhibit E to His Opp’n to SCETTF’s Mot.
to Dismiss at 4), this particular website qualifies as news media
in light of the concerns motivating the FCA’s public disclosure
bar, as recognized by this Circuit and the holdings in favor of
broad constructions of its terms.
2.
The reimbursement allegation
Green alleges that the defendants are liable for false
claims because the training provided by SCETTF did not constitute
a bona-fide fringe benefit since the cost was reimbursed or
recaptured, in alleged violation of SCA regulations.
With regard
to this claim, the SCETTF website was more than sufficient to “to
set government investigators on the trail of fraud.”
Springfield
- 24 Terminal, 14 F.3d at 655.
The FCA provides that a public
disclosure may be either of “allegations or transactions.”
31
U.S.C.A. § 3730(e)(4)(A) (2009); see also Schwedt, 39 F. Supp. 2d
at 32 n.3 (emphasizing “disjunctive nature of 3730(e)(4)(A)”).
The website sufficiently discloses transactions, potential
“exchange[s] between two parties or things that reciprocally
affect or influence one another.”
at 654.
Springfield Terminal, 14 F.3d
The promotional website clearly illustrates that a
hypothetical trust fund participant would receive reimbursement
from both the government and the trust fund amounting to 90% of
its training costs.
From the website, a reader would be able to
infer that SCETTF might be reimbursing participant contractors
for contributions to the training fund and that SCETTF
participants therefore might be recouping contributions in
possible violation of regulations.
The SCETTF website
accordingly “raise[d] the specter of ‘foul play’” so as to reveal
the “questionable legality” of the allegedly fraudulent practice.
Findley, 105 F.3d at 687.
Green’s reimbursement claim is also “based upon” the public
disclosure within the meaning of the statute because it is
“supported by” the information on the website.
Id. at 682.
As
courts of this Circuit have recognized, a suit need not be
“derived from” the public disclosure to come within the
jurisdictional bar.
Id.
Regardless of whether Green learned of
- 25 the alleged fraud from the website, “a relator’s ability to
reveal specific instances of fraud where the general practice has
already been publicly disclosed is insufficient to prevent
operation of the jurisdictional bar.”
919.
Settlemire, 198 F.3d at
The fact that Green’s complaint, for example, lists 31
specific entities that allegedly participated in the fraud makes
no difference.
Because Green’s “complaint merely echoes publicly
disclosed, allegedly fraudulent transactions that already enable
the government to adequately investigate the case and to make a
decision whether to prosecute, the public disclosure bar
applies.”
Findley, 105 F.3d at 688.
3.
The on-the-job training allegation
With regard to Green’s claim that the defendants
misrepresented the on-the-job training they provided or
facilitated, the promotional page described in the Complaint does
not constitute a public disclosure of relevant allegations or
transactions.
That website simply does not contain any
information about the nature of the training financed by SCETTF.
Defendant Crothall Healthcare described and submitted a screen
shot of another page on the SCETTF website, which advertised that
SCETTF would reimburse “30% of the wages of an employee
designated to train other employees on the job,” “100% of
employees’ wages while attending safety or training meetings,”
and “100% of the costs of a third party instructor.”
(Def.
- 26 Crothall Healthcare Mot. to Dismiss at 5.)
While Green does not
dispute the accuracy of Crothall’s representation of this page,
the record is unclear as to how long this particular page was
available on the Internet.
In addition, Green’s allegation
regarding on-the-job training does not necessarily rely on the
SCETTF reimbursement that the page submitted by Crothall
highlights.
While he alleges that recaptured funds “allocated by
the Participating Contractors for on-the-job training were, in
truth and in fact, used to compensate employees for performing
tasks required by the contractors’ service contracts,” he also
emphasizes that the training benefits provided were illegitimate
“whether or not financed by the . . . recaptured contributions.”
(Compl. ¶¶ 46-47.)
Because the second website does not suffice
to alert a reader that training funds might be used to compensate
employees for contract-mandated work, the public disclosure bar
does not preclude jurisdiction over this claim.10
10
Green’s on-
The defendants argue that two other obstacles bar
jurisdiction over all of Green’s claims, including that regarding
the nature of the purported on-the-job training. First, SCETTF
argues that the court lacks jurisdiction because the Secretary of
Labor has exclusive, discretionary authority over the
interpretation, administration, and enforcement of the SCA.
(Def. SCETTF’s Mot. to Dismiss at 11-19.) However, there is
scant support for the proposition that FCA actions predicated on
a contractor’s alleged misrepresentation of adherence to arguably
clear SCA regulations are precluded. See, e.g., United States ex
rel. Head v. Kane Co., 798 F. Supp. 2d 186 (D.D.C. 2011)
(permitting FCA action alleging that contractors avoided payment
of wages required under the SCA). The correctness of Green’s
interpretation of the fringe benefits regulations is certainly
not without doubt; however, his complaint can reasonably be read
- 27 the-job training allegation therefore will be evaluated on the
merits.
B.
See Section II, infra.
Original source exception
Because the public disclosure bar applies to Green’s
reimbursement claim, subject matter jurisdiction exists over that
claim only if Green demonstrates that he is an original source by
establishing that he has direct and independent knowledge of the
information underlying his allegations and that he provided the
information to the government before filing his suit and before
the public disclosure.
1.
Direct and independent knowledge
Green must demonstrate direct and independent knowledge of
“any essential element of the underlying fraud transaction” on
which his allegations are based.
at 657.
Springfield Terminal, 14 F.3d
As Green affirmed in his briefing, he “alleges that the
to allege (although not with the particularity required under
Rule 9(b), see Section II, infra) that the defendants did not
provide training at all, but used funds allocated for that
purpose to pay for contract-required work. This is a clear
enough violation of regulations requiring that fringe benefits be
provided to service employees. Second, SCETTF argues that
jurisdiction is barred by 31 U.S.C. § 3730(e)(3), which provides
that “[i]n no event may a person bring a [qui tam suit] which is
based upon allegations or transactions which are the subject of .
. . an administrative civil money penalty proceeding in which the
Government is already a party.” (Def. SCETTF’s Mot. to Dismiss
at 19-20.) The defendant’s proffered declaration and accompany
exhibits (id., Decl. of Terese M. Connerton) establishing
SCETTF’s communication with DOL and the U.S. Air Force regarding
SCETTF’s bona fide fringe benefit status does not suffice to
establish that any “administrative civil money penalty
proceeding” had been undertaken by the government.
- 28 contractors lied to the Government by stating to victim agencies
they would provide bona fide fringe benefits to their employees,
on service contracts awarded by those agencies.”
LIUNA at 6.)
(Pl.’s Opp’n to
The contractors’ representations and subsequent
claims for payment under the service contracts were allegedly
“lie[s]” because “[t]he benefits that they actually provided, and
intended to provide at the time the statements were made, did not
and could not qualify as bona fide fringe benefits” because the
cost of the benefits was “ultimately recaptured by, or reimbursed
to, the contractors[.]”
(Id.)
As Green brings claims against
SCETTF, LIUNA, and the contractor defendants, he must demonstrate
direct and independent knowledge of the information underlying
his allegations with respect to each one.
Green alleges in general terms that he “has direct and
independent knowledge, within the meaning of 31 U.S.C.
3730(e)(4)(B), of the information on which the allegations set
forth in this Complaint are based derived through his employment”
at SCETTF and LIUNA.
(Compl. ¶ 5.)
In briefing, Green further
contends that he qualifies as an original source because “[he]
was the individual who designed and posted th[e] information on
the Fund’s website.”
(Pl.’s Consolidated Opp’n to Defendant
Contractors’ Mots. to Dismiss (“Pl.’s Consolidated Opp’n”) at 7
(emphasis omitted).)
This argument misunderstands the focus of
the direct and independent knowledge inquiry.
As the Supreme
- 29 Court explained in Rockwell, original source status hinges on
whether the relator has direct and independent knowledge of the
information underlying his own allegations, not the information
underlying the public disclosure.
Rockwell, 549 U.S. at 470-72;
see also Hockett, 498 F. Supp. 2d at 51 (explaining that “the
inquiry is not about whether relator was a source of the [public
disclosure], but whether she had direct and independent knowledge
of the information underlying her own . . . allegation of
fraud”).
Green’s general assertion that he has direct and independent
knowledge “derived through his employment” (Compl. ¶ 5) does not
suffice to explain the basis of his knowledge of any elements of
the alleged fraud committed by these defendants.
Green alleges a
vast scheme, beginning in or about 1978 and continuing until
April 22, 2009, the date he filed the complaint.
61, 65, 71, 77.)
(Compl. ¶¶ 57,
Green’s own employment with LIUNA and SCETTF
spanned the years of 2001 to 2004 only.
(Compl. ¶ 4.)
In
briefing, Green concedes that a six-year statute of limitations
applies and that alleged claims arising before April 22, 2003 are
time barred.
(Pl.’s Consolidated Opp’n at 9.)
Even if the
relevant period is limited to April 22, 2003 through Green’s
tenure at SCETTF in 2004, Green fails to demonstrate direct and
independent knowledge of the alleged fraudulent activity.
does not begin to explain how he could have had first-hand
And he
- 30 knowledge of what SCETTF, LIUNA, or any of the defendant
contractors were doing after his tenure at SCETTF concluded.
With regard to LIUNA and SCETTF, Green’s complaint lists
several high-level individuals “who were aware of, approved of,
and participated in the fraudulent activity described in th[e]
Complaint.”
(Compl. ¶ 11.)
But Green does not explain how he
came to learn of any specified individual’s awareness, approval,
or participation in the alleged fraud.
He does not describe any
meetings he attended, communications to which he was privy, or
any other source of knowledge.
Cf. United States ex rel.
Hutcheson v. Blackstone Medical, Inc., 694 F. Supp. 2d 48, 60 (D.
Mass. 2010) (finding relator an original source where the
complaint alleged that relator “[i]n the regular course of her
job duties . . . had access to email and internal documents and
data which reflected the conduct discussed in the complaint,
including communications and documents circulated among upper
management”).
With regard to the defendant contractors, the basis for
direct and independent knowledge is similarly unexplained.
Green
does not, for example, explain the nature or regularity of any of
his interactions with any particular defendant contractor.
He
merely lists a “Contact Person” for each defendant contractor, in
each case the contractor’s President, and alleges that such
person “knowingly participated in, or knowingly executed the
- 31 agreement whereby his Contractor participated in the SCETT Fund,
including its specified provision for on-the-job training,
classroom training, and third party training.”
13.)
(Compl. ¶¶ 12-
This general allegation that the defendant contractors were
members of SCETTF leaves no basis for inferring that Green had
first-hand knowledge of the false or fraudulent
misrepresentations they are alleged to have made.
By way of comparison, in United States ex rel. Davis, a
court considered a qui tam suit alleging that District of
Columbia Public Schools (DCPS) had submitted Medicaid
reimbursement claims without maintaining adequate supporting
documentation.
Id., 773 F. Supp. 2d at 22.
The court found that
the plaintiff had direct and independent knowledge of the lack of
such documentation, an essential element of the claim, where the
plaintiff’s complaint alleged that plaintiff’s firm, which was
responsible for collecting and maintaining necessary
documentation, and of which plaintiff was the chairman, itself
retained the supporting documentation and never provided it to
either DCPS or the firm that DCPS subsequently retained to
replace plaintiff’s firm.
United States ex rel. Davis, 773 F.
Supp. 2d at 32 (citing United States ex rel. Davis v. District of
Columbia, 591 F. Supp. 2d 30, 37 (D.D.C. 2008)).
Green has not
pled that he observed first-hand the pay vouchers or supporting
- 32 documentation allegedly submitted by defendant contractors with
false representations about the reimbursement scheme involved.
This case is closer to Hockett, another FCA action brought
by a relator alleging Medicare fraud.
There, a court found the
relator’s assertion that she heard an alleged perpetrator of the
fraud making incriminating statements insufficient to constitute
direct and independent knowledge of certain information in the
amended complaint because it “relie[d] on several layers of
hearsay” and was “highly conclusory in nature, asserting legal
conclusions rather than what was actually said.”
Supp. 2d at 53.
Id., 498 F.
Green does not refer to any statements made by
the individuals he lists at all, and his allegations are entirely
conclusory.
That SCETTF promoted a program in which participants
would be reimbursed for training was a matter of public
disclosure since at least 2003 when the website was published.
Green’s allegations do little more that conclude, based on
Green’s own interpretation of the applicable regulations, that
the reimbursement program that SCETTF promoted was not in
compliance with the SCA.
Nowhere, however, does Green explain
how he knows, rather than merely speculates, that the defendants
misrepresented the nature or operation of SCETTF in order to get
allegedly false or fraudulent claims paid.
“‘[T]he relator must
possess substantive information about the particular fraud,
rather than merely background information which enables a
- 33 putative relator to understand the significance of a publicly
disclosed transaction or allegation.’”
Findley, 105 F.3d at 688
(quoting United States ex rel. Stinson, Lyons, Gerlin &
Bustamante, P.A. v. Prudential Ins. Co., 944 F.2d 1149, 1160 (3rd
Cir. 1991)).11
Finally, that Green includes himself among the alleged
perpetrators of the fraud does not obviate the statutory
requirement that an original source’s direct and independent
knowledge be demonstrably of “the information on which the
allegations are based.”
(emphasis added).
31 U.S.C.A. § 3730(e)(4)(B) (2009)
Green lists his name among those “who were
aware of, approved of, and participated in the fraudulent
11
The declaration Green submitted provides no better
explanation than does his complaint. Green states that the
general job responsibilities he held at SCETTF included
“develop[ing] literature and other documents for the Fund, and
facilitating card-check elections for the organization of unions
(as opposed to voting elections),” as well as “conduct[ing]
training sessions for shop stewards, supervis[ing] staff, and
assist[ing] in contract negotiations.” (Green Decl. ¶ 3.)
However, Green does not tie any of these duties to his
allegations of fraud. He does not, for example, state that he
supervised staff involved in the fraud or that he assisted in any
of the contracts allegedly negotiated on the basis of fraudulent
representations about providing fringe benefits. And he does not
detail how he or anyone else perpetrated a fraud, stating only
that “[a]s Director of the Fund, [he] became aware of the manner
and means of [SCETTF’s] operation [sic] the fraudulent conduct of
the Fund, LIUNA, and the contractors named as defendants in the
case, which is the basis of the allegations in [the] Complaint.”
(Id. ¶ 4.) Simply asserting that Green’s leadership position
made him aware of the fraud, without more, does not provide a
basis for concluding that Green had first-hand knowledge of the
fraudulent scheme alleged.
- 34 activity described in th[e] Complaint” (Compl. ¶ 11), but his
sole specific contention with regard to his own role is that he
created a website illustrating a hypothetical by which
participating contractors would receive 90% reimbursement for
training.
(Pl.’s Consolidated Opp’n at 7.)
Direct and
independent knowledge of the creation of a website promoting a
reimbursement program that may or may not provide fringe benefits
that comply with the SCA is not direct and independent knowledge
of an essential element of the fraudulent transaction, namely,
submitting false claims, making or submitting false records or
statements, or conspiring to do either.
Since Green plainly need
not await discovery before setting forth information about his
own actions, his reliance on generalities is significant.
Green’s failure to explain what knowledge he has that he, or
anyone else at SCETTF, LIUNA, or the defendant contractors
submitted or caused others to submit false claims, provided or
caused others to provide or make false records or false
statements to get claims paid, or conspired to further a fraud,
precludes a finding that Green has “direct and independent
knowledge” of the information underlying his allegations.
2.
Provision of information to the government
Green’s complaint does not assert that Green provided the
information underlying his allegations to the government before
filing suit as required by § 3730(e)(4)(B).
In his declaration,
- 35 however, Green contends for the first time that he “provided all
of th[e] information [on which the allegations are based] to the
United States Department Justice before filing my Complaint . . .
by the submission of a sixteen page, single spaced memorandum,
with exhibits, prepared by and transmitted by my attorney, dated
April 2, 2009.”
(Green Decl. ¶ 4.)
Green does not include a
copy of the memorandum submitted or any proof of mailing or
receipt.
Rather, he attaches to his declaration “Exhibit 9 [to
the] memorandum,” which is a print out of the SCETTF website, and
“Exhibit 1 to the memorandum,” which is a piece of SCETTF
literature including a description of reimbursement for on-thejob training.
(Id. ¶¶ 5, 7.)
Defendant Integrity Management
argues that Green’s representation of submission should not be
credited because Green has “not produced proof of the submission
and evidence of the Justice Department’s receipt of the
submission prior to April 22, 2009.”
(Def. Integrity
Management’s Reply at 6.)
It is within a court’s discretion to credit a plain
statement made by a relator in a complaint that information was
disclosed timely to the government.
See, e.g., United States ex
rel. Hutcheson v. Blackstone Medical, Inc., 647 F.3d 377, 384 n.8
(1st Cir. 2011) (“[Relator’s] complaint stated that she disclosed
the allegations to the United States Attorneys’ Office for the
Middle District of Florida in the ‘Summer of 2006’ ‘prior to
- 36 filing.’
This is more than enough.”)
In this case, however, the
assertion of disclosure was absent from Green’s complaint, and
the declaration specifies only that the disclosure was “dated
April 2, 2009,” where the complaint was filed on April 22, 2009,
and lacks an affirmative representation regarding the date of
submission or any verification of receipt.
On such an issue of
jurisdictional import, the omission from the complaint of a
representation concerning disclosure to the government and
Green’s decision to append only two exhibits to the memorandum
that Green purportedly sent to the government and not the
memorandum itself is troubling.
However, defendants cite no
authority for the proposition that proof of voluntary disclosure
to the government need be any more rigorous than submission of a
sworn declaration.
Green’s sworn representation that he
disclosed the information underlying his allegations to the
government on April 2, 2009 therefore will be credited.12
12
Two months after submitting his declaration, Green, in a
footnote in his reply in support of his motion to amend Exhibit E
to his opposition to SCETTF’s motion to dismiss, represented that
he is “prepared to provide a copy of his disclosure memorandum
. . . to the Court, if required, in an ex parte, in camera,
submission.” (Pl.’s Reply to Defs.’ Joint Resp. in Opp’n to
Relator’s Mot. to Amend Exhibit E to his Opp’n to SCETTF’s Mot.
to Dismiss at 5 n.4.) Such a representation more properly would
have been made by Green at the same time that he submitted his
declaration. Since his disclosure representation in the
declaration is being credited, in camera review of the disclosure
memorandum is unnecessary.
- 37 However, Green’s representation of submission in April 2009
aside, Green clearly has not complied with this Circuit’s
requirement that he provide the information to the government
before the public disclosure.
Contrary to Green’s arguments,
Findley remains binding precedent.
See supra at 17-18.
“[N]either the Supreme Court nor the D.C. Circuit has purported
to overrule Findley’s pre-public disclosure notification
requirement, and this Court will not ‘lightly infer an abrogation
of settled precedent.’”
United States ex rel. Davis, 773 F.
Supp. 2d at 33 (quoting McBride, 2007 WL 1954441, at *7 n.16).
Because Green’s submission to the government on April 2, 2009
came years after the public disclosure of the allegedly
fraudulent reimbursement scheme by means of the SCETTF website
published in 2003, Green cannot qualify as an original source.
II.
FAILURE TO PLEAD FRAUD WITH PARTICULARITY
“[B]ecause the False Claims Act is self-evidently an
anti-fraud statute, complaints brought under it must comply with
Rule 9(b)[,]” which requires that allegations of fraud be pled
with particularity.
United States ex rel. Totten v. Bombardier
Corp., 286 F.3d 542, 551-52 (D.C. Cir. 2002).
This requirement
“discourages the initiation of suits brought solely for their
nuisance value, and safeguards potential defendants from
frivolous accusations of moral turpitude.”
United States ex rel.
Williams v. Martin-Baker Aircraft Co., Ltd., 389 F.3d 1251, 1256
- 38 (D.C. Cir. 2004) (internal quotations omitted).
In addition, it
ensures that defendants have sufficient notice of the claims
against which they must defend.
Id.
Under Rule 9(b), “[the
relator] must set forth an adequate factual basis for his
allegations that the Contractors submitted false claims (or false
statements in order to get false claims paid), including a more
detailed description of the specific falsehoods that are the
basis for his suit.”
Totten, 286 F.3d at 552 (emphasis added);
see also Williams, 389 F.3d at 1256 (requiring that “the pleader
. . . state the time, place and content of the false
misrepresentations”) (quoting Kowal v. MCI Commc’ns Corp., 16
F.3d 1271, 1278 (D.C. Cir. 1994).
Green has set forth neither an adequate factual basis nor
any detailed description of the specific falsehoods underlying
his claim that the defendant contractors used the money that
SCETTF reimbursed to them, or used government funds, not to
provide actual on-the-job training, but “to compensate employees
for performing tasks required by the contractors’ service
contracts.”
(Compl. ¶ 46.)
Notably, Green expressly disclaims
reliance on an implied certification theory of defendants’
liability.13
13
(See Pl.’s Consolidated Opp’n at 15 n.24 (“Mr. Green
False certification claims “rest[ ] on a false
representation of compliance with an applicable federal statute,
federal regulation, or contractual term.” United States v.
Science Applications Int’l Corp., 626 F.3d 1257, 1266 (D.C. Cir.
2010).
- 39 does not allege an implied certification; he alleges an outright
lie.”))
Instead, he argues that the defendants affirmatively
lied to the government and are liable on a fraudulent inducement
theory, because they allegedly procured their contracts by means
of false representations, rendering fraudulent all subsequent
claims for payment.
(See Pl.’s Consolidated Opp’n at 14-15
(“Relator alleges that the Defendants lied to the government
agencies with which they contracted, stating that they provided
their employees bona [fide] fringe benefits as those benefits are
defined and allowed by the Department of Labor, fraudulently
inducing those agencies to award contracts that included funding
for services that were not provided, i.e., the bona fide fringe
benefits to the contractors’ employees.”))
In addition, he
alleges that the defendants knowingly presented false claims for
payment, and submitted false records and statements in support of
those claims.
(Compl. ¶¶ 56-75.)
However, nowhere in the complaint does Green identify with
particularity a single lie, or false representation, regarding
on-the-job training made by any of the defendants to a government
official in order to secure a contract, or in order to get a
claim paid.14
14
Green simply alleges that, over a period of some
In support of his opposition to SCETTF’s motion to
dismiss, Green submitted Exhibit E, identifying various federal
service contracts awarded to certain contractors. He argued that
the purpose of that exhibit was to demonstrate that, in the event
his complaint was found deficient under Rule 9(b), he was
- 40 thirty years, every “Addendum A” submitted by the defendant
contractors to secure contracts and every Voucher for Services
submitted to secure compensation under contracts awarded
contained false representations about fringe benefits (Compl.
¶¶ 48-55).
This vast time span fails to afford the defendants
notice of which, if any, of the practices they may have
characterized as on-the-job training over that period of years
allegedly constituted work that they were required to perform
under their various government contracts.
Green’s complaint
fails to provide even one representative example of an on-the-job
training practice engaged in by any contractor defendant that
constituted work required under a contract.
In addition, Green
fails to support his claim of conspiracy with any allegation of
agreement among the defendants.
With regard to the individuals his complaint lists as
involved in the alleged fraudulent scheme, Green fails to
articulate the roles any particular individual played or any lies
prepared to amend it to identify the contracts he alleged were
secured through fraud. (Pl.’s Mot. to Amend Exhibit E to Pl.’s
Opp’n to SCETTF’s Mot. to Dismiss at 3.) After the defendants
filed replies in support of their motions to dismiss, Green moved
for leave to amend Exhibit E, noting that he had omitted records
of the contracts awarded to four of the five defendant
contractors. Green’s motion will be denied. Green’s
contemplated amendment to identify federal service contracts
awarded to the defendants does not support Green’s burden under
Rule 9(b) to state the time, place and content of the false
misrepresentations allegedly made to secure the contracts.
Neither do any of the other exhibits that Green proffered bear on
this point.
- 41 or misrepresentations made.
In Williams, the D.C. Circuit found
that a complaint had failed to plead fraud with particularity
where it “repeatedly refers generally to ‘management’ and
provides a long list of names without ever explaining the role
these individuals played in the alleged fraud.”
1257.
Id., 389 F.3d at
The same is true here, where Green lists, without any
supporting details, high-level individuals at SCETTF and LIUNA
“who were aware of, approved of, and participated in the
fraudulent activity described in th[e] Complaint.”
¶ 11.)15
(Compl.
Green’s generalized pleading is “an especially
surprising deficiency given that [the relator] worked for . . .
and with [the defendants]” for several years.
at 1257.
Williams, 389 F.3d
In sum, there is no information in Green’s complaint
that would support a reasonable inference that these defendants
told government officials that they would provide on-the-job
training or other training but instead used funds, either from
SCETTF or the government, to compensate their employees for work
required under their government contracts in violation of the SCA
or DOL regulations.
15
With regard to the defendant contractors, Green’s
allegation that a “Contact Person” for each “knowingly
participated in, or knowingly executed the agreement whereby his
Contractor participated in the SCETT Fund, including its
specified provision for on-the-job training, classroom training,
and third party training” (Compl. ¶¶ 12-13) stops short of even
alleging that the listed individuals were aware of, approved of,
or participated in the alleged fraud at all.
- 42 CONCLUSION
The SCETTF website published in 2003 constitutes a public
disclosure from the news media of the reimbursement scheme Green
alleges.
Green’s action is based on that publicly disclosed
information, and his conclusory assertions of direct and
independent knowledge of the information underlying his
allegations do not withstand scrutiny.
In addition, Green’s
required disclosure of that information to the government was
years too late under the law of this Circuit.
Because Green is
therefore not an original source, the public disclosure bar
precludes subject matter jurisdiction over the reimbursement
claim.
While Green’s claim that the defendants used on-the-job
training funds to compensate employees for work required under
their government contracts is not jurisdictionally barred, Green
fails to plead the claim of fraud with particularity.
therefore must also be dismissed.
That claim
A final order accompanies this
memorandum opinion.
SIGNED this 13th day of February, 2012.
/s/
RICHARD W. ROBERTS
United States District Judge
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