United States of America et al v. KBR INC et al
Filing
223
ORDER AND OPINION denying 214 Motion for Reconsideration Entered by Judge Michael M. Mihm on 9/25/2020. Defendants have not demonstrated that the Court committed a manifest error of law or that a reconsideration is otherwise appropriate in these circumstances. Accordingly, their Motion for Reconsideration 214 is DENIED. (AEM, ilcd)
E-FILED
Friday, 25 September, 2020 02:30:56 PM
Clerk, U.S. District Court, ILCD
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE CENTRAL DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS
ROCK ISLAND DIVISION
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
ex rel. GEOFFREY HOWARD and
ZELLA HEMPHILL,
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Plaintiffs,
v.
KBR, INC., and KELLOGG BROWN &
ROOT SERVICES, INC.,
Defendants.
Case No. 11-4022
ORDER AND OPINION
Pending before the Court is Defendants KBR, Inc. and Kellogg Brown & Root Services,
Inc.’s Motion for Reconsideration. ECF No. 214. Defendants ask the Court to reconsider its July
9, 2020 Order and Opinion denying KBR’s Motion to Dismiss the Complaint for Lack of Subject
Matter Jurisdiction. For the reasons stated below, this motion is DENIED.
BACKGROUND
The Court explained the factual background of this case in more detail its initial opinion.
ECF No. 213. In short, Defendants are government contractors and Relators brought a case under
the False Claims Act (“FCA”) accusing Defendants of a knowing failure to redistribute excess
product. The Realtors allege that Defendants’ failure to redistribute excess product resulted in
Defendants overbuying, which the Government would not have reimbursed had Defendants not
concealed their failures. The Court recently denied Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss, finding that
the Relators were the original source of certain information related to Defendants’ allegedly
fraudulent activity. While there had been a public disclosure of some information related to
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Plaintiffs’ alleged wastefulness, the Court determined that the Relators had direct and
independent knowledge of fraudulent activity and materially added to the publicly disclosed
information. Accordingly, the Court found that the Defendants met the original source exception
to the public disclosure bar and declined to dismiss the Complaint. Defendants filed this motion
to reconsider, arguing that the Court applied the wrong standard to determine whether the
Relators materially added to the publicly disclosed information. This opinion follows.
LEGAL STANDARD
“Pre-judgment orders, such as [rulings on] motions to dismiss, are interlocutory and may
be reconsidered at any time.” Cameo Convalescent Ctr., Inc. v. Percy, 800 F.2d 108, 110 (7th
Cir. 1986). A court should reconsider an interlocutory order where necessary to “correct manifest
errors of law,” Caisse Nationale de Credit Agricole v. CBI Industries, Inc., 90 F.3d 1264, 1269
(7th Cir. 1996) (citation omitted), which “occur[] when the district court commits a ‘wholesale
disregard, application, or failure to recognize controlling precedent.’” Michel v. Princeville
Cmty. Unit Sch. Dist. #326 Bd. of Educ., 317 F.R.D. 555, 559 (C.D. Ill. 2016) (quoting Burritt v.
Ditlefsen, 807 F.3d 239, 253 (7th Cir. 2015)); see also Bank of Waunakee v. Rochester Cheese
Sales, Inc., 906 F.2d 1185, 1191 (7th Cir. 1990) (motion for reconsideration particularly
appropriate where court “has made an error not of reasoning but of apprehension”) (internal
quotation marks omitted).
DISCUSSION
Defendants argue that the Court correctly determined that the Relators’ claims were
publicly disclosed before the lawsuit was filed but that the Court wrongly determined that the
Relators’ claims fell within the original source exception to the bar on FCA claims for publicly
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disclosed information. Defendants assert that the Court cited and applied the incorrect standard
for determining whether Relators were an original source of certain information.
Defendants explain that there was a 2010 revision to the statute governing FCA claims.
The amendments both changed “what constitutes a public disclosure” under 31 U.S.C. §
3730(e)(4)(A) and revised the definition of “original source” under section 3730(e)(4)(B).
Bellevue v. Universal Health Servs. of Hartgrove, Inc., 867 F.3d 712, 718 (7th Cir. 2017). In the
initial opinion, the Court applied the pre-2010 version of the law to determine whether the
Relators’ FCA claims were publicly disclosed before Relators filed the lawsuit. Defendants agree
that was correct because the amendments to that portion of the statute were not retroactive.
However, Defendants argue that the Court mistakenly applied the pre-2010 definition of the
“original source” exception when it should have applied the post-2010 version of that subsection
because that amendment was retroactive. While Defendants acknowledge that the changes to the
“original source” is a “clarification rather than a substantive change,” they argue that citing the
pre-2010 version of the law constituted a manifest error of law that requires the Court’s
reconsideration of its prior opinion. ECF No. 215 at 4 (citing Bellevue, 867 F.3d at 718).
Defendants also complain that the Court ignored several Seventh Circuit cases that they cited in
their original briefs.
The differences between the pre-2010 and the 2010 revisions to the “original source”
definition are relatively slight. Before 2010, § 3730(e)(4)(B) defined original sources as “an
individual who has direct and independent knowledge of the information on which the
allegations are based.” The 2010 version of § 3730(e)(4)(B) provides that an original source is an
individual “who has knowledge that is independent of and materially adds to the publicly
disclosed allegations or transactions.” 31 U.S.C. § 3730(e)(4)(B) (2010) (emphasis added). As
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Defendants point out, the amended definition of “original source” now “controls” in all FCA
actions, Bellevue, 867 F.3d at 720, “‘regardless of when a person claiming to be an original
source acquired his knowledge.’” Cause of v. Chicago Transit Auth., 815 F.3d 267, 283, n.22
(7th Cir. 2016) (quoting U.S. ex rel. Bogina v. Medline Industries, Inc., 809 F.3d 365, 368–69
(2016)).
While the Court cited the pre-2010 version of the law and cited some cases applying the
old version of the law, it also acknowledged the requirement that the Relators “materially add” to
the publicly disclosed information. The “materially added” phrase is only found only in the post
2010 version of the statue and is the primary distinction between the old and new version of the
statute. Accordingly, the Court applied the correct standard, and in any event, the alteration was
not intended to substantively change the statue. In support of its finding that the Relators
materially added to the publicly disclosed information, the Court cited the reports that
demonstrated:
(1) the head of KBR’s Kuwait Support Office deleted Relator Howard’s
reports that showed over $600 million in unnecessary materials
stockpiled in KBR’s warehouses, because it was “too dangerous” to
risk the Government finding the report during an audit; (2) emails
from 2009 where a KBR manager stated it should not show
underutilization on anything; (3) emails where KBR directed its
employees not to speak to anyone outside of KBR about internal
business allegedly after Relator Howard alerted KBR’s senior
management about KBR’s cross-leveling failures; and (4) KBR not
correcting hundreds of millions of dollars of excess materials in virtual
storerooms because doing so would risk governmental audits.
ECF No. 213 at 13. In short, the Court applied the correct standard and cited several important
pieces of evidence to support the Relators’ assertion that Defendants engaged in knowing fraud
as opposed to mere negligence.
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Defendants further complain that the Court cited a Third Circuit case instead of their
preferred Seventh Circuit opinions. ECF No. 215 at 7 (citing Bellevue, 867 F.3d 712; Cause of
Action, 815 F.3d 267). Defendants cited these opinions in their initial briefing (ECF No. 198 at
17), and a motion for reconsideration is not the time to rehash arguments that the Court has
already reviewed. However, the Court will briefly explain why these cases are distinguishable.
In Bellevue, the relator provided information that when the facility was over capacity, patients
would sleep on a rollout bed in the group therapy room rather than a patient room, but that the
facility was still billing Medicaid for inpatient care. Bellevue, 867 F.3d at 714. Before the relator
filed suit, the hospital voluntarily provided information to authorities. The relator argued that the
government only had information that the facility was over capacity without any reference to a
knowing misrepresentation of facts. Id. at 718. There, the court found that the government had
enough information to “infer scienter” and the public disclosure bar applies “where one can
infer, as a direct and logical consequence of the disclosed information, that the defendant
knowingly—as opposed to negligently—submitted a false set of facts to the Government.” Id. at
718–19 (quoting Cause of Action, 815 F.3d at 27). The court further observed that the relator did
not have personal knowledge over the facility’s billing practice and he “necessarily” had to infer
that the facility was knowingly overbilling. According to the court, there was no reason that the
government could not make that same inference based upon the information that it had. Id. at
719.
In Cause of Action, the court noted that the relators only provided two additional pieces
of information. One was that the defendant knowingly misreported data, but that piece of
information was not directly based on information that the relator had about the defendant’s
knowledge or lack thereof. Instead, the relator made an inference that was based upon available
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facts. The Government already had those facts and was “in an identical position to infer scienter
from the publicly disclosed Audit Report.” Id. at 282. The court observed that the second piece
of information was a broadening of the timeframe of misreporting. However, the few additional
allegations were insufficient when they pertained to the same entity and described “the same
allegedly fraudulent conduct . . . as the publicly disclosed information.” Id. Accordingly, the
purported additional facts were not enough in the case of Cause of Action.
Unlike the relators in Bellevue and Cause of Action, Relators here provided specific
concrete examples that suggest fraud. They were not simply providing their own inference from
information already disclosed but instead, disclosed new information and provided emails that
supported their assertion that Defendants were engaged in a knowing cover-up as opposed to
mere negligence. Plaintiffs sufficiently alleged that information had not previously been
disclosed and thus, their claims fall outside the public disclosure bar.
CONCLUSION
Defendants have not demonstrated that the Court committed a manifest error of law or
that a reconsideration is otherwise appropriate in these circumstances. Accordingly, their Motion
for Reconsideration [214] is DENIED.
ENTERED this 25th day of September, 2020.
/s/ Michael M. Mihm
Michael M. Mihm
United States District Judge
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