United States of America et al v. EOD Technology, Inc et al
Filing
249
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER granting 220 Motion for Leave to File Document. Relator SHALL file his operative pleading in CM/ECF on or before May 8, 2024. Signed by Magistrate Judge Debra C Poplin on 5/6/2024. (MKM) c/m John C Kessler Blank Rome LLP 1271 Avenue of the Americas New York, NY 12207. Modified text on 5/6/2024 (MKM).
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
EASTERN DISTRICT OF TENNESSEE
AT KNOXVILLE
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, ex rel.
PATRICK GRIFFIS, and PATRICK GRIFFIS,
individually,
Plaintiffs,
v.
EOD TECHNOLOGY, INC. (N/K/A JANUS
GLOBAL OPERATIONS LLC),
Defendant.
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No. 3:10-CV-204-TRM-DCP
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
This case is before the undersigned pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 636, the Rules of this Court,
and Standing Order 13-02.
Now before the Court is Relator’s Motion for Leave to File Third Amended Complaint
[Doc. 220]. Defendant responded in opposition to the motion [Doc. 224]. Relator filed a reply
[Doc. 226]. The motion is ripe for adjudication. See E.D. Tenn. L.R. 7.1(a). For the reasons set
forth below, the Court GRANTS the motion [Doc. 220].
I.
POSITIONS OF THE PARTIES
Relator seeks leave to file a Third Amended Complaint “(1) to amend and clarify his
allegations regarding Defendant’s misrepresentations regarding the nature of its workforce and the
corresponding fraudulently inflated costs and prices submitted to the Government; (2) to include
misrepresentations made by [Defendant] in its proposal for the Rusafa Rule of Law Contract in
which it falsely asserted that it would be providing paid home leave for its third country national
(“TCN”) workers; and (3) to clarify that Count III includes factually false claims under all
contracts at issue in this case” [Doc. 220 p. 1]. For grounds, Relator states that during the discovery
phase in this case, he “uncovered additional details regarding [Defendant’s] fraudulent schemes”
[Id. at 2]. Relator explains:
Specifically, Relator previously alleged that [Defendant] falsely
represented to the Government that it would employ and not
subcontract the security labor it would use to do the work under the
Rusafa Contract. The [Second Amended Complaint] provided
details as to that allegation with respect to TCN workers from
Uganda; Relator seeks to add the fact that [Defendant’s] false
representations in its Rusafa Rule of Law (“Rusafa”) Contract
proposal and in its Rusafa invoices also included workers from other
countries, known as other country nationals (“OCNs”).
Relator also uncovered additional fraud in the form of
misrepresentations to the Government regarding TCN benefits
which [Defendant] promised but did not provide, specifically,
airfare costs associated with TCN “home leave.” These costs were
presented to the Government as a benefit which would improve
TCN morale; however, they were never actually provided by
[Defendant], and the Government relied upon these
misrepresentations when awarding the Rusafa Contract.
[Id. at 2–3 (footnote omitted)]. With respect to the third category of amendments, Relator seeks
to clarify it “to include all of the contracts at issue in the [Second Amended Complaint] and not
just Contract 18, Task Order 21” [Id. at 3]. He claims that he “could not have reasonably identified
these additional frauds until [he] reviewed the documents produced by [Defendant] in discovery”
[Id.]. According to Relator, “[Defendant] will not be prejudiced by the proposed amendment
because it has been in possession of the same documents that allowed Relator to identify these
additional facts/frauds” [Id.]. In addition, Relator states that “there is ample time for [Defendant]
to prepare its defense relating to these additional facts as evinced by the fact that [his] motion is
timely” pursuant to the Scheduling Order [Id.].
Defendant objects to Relator’s amendments based on undue delay and prejudice [Doc.
224]. With respect to undue delay, Defendant argues that Relator failed to “identify what the new
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information is or when he allegedly learned of it” [Id. at 5]. Because Relator did not include any
additional exhibits with his proposed Third Amended Complaint, Defendant argues that any
additional details Relator uncovered are based on the documents that he has possessed since at
least 2022 [Id.]. With respect to the Rusafa OCNs allegations, Defendant argues that “Relator
does not otherwise describe the OCNs or explain what new evidence has surfaced about any
OCNs” [Id. at 6]. According to Defendant, its “use of OCNs on the Rusafa contract is not newly
‘uncovered’ information” as it “produced the Rusafa proposal to the Government on March 28,
2019” and Relator had access to this document [Id.]. Defendant submits that its “Rusafa proposal
describes [its] proposed labor force as including OCNs” [Id.]. It contends that “OCNs constitute
an entirely separate labor category from the Askar-recruited TCNs that were the subject of the
[Second Amended Complaint]” and that “Relator has been on notice for years that [Defendant]
used OCNs on Rusafa, but only now seeks to extend his fraud claims to a new labor group” [Id. at
7 (emphasis omitted)].
Moreover, Defendant asserts that “Relator also seeks to add allegations that [it] failed to
pay home leave to TCNs under Rusafa, based on information that has been available for at least
several months” [Id.]. While the Third Amended Complaint “cites the Rusafa Source Selection
Decision Document (“SSDD”) in alleging that [Defendant] ‘falsely told the selection authority for
Rusafa that it would provide home leave to its employed security workers[,]’” Defendant claims
that “[t]he SSDD is consistent with [its] proposal—which Relator has had for years—where
[Defendant] proposed home leave benefits for TCNs” [Id. at 7–8 (citation omitted)]. According
to Defendant, “Relator cannot credibly claim to have only recently learned of this information”
[Id. at 8].
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Further, Defendant asserts that “Relator’s third category of proposed amendments would
significantly expand the [Second Amended Complaint’s] Task Order 21 domestic travel and
lodging fraud claims to cover all other contracts presently at issue” [Id. (citation omitted)].
Defendant argues that Relator provides no citations to the “newly discovered information in
support” of this amendment [Id.]. “Since filing his original complaint in 2010,” Defendant states,
“Relator’s allegations regarding travel and lodging expenses have always been limited to Task
Order 21 and domestic travel” [Id. (citation omitted)]. Defendant asserts, “Relator’s proposed
amendment now seeks to expand his travel/lodging fraud theory to dozens of other contracts and
task orders involving overseas travel” [Id. (citation omitted)]. This is not a clarification, Defendant
argues, but “a significant change that adds entirely new claims that require potentially extensive
additional discovery and analysis” [Id.]. Defendant adds that these claims are also futile under the
particularity requirement in Rule 9(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure [Id. at 9]. According
to Defendant, “Relator does not include a single allegation describing purported travel fraud on
any of the contracts performed in Iraq or Afghanistan” [Id.].
Finally, Defendant argues that the “proposed amendments at this late juncture are
extremely prejudicial because they would necessarily require [an] extension of the fact and expert
discovery deadlines, and delay dispositive motions and trial” [Id. at 10 (citation omitted)].
Relator filed a reply in support of his motion [Doc. 226]. Because Relator timely filed his
motion pursuant to the Scheduling Order, he argues this defeats any argument that he was
unreasonably delayed in moving to amend [Id. at 2]. Even so, he claims that he did not act with
undue delay in filing his motion [Id. at 3]. Relator argues that his “proposed Third Amended
Complaint makes very few substantive changes from the Second Amended Complaint” [Id.]. With
respect to the amendments regarding the OCNs as W-2 employees on the Rusafa Contract, Relator
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explains that he “received the [Overseas Services Agreements (“OSAs”)] related to the Rusafa
project in December 2023, along with thousands of other documents, and his expert completed his
accounting review in late February 2024” [Id. at 4]. He filed his instant motion on March 4, 2024
[Id.]. Relator notes that other documents were not produced unitl late 2023 or early 2024, noting
that at one hearing, “the Court ordered [Defendant] to investigate the cost information contained
within the Deltek system and communicate to Relator’s counsel the parameters and fields available
for generating reports” [Id.]. The day before this hearing, Relator states, Defendant produced
100,000 pages of documents, which included the OCN OSAs at the Rusafa sites” [Id. at 5 (citation
omitted)]. Relator argues that “[t]hese agreements show that [Defendant] hired OCNs on an
independent-contractor basis rather than a W-2 basis” [Id. (citation omitted)].
“Prior to
[Defendant’s] December 6, 2023 production,” Relator asserts that he had not received an OCN
OSA for the Rusafa Contract, and he “was not able to have an expert conduct a complicated
accounting review of cost accounting documents due to [the] lack of [Defendant’s] documents”
[Id.]. He argues that his experts had to analyze these documents, which took a few months because
the documents “involved not only the Rusafa Contract but the other eight contracts at issue” [Id.].
In addition, Relator states that his suspicions regarding the Rusafa Contract were confirmed on
March 1, 2024, when Bill Pearse, Defendant’s former program manager, “testified that the OCNs
working on the Rusafa Contract were not [Defendant] employees as [Defendant] had intimated to
the Government” [Id. at 6.]. “Prior to this deposition,” Relator asserts that he “lacked sworn proof
to substantiate the accounting records’ suggestion that the ONCs were not [Defendant] employees”
[Id.].
With respect to the home leave amendment, Relator states that he received the relevant
source-selection materials on May 8, 2023; however, he did not receive “affidavits from Rusafa
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source-selection authorities [until] January 29, 2024” [Id. at 7]. He was unaware of these
affidavits, which prompted him “to closely review the source-selection process and documents
from the Rusafa Contract” [Id.]. “Even then,” Relator asserts, “only an expert accountant’s review
of [Defendant’s] accounting documents could confirm that [Defendant] never paid for any homeleave airfare as promoted” [Id.]. He concludes that while he had some documents, he “could not
confirm that [Defendant] never paid for home leave for its TCNs until he had sufficient documents
and knowledge of [Defendant’s] home-leave practices and the opportunity for his accounting
expert to review [Defendant’s] airfare expenditures, because the expert accounting was necessary
to establish that [Defendant] had only incurred costs for home leave (i.e., airfare costs) for W-2
ex-pat employees and not for TCNs” [Id. (footnote omitted)].
With respect to the third category of amendments, Relator states that “[Defendant]
misinterprets the changes [he] seeks to make to Count III” [Id.]. “[He] does not allege that
[Defendant] perpetuated travel fraud on all contracts” [Id.]. According to Relator, the changes are
to “clarify that the presentment claim covers the false presentment of all of the previously pled
frauds on all contracts” and not that the “travel and per diem fraud extended to contracts other than
[Task Order] 21” [Id. at 8].
Relator argues that Defendant cannot claim surprise and prejudice because its experts
opined on the employment status of OCNs and the home-leave benefits [Id. at 8–9]. In addition,
Relator asserts that Defendant’s expert is reviewing his expert’s opinion in order to prepare a
proper rebuttal report. Relator denies that allowing the amendments will require the deadlines to
be extended [Id. at 9–10].
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II.
ANALYSIS
The Court finds that Plaintiff has established good cause to file a Third Amended
Complaint. Under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 15, courts should “freely give leave when
justice so requires.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 15(a)(2). The decision whether justice requires an amendment
“is committed to the district court’s discretion.” Moore v. City of Paducah, 790 F.2d 557, 559 (6th
Cir. 1986) (citations omitted). Despite the liberality of Rule 15(a)(2), a court may deny a motion
to amend if the court finds “undue delay, bad faith, or dilatory motive on the part of the movant,
repeated failure to cure deficiencies by amendments previously allowed, undue prejudice to the
opposing party by virtue of allowance of the amendment, [or] futility of the amendment.” Scheib
v. Boderk, No. 3:07-CV-446, 2011 WL 208341, at *2 (E.D. Tenn. Jan. 21, 2011) (quoting Foman
v. Davis, 371 U.S. 178, 182 (1962)).
Defendant objects to Plaintiff’s amendments, stating that he acted with undue delay that
will prejudice it. As an initial matter, Plaintiff’s motion is timely under the Scheduling Order. The
Scheduling Order set the deadline to amend pleadings on March 4, 2024 [Doc. 150 p. 2]. “When
a plaintiff moves to amend its complaint within the deadline listed in the Court’s scheduling order,
. . . such [a] request does not in and of itself create substantial prejudice to the opposing party.”
Hamm v. FCA US LLC, No. 2:19-CV-169, 2020 WL 13443062, at *2 (E.D. Tenn. Dec. 15, 2020)
(citation omitted); see also L.V. v. City of Maryville, No. 3:16-CV-508, 2017 WL 4293233, at *3
(E.D. Tenn. Sept. 27, 2017) (“In this vein, the Court is unwilling to accept an argument that a
party’s compliance with its Scheduling Order creates a scenario in which substantial prejudice can
befall another party. A scheduling order, in fact, has the opposite effect, resulting in ‘the orderly
preparation of a case for trial.’” (citation omitted)). Indeed, the deadline for amending the
pleadings should not have “take[n] [Defendants] by surprise.” L.V., 2017 WL 4293233, at *3.
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Even so, the Court has considered whether Plaintiff acted with undue delay such that it will
cause prejudice to Defendant. “[D]elay alone does not justify denial of leave to amend.” Scheib,
2011 WL 208341, at *2 (quoting Morse v. McWhorter, 290 F.3d 795, 800 (6th Cir. 2002)); see
also Combs v. United States, No. 2:04-CV-306, 2008 WL 11452361, at *2 (E.D. Tenn. July 16,
2008) (“[C]ourts may not deny an amendment solely because of delay and without consideration
of the prejudice to the opposing party.” (collecting cases)). “At some point, however, delay
becomes undue, placing an unwanted burden on the court, or . . . prejudicial, placing an unfair
burden on the opposing party.” Scheib, 2011 WL 208341, at *2 (quoting Morse, 290 F.3d at 800).
As explained in Phelps v. McClellan:
In determining what constitutes prejudice, the court considers
whether the assertion of the new claim or defense would: require the
opponent to expend significant additional resources to conduct
discovery and prepare for trial; significantly delay the resolution of
the dispute; or prevent the plaintiff from bringing a timely action in
another jurisdiction.
30 F.3d 658, 662–63 (6th Cir. 1994) (citation omitted). “The longer the period of unexplained
delay, the less will be required of the nonmoving party in terms of showing of prejudice.” Scheib,
2011 WL 208341, at *2 (quoting Phelps, 30 F.3d at 663). It is only when a party acts with delay
that causes prejudice to the nonmoving party that a court should deny a request to amend. Combs,
2008 WL 11452361, at *2.
Defendant claims that Plaintiff possessed the documents for which he claims support the
amendments.1 Plaintiff explains, however, that with respect to the amendment regarding the
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Defendant argues that Plaintiff did not identify the documents in its opening motion, and
therefore, to the extent he tries to do so in his reply, “the Court should disregard any such
arguments” [Doc. 224 p. 5 n.5]. Not identifying the specific documents, however, is not a ground
for finding that he waived his argument that additional discovery supports the filing of his
amendments. Indeed, in his motion, Relator argued that he uncovered additional details from
reviewing Defendant’s documents. In light of Defendant’s argument that he did not identify the
documents, he did so in his reply brief—the very purpose of a reply brief. See E.D. Tenn. L.R.
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OCNs, he received relevant documents on December 7, 2023, but did not learn of the extent of
Defendant’s alleged overbilling until his experts reviewed these documents and analyzed the
financial data. Similarly, with respect to the home leave amendment, Relator acknowledges that
he possessed some documents on May 8, 2023, but he did not receive “affidavits from Rusafa
source-selection authorities” until January 29, 2024 [Doc. 226 p. 7 (citation omitted)]. In addition,
he needed an expert’s opinion to support his allegation that Defendant never paid any home-leave
airfare.
Defendant argues that it will be prejudiced because the proposed amendments “would
necessarily require [an] extension of the fact and expert discovery deadlines, and delay dispositive
motions and trial” [Doc. 224 p. 10 (citation omitted)]. The Court is not convinced that these
amendments will cause any delay. As Relator represents, Defendant’s expert addressed the subject
matter of the amendments in his expert report, and Relator’s expert did as well [Doc. 226 pp. 8–
9]. Defendant states that “Relator’s proposed amendments regarding TCN home benefits under
Rusafa would require additional discovery into [Defendant’s] proposal and pricing associated with
TCN benefits, the extent to which the Government considered those proposed benefits in its award
decision, actual [Defendant] incurred costs for TCN benefits, and deposition testimony and expert
analysis regarding the same” [Doc. 224 p. 11]. But most of the categories should be information
that Defendant already possesses. The Court finds Defendant’s argument not well taken.2
7.2(a) (“A reply brief shall not be used to reargue the points and authorities included in the opening
brief, but shall directly reply to the points and authorities contained in the answering brief.”).
The Court does not need to consider Defendant’s argument that the proposed amendments
on travel/lodging fraud are futile because Relator represents that he “does not allege that
[Defendant] perpetuated travel fraud on all contracts” [Doc. 226 p. 7]. Instead, his “change is
purely an attempt to clarify that the presentment claim covers the false presentment of all of the
previously pled frauds on all contracts. Relator does not now allege that travel or per diem fraud
extended to contracts other than [Task Order] 21” [Id. at 8].
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III.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, the Court GRANTS Relator’s Motion for Leave to File Third
Amended Complaint [Doc. 220]. Relator SHALL file his operative pleading in CM/ECF on or
before May 8, 2024.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
ENTER:
___________________________
Debra C. Poplin
United States Magistrate Judge
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