Disputes Over the Government’s Qui Tam Dismissal Authority Explode Around the Country

Disputes Over the Government’s Qui Tam Dismissal Authority Explode Around the Country

Client Alert

Since the beginning of the Trump Administration, and particularly in the last six months, the Justice Department has been exercising its authority to dismiss qui tam False Claims Act (FCA) cases with increasing frequency. As relators have challenged the government’s efforts, disputes over the scope of the government’s dismissal authority have arisen in at least a dozen cases in seven districts around the country, and one of the disputes has already reached the Ninth Circuit. These fights not only reflect the key considerations driving government dismissal motions, but also raise fundamental legal issues about control over qui tam litigation—issues that are now likely to be decided by many courts of appeals and, perhaps as early as next year, by the Supreme Court.

Those issues include:

  1. How deferential should courts be in acting on government motions to dismiss?
  2. What kind of evidentiary showing, if any, must the government make to establish that dismissal would advance a legitimate governmental purpose?
  3. If the government moves to dismiss after the court has denied the defendant’s motion to dismiss for failure to state claim, how should that affect the court’s resolution of the government’s motion, particularly if it rests in part on the government’s determination that the claims are meritless?
  4. What must a relator establish to show that the government’s dismissal effort is “fraudulent, arbitrary and capricious, or illegal”?

Partner Jonathan Cedarbaum recently published an article in Law360 analyzing these cases and their implications for FCA defendants.

Read the full article.

Notice

Unless you are an existing client, before communicating with WilmerHale by e-mail (or otherwise), please read the Disclaimer referenced by this link.(The Disclaimer is also accessible from the opening of this website). As noted therein, until you have received from us a written statement that we represent you in a particular manner (an "engagement letter") you should not send to us any confidential information about any such matter. After we have undertaken representation of you concerning a matter, you will be our client, and we may thereafter exchange confidential information freely.

Thank you for your interest in WilmerHale.