3 minute read | April.01.2024
The U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) has announced plans to offer financial incentives to whistleblowers who report allegations of wrongdoing. It’s an effort to fill gaps left open by existing whistleblower and bounty provisions offered by the SEC, CFTC, IRS and FinCEN.
The DOJ envisions a pilot program within 90 days, with a formal start date for the full program later this year.
U.S. Attorney’s Offices in New York and California announced plans for similar whistleblower reward programs this year.
The DOJ has made clear that it will accept information about alleged violations of any federal law, but it has a keen interest in:
There is no reason to think new whistleblower investigations will be limited to these three categories. Given the breadth of the DOJ’s enforcement mandates, DOJ attorneys across many departments will have access to a new source of information related to potential violations of antitrust, environmental and civil rights laws and other statutes.
In January, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York said it would launch its own Whistleblower Pilot Program.
The SDNY’s program applies broadly to so-called white collar and public corruption offenses, is not limited in its breadth and offers the prospect of receiving a non-prosecution agreement as the reward for coming forward if certain conditions are met.
Those conditions include that the information is not already public or known to the government, that the disclosure is voluntary (as opposed to being compelled by a subpoena), that the whistleblower is able to provide substantial assistance in the investigation and prosecution of someone who is equally or more culpable, that the whistleblower truthfully discloses all criminal conduct in which the whistleblower has been involved (which cannot include certain offenses) and that the whistleblower is not a public official, a law enforcement agent or a CEO or CFO of a public or private company.
The U.S. Attorney’s Office in the Northern District of California said it also plans to launch a similar program.
These new programs provide substantial incentives for low to mid-level employees to provide information to prosecutors, substantially increasing the risk to companies that they will become embroiled in a federal criminal investigation. To help companies minimize that risk, companies should consider:
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Want to know more or have questions? Contact Amy Walsh or Lisa Lupion.