Key Takeaways Courts Revisit the Constitutionality of the FCA: Recent federal decisions reflect renewed judicial scrutiny of the False Claims Act’s qui tam provisions, which authorize private ...
Prosecutors say the settlement resolves serious allegations under the False Claims Act. Click to see which companies and how much they’ll pay.
Two foreign-controlled companies agreed to pay $1.75 million to resolve allegations related to the federal Paycheck Protection Program loans.
This is the second post in the Dorsey FCANow Blog’s FCA Basics Series covering the fundamentals of the False Claims Act (“FCA”), outlining ...
Jonathan Porter welcomes colleague Claire Postman to discuss how healthcare providers approach HIPAA when responding to civil investigative demands ...
The Austin Emergency Center agreed to pay the United States a total of $429,231 over allegations regarding overbilling under ...
Patients Choice Laboratories allegedly knowingly submitted claims to Medicare for tests that were either "medically ...
The U.S. DOJ announced that B. Braun subsidiary Aesculap agreed to pay $38.5 million to resolve allegations under the False ...
Aesculap Implant Systems, an orthopedic and spine device maker, agreed to pay $38.5 million in order to resolve False Claims Act allegations.  The agreement resolves allegations that between July 2010 ...
A physician warns that turning honest paperwork mistakes into fraud allegations will push healthcare providers away from ...
Two foreign-controlled companies have agreed to pay more than $1.7 million after federal officials said they weren’t eligible for the COVID relief loans they took. Setterstix Inc. and MAE-EITEL Inc.