5th Circuit Rules that SEC Whistleblowers are Ineligible for Awards in Certain Bankruptcy Proceedings - Whistleblower Network News
On August 30, the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit ruled in Barr v. SEC, that two whistleblowers are not eligible to receive whistleblower awards based on proceeds collected by the government in a voluntary bankruptcy proceeding.
After two whistleblowers exposed what has been called “one of the biggest frauds in Texas history” the SEC sanctioned the fraud-committing company $38.7 million. The company then voluntarily declared bankruptcy in response to the sanctions.
The two whistleblowers fully qualified for awards under the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Whistleblower Program, but the Court sided with the SEC’s argument that whistleblowers are not eligible for awards based on funds collected from the bankruptcy proceeding.
Through the SEC Whistleblower Program, qualified whistleblowers are eligible for awards of 10-30% of the funds collected in an action aided by their disclosure. The Fifth Circuit ruled that a voluntary bankruptcy proceeding is not “an action” carried out by the SEC.
Thus, despite their whistleblowing resulting in the SEC sanctioning a company $38.7 million and returning millions to harmed investors, the two whistleblowers have only received $31,000 according to reporting by Bloomberg.
According to whistleblower attorney Andrew Feller of Kohn, Kohn & Colapinto, this ruling reveals a major shortcoming in the SEC Whistleblower Program. In a new article published by the Columbia Law School BlueSky blog, Feller, a former...
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