The United States Department of Justice (DOJ) recently announced another settlement agreement showing that DOJ continues to prioritize cybersecurity enforcement under the False Claims Act (FCA). According to the press release, government contractor Illumina Inc. (Illumina) agreed to pay $9.8 million to settle its FCA matter, which arose from allegations related to the company’s cybersecurity practices in connection with government contracts—a priority area we have seen increasingly highlighted in recent DOJ settlements.
The Illumina Settlement
Illumina is a biotechnology company that manufactured and sold genomic sequencing systems—technology used in genetic testing to determine organisms’ DNA sequences—to various federal agencies. llumina’s former Director of Portfolio and Program Management filed the qui tam suit in September 2023 after she was allegedly terminated by Illumina for raising certain cybersecurity concerns.
According to the Settlement Agreement, Illumina’s genomic sequencing systems operated with Local Run Manager (LRM) and/or Universal Copy Service (UCS) software, which suffered from cybersecurity vulnerabilities, and Illumina did not have the product security program or quality measures necessary to identify and address these vulnerabilities. As has been in the case in other recent FCA cybersecurity settlements, there was no allegation that an actual cybersecurity breach had occurred in connection with Illumina’s products. But DOJ still considered...
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