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Friday, April 10, 2026

Community Health Owes Attorneys' Fees in $98 Million Fraud Case - Bloomberg Law

A group of 7 whistleblowers may receive attorneys’ fees for helping federal prosecutors reach a “global” $98 million False Claims Act settlement in 2014 with Community Health Systems Inc. for alleged improper hospital admissions, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit ruled.

Community Health’s reliance on the FCA’s public disclosure bar and first-to-file rule was an improper “last-ditch” effort to deny fees to the whistleblowers, Judge Karen Nelson Moore said in a Tuesday decision to reverse and remand to a Tennessee district court.

The public disclosure bar precludes suits based on already disclosed information, and the first-to-file rule bars “parasitic” suits that are related to a first whistleblower’s suit.

It would be unfair to only allow the first whistleblower to recover all the attorneys’ fees if multiple whistleblowers uncovered multiple independent parts of the same complex scheme, and the government used their collective resources to investigate fraud, the court said.

The whistleblowers here differ from the opportunistic whistleblowers courts are concerned about, the court said. Here, the whistleblowers expended significant time and resources helping the government develop claims against Community Health, the court said.

The government intervened in all the whistleblowers’ cases, collaborated with all of them, and encouraged them to share the...



Read Full Story: https://news.bloomberglaw.com/us-law-week/community-health-owes-attorneys-fee...