Under a new 2025 law, Massachusetts is one of the first in the nation to broaden its state False Claims Act (FCA) to require disclosures by investors and owners of health care entities. On January 8, 2025, Governor Maura Healey signed into law H.5159, An Act enhancing the market review process (the Act), significantly changing Massachusetts’s regulatory and enforcement landscape. As discussed in further detail here, the law imposes FCA liability against investors and focuses on private equity and corporate ownership in health care. While this Act appears to be the first direct codification of FCA liability, it is consistent with the Department of Justice (DOJ) and Office of the Inspector General, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ (HHS-OIG) recent focus on private equity and the impact on health care.[1] While the DOJ has focused on private equity firms that allegedly knew of misconduct at portfolio companies and failed to stop it through their involvement in the operations of those companies, the MA FCA goes further by imposing liability on health care investors for merely being aware of misconduct and failing to report it to the state. H. 5159 expands the scope of the MA FCA enforced by the Commonwealth’s Attorney General[2] to apply to any person who has an “ownership or investment interest” and any person who violates the false claim statute that “knowingly” or “knows” about the violation[3] and fails to disclose the violation to the government within 60...
Read Full Story:
https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMipwFBVV95cUxPSnV3TE1FUlpHM1NDb2xFRGZa...