Whistleblower-initiated DOJ investigation highlights risks facing PPP beneficiaries
Whistleblowers represent a significant threat to recipients of government stimulus funds, including from programs like the Paycheck Protection Program.
In late August, the Department of Justice announced the first False Claims Act settlement to arise out of a qui tam, or whistleblower-initiated action.
On Aug. 26, the DOJ announced that Seth Bernstein, owner of jet charter company JetReady, agreed to pay $287,055 to settle allegations that he misappropriated PPP loan proceeds. The settlement-resolved allegations were brought by former JetReady employee Victoria Hablitzel in a qui tam action.
According to Hablitzel’s complaint and the government’s press release, Bernstein applied for PPP funds in April 2020 and, within days of receiving a $1,173,382 PPP loan, diverted $98,929 to cover, among other items, charitable contributions to support the construction of a drive-in theater in Nantucket, Mass., and sports fields in Winter Park, Fla. JetReady failed to use any of the PPP funds for payroll or to bring back furloughed employees, as contemplated by the program.
Consistent with the FCA’s treble damages provision, the $287,055 settlement appears to represent just shy of three times the amount that Bernstein allegedly misappropriated.
The whistleblower was the company’s assistant controller, and was in a unique position to trace the PPP funds. The company account into which the PPP funds were transferred had a negative account balance prior to the transfer, meaning any expenditure made from that account was surely paid for with PPP funds. The government may decline to prosecute cases where it’s unable to adequately trace funds, or where the borrower is able to show that it spent the PPP funds on approved expenses and/or would have made the challenged expenditure regardless of receiving the PPP loan.
Whistleblower-initiated FCA actions
The FCA permits private citizens to sue on behalf of the U.S. to recover public funds allegedly obtained through fraud. The government investigates the allegations as the complaint remains under seal and, eventually, elects whether to intervene or decline.
Even if the government declines, the “relator” may continue to prosecute the case on the government’s behalf subject to certain restrictions. In either event, the relator may receive up to 30 percent of any recovery.
Due in part to that financial incentive, most PPP beneficiaries are more vulnerable to scrutiny catalyzed by current and former employees than by the government itself.
That was the case with the Bernstein settlement. Although Bernstein fell into the $2 million-or-less “safe harbor,” he faced an extensive DOJ investigation because of a qui tam action by JetReady’s former assistant controller, who was laid off along with numerous other JetReady employees in March 2020. The pandemic caused many similar layoffs, and it is likely that some disgruntled former employees became whistleblowers.
Bernstein received a $1.1 million PPP loan in April 2020. Hablitzel filed her qui tam complaint in July 2020. And the government moved to unseal the complaint “for settlement purposes” in August 2021. In other words, the government investigated for approximately one year. Extrapolating that timeline, whistleblowers likely began filing qui tam actions involving those loans in spring and summer 2020. If the government takes one year to investigate those cases, a flood of qui tam actions should be emerging from under seal in the coming months.
Bankruptcy implications
The Bernstein settlement demonstrates the methods that the government will use to protect FCA claims involving PPP loans in bankruptcy proceedings. The agreement states that the U.S. will rescind the FCA release and file a civil action to recover more than the settlement amount if Bernstein’s obligation under the agreement are avoided for any reason, including bankruptcy.
Typically, the DOJ takes the position that FCA liability constitutes a debt that is not dischargeable, and that takes priority over most competing claims in a bankruptcy case.
Any PPP beneficiary who receives an FCA civil investigative demand or similar information request from the government should assume the existence of a qui tam action and consult counsel.
Attorney David A. Vicinanzo leads Nixon Peabody’s national Government Investigations & White-Collar Defense practice. Morgan C. Nighan is a partner in Nixon Peabody’s Complex Commercial Disputes practice who also serves on the firm’s Covid-19 Client Response team.