A recent settlement agreement presents another example of how educational institutions can find themselves facing potential liability under the False Claims Act (FCA). The settlement illustrates how FCA liability remains a risk for universities and other education institutions awarded federal research grants as well as academic medical centers engaged in clinical research trials.
The Justice Department announced in October 2023 that it had entered into a FCA settlement agreement with Stanford University to resolve allegations that the university had submitted research grant proposals to several federal agencies without disclosing that certain faculty serving as principal investigators had received funding from foreign sources.
The FCA’s origins date back to the Civil War era, when Congress first enacted the law in the wake of fraud by Union Army suppliers. Today, following transformational amendments in 1986, 2009, and 2010, the FCA is more powerful and prevalent than ever.
Indeed, the FCA has become the federal government’s chief civil fraud enforcement tool, targeting traditional government, aerospace, and defense contractors; healthcare providers charging Medicare/Medicaid and other federal programs; and other business sectors, including education, insurance, banking, mortgage lending and servicing, and life sciences.
The FCA imposes liability for knowingly making false claims for payment to the federal government, with “knowingly” defined to include not only actual knowledge but also deliberate ignorance and reckless disregard. Claims can be false either because of the goods or services sold or because of false certifications concerning eligibility to bill the government.
The FCA further creates liability for so-called “reverse” false claims, which occur when a person knowingly avoids an obligation to pay money to the government, including when the person receives an overpayment from the government and fails to return it.
The FCA uniquely allows for private persons to bring suit in the name of the government. These suits, known as qui tam actions, allow “relators” to receive between 15% and 30% of the proceeds of the action, whether by settlement or judgment. Qui tam cases dominate the FCA docket, with a recent annual average of 600 to 700 new cases.
Upon a finding of liability, the FCA imposes treble damages—i.e., three times the loss sustained by the government because of the violation—plus statutory per-claim penalties ranging from approximately $13,000 to $27,000. Since the 1986 FCA amendments, the government has recovered more than $72 billion, with annual recoveries over the last 10 years averaging approximately $3.7 billion.
While the Justice Department does not separately report recoveries from education institutions or concerning research grants, FCA activity in this space remains steady, as evidenced by court decisions and settlements.
The conduct giving rise to the Stanford settlement involved research grants awarded by the National Science Foundation (NSF), NASA, the US Navy, the US Army, and the US Air Force. According to the settlement agreement, in which Stanford did not admit liability, the Justice Department alleged that, when applying for the research grants in question, Stanford failed to disclose that its faculty members named as principal investigators on the grant proposals received funding from various foreign sources and that one Stanford faculty member/principal investigator had affiliations with or received funding from a Chinese university.
According to the government, Stanford was required to make these disclosures in its grant proposals. The settlement, under which Stanford agreed to pay $1.9 million, indicates that this was an affirmative FCA action by the Justice Department, meaning no qui tam relator was involved.
The breadth of FCA activity in the education arena is illustrated by public settlements and litigation, including the following:
Education institutions are regular targets of FCA allegations, investigations, and litigation. According to government statistics, federal research and development expenditures to education institutions in FY2022 exceeded $53 billion, including funding from HHS ($30 billion), the Department of Defense ($7.9 billion), and the NSF ($6 billion).
In most instances, federal grant and funding recipients certify their eligibility for such awards, make representations regarding their research capabilities, attest to their compliance with cybersecurity regulations, submit effort reports, and/or certify compliance with other regulations and requirements during the course of performance. These activities remain fertile ground for FCA enforcement, including by persons within these institutions.
Education institutions that receive federal funding should be cognizant of the FCA risks and maintain effective compliance programs designed to educate participants as well as identify issues and conduct appropriate reviews. And when there are signs of a federal investigation, such as receipt of an agency subpoena or Civil Investigative Demand, compliance programs alone are not enough: the legal department within the institution should be promptly notified so that document preservation, internal investigation, voluntary or mandatory disclosures, and outside counsel assistance can be considered.
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