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Mary Jane Wilmoth - Whistleblower Attorney

Mary Jane Wilmoth

Managing Partner

Contact Mary Jane
[email protected]

What Clients are Saying

“Among the most experienced and skilled attorneys practicing in the specialization of whistleblower law”

Decision Awarding Attorneys Fees in Hobby v. Georgia Power Co.
Linda Tripp

“I couldn’t have navigated the shark invested waters whistleblower face without the passion, dedication, determination, and brilliance of my incredible attorneys.”

“…the three co-founders of the National Whistleblower Center, these are important names, Stephen Kohn, Michael Kohn and David Colapinto, thank you so much for all that you do, they broke the mold with these visionaries and we are all better for it.” – National Whistleblower Day, 2018

Linda Tripp, Retaliation Whistleblower

Mary Jane's Latest Thinking

SEC Charges Tampa Executive SEC With Giving Bribes to Qatari Officials

January 26th, 2015|Foreign Corrupt Practices, Whistleblower News and Qui Tam Blog|

The Securities and Exchange Commission announced on January 22, 2015, that it charged a former executive at a Tampa based engineering and construction firm with bribing foreign officials to secure contracts with the government of Qatar. Such bribes violate the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA). The Foreign Corrupt Practices Act is a federal law which mandates accounting transparency and prohibits companies from paying bribes to foreign government officials and political figures for the purpose of obtaining business. It is the first American law that gives full protection to foreign nationals for reporting bribes and contains extraordinary procedures for their protection. An SEC investigation found that Walid Hatoum, who has agreed to settle the SEC’s charges, offered to funnel funds to a local company owned and controlled by a foreign official in order to secure two multi-million Qatari government contracts for PBSJ in 2009. The foreign official subsequently provided Hatoum and ...

False Claims Act Used to Enforce Environmental Safety Standards

January 23rd, 2015|False Claims/Qui Tam, Whistleblower News and Qui Tam Blog|

This past Friday the Houston Chronicle published an important article regarding allegations that DuPont let poisonous gas leak continuously from a plant near New Orleans for three years. The article, “Whistleblower case raises more safety concerns about DuPont,” details a novel approach to enforce environmental standards using the False Claims Act (FCA). The plaintiff in U.S. ex rel Simoneaux v. E.I. DuPont de Nemours and Co., Civ. No. 12-129-SDD-SCR is attempting to prove his case in what experts describe as an unusual and potentially ground-breaking use of the False Claims Act FCA), claiming DuPont did not report environmental issues at the plant to avoid fines from the federal government. The False Claims Act should be expanded beyond claims of Medicaid fraud or the narrow federal contract claims. The FCA is the most successful tool in uncovering fraud and protecting whistleblowers. It is important to carefully determine whether a violation, which on its face does ...

OSC Proposed Rule For Federal Contractor Employees May Cause Confusion

January 22nd, 2015|Whistleblower News and Qui Tam Blog, Whistleblower Protection|

Washington, D.C. January 22, 2015. Today the U.S. Office of Special Counsel (OSC) proposed a rule that it claims would extend protections under the Civil Service Reform Act and the Whistleblower Protection Act to employees of Federal contractors. However, the unintended consequences of OSC’s proposed rule may cause more harm than good for employees of federal contractors. This rule may cause confusion and interfere with other preexisting rights contractors have under other laws. OSC should reconsider whether such a rule is even necessary given that employees of contractors already have stronger whistleblower protections under state and federal law than federal employees. In any event, if the proposed rule is enacted it should be amended to make sure this confusion or weakening of other rights does not occur. As grounds for this new rule OSC cites 41 U.S.C. §4712, which is a law Congress enacted in 2013 that weakened pre-existing whistleblower ...

Our Client Received the Largest Whistleblower Reward in World History of $104 Million

Bradley Birkenfeld broke the back of Swiss bank secrecy. He was the first Swiss banker to file a case under the IRS whistleblower law. The results were unprecedented. UBS bank (at the time the largest bank in the world) had to pay a fine of $780 million. They also had to close all known U.S. accounts, and for the first time in history, the bank turned over the names of 4450 U.S. taxpayers for prosecution in the United States. Mr. Birkenfeld obtained the largest ever individual qui tam whistleblower award in history, $104 million.

Mary Jane's Successful Legal Advocacy

Legal Advocacy

Pro Bono Public Service

Dedicated to protecting whistleblowers, the National Whistleblower Center (NWC) was founded in 1988 by three experienced whistleblower-rights attorneys, Stephen M. Kohn, Michael D. Kohn and David K. Colapinto. Mary Jane was selected as the NWC's first Public Interest Law Fellow, and soon became a major leader in the NWC. She currently is the NWC corporate Treasure and serves on its Board of Directors. She founded the whistleblower protection blog, and for years managed many of the NWC's highly successful programs.

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