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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

Supreme Court Backs Former Air Marshal

January 21st, 2015|Whistleblower News and Qui Tam Blog, Whistleblower Protection|

Washington, D.C. January 21, 2015. Today the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that former Air Marshall Robert MacLean was not “specifically prohibited by law” from disclosing information to the press about TSA’s plan to cutback on the number of air marshals during a terrorist alert. Such a disclosure was against agency regulations. The Whistleblower Protection Act prohibits individuals in positions of authority from taking a “personnel action” against a government employee when the employee makes a disclosure, which the employee reasonable believes to evidence a “substantial and specific danger to public health and safety, if such disclosure is not specifically prohibited by law.” The issue the Supreme Court decided was whether when a federal statute bars whistleblower from making disclosures that are “specifically prohibited by law,” does this bar also apply to disclosures prohibited by agency regulations? In the 7-2 Decision in Department of Homeland Security v. MacLean, the court stated that the agency ...

TSA Whistleblower Wins at Supreme Court

January 21st, 2015|Whistleblower News and Qui Tam Blog, Whistleblower Protection|

Washington, D.C. January 21, 2015. Today the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that former Air Marshall Robert MacLean was not “specifically prohibited by law” from disclosing information to the press about TSA’s plan to cutback on the number of air marshals during a terrorist alert. Such a disclosure was against agency regulations. The Whistleblower Protection Act prohibits individuals in positions of authority from taking a “personnel action” against a government employee when the employee makes a disclosure, which the employee reasonable believes to evidence a “substantial and specific danger to public health and safety, if such disclosure is not specifically prohibited by law.” The issue the Supreme Court decided was whether when a federal statute bars whistleblower from making disclosures that are “specifically prohibited by law,” does this bar also apply to disclosures prohibited by agency regulations? In the 7-2 Decision in Department of Homeland Security v. MacLean, the court stated that the agency ...

KBR Denied Stay in Iraqi War DOD Contract Fraud Case

January 14th, 2015|False Claims/Qui Tam, Whistleblower News and Qui Tam Blog|

Washington, D.C. January 13, 2015. U.S District Court Judge James Gwin denied a request by Kellogg Brown & Root (KBR) to stay proceedings brought under the False Claims Act in United States ex rel. Barko v. Halliburton Co. et al., while the defense contractor appeals rulings made late last year. In November, Judge Gwin ordered KBR to turn over incriminating documents prepared as part of an internal investigation of multi-million dollar war contracting fraud. The order requires KBR to turn over certain internal papers, including investigative reports, which contain evidence of fraud. KBR argues that the documents concerned should be covered under attorney-client privilege and have filed a writ of mandamus with the D.C. Circuit. However, in his order denying KBR’s request for a stay, Judge Gwin explained that much of the case's discovery doesn't concern attorney-client privilege questions and isn't related to KBR's appeal. "A ruling on the mandamus petition ...

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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