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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

Top Whistleblower Attorney Tells World Bank Group It Must Protect Whistleblowers

November 8th, 2018|Whistleblower News and Qui Tam Blog, Whistleblower Protection|

During a presentation on Technical Workshop on Reprisals to the World Bank Group on October 23, 2018, whistleblower attorney Stephen M. Kohn explained the importance of both incentivizing and protecting whistleblower who come forward to report fraud and corruption. Kohn discussed the success of U.S. whistleblower incentive laws as a tool to detect fraud. He used the qui tam provisions of the U.S. False Claims Act as an example, demonstrating how it is the most effective U.S. whistleblower law ever passed to protect and reward whistleblowers that expose fraud in government contracting. Kohn’s presentation included several quotes from government officials citing to the effectiveness of these laws such as that of Acting Associate Attorney General Bill Baer, “The False Claims Act and it’s [whistleblower] provisions remain the government’s most effective civil tool in protecting vital government programs from fraud schemes.” In addition, Kohn directed the World Bank Group’s attention to ...

CFTC Whistleblower Program Pays Over $75 Million to Dodd Frank Whistleblowers in 2018

November 2nd, 2018|Securities, Whistleblower News and Qui Tam Blog|

The CFTC whistleblower reward program was established by the 2010 Dodd Frank Act to protect the U.S. economy and American public. The program pays monetary awards to qui tam whistleblowers who provide information that leads the CFTC to bring a successful enforcement action exceeding a million dollars for violations of the Commodity Exchange Act. After a slow start the program, the CFTC reported in 2017 that it expected to pay $45.5 million in qui tam awards in 2018 to Dodd Frank whistleblowers. However, 2018 was even more successful than predicted, with more than $75 million paid to whistleblowers who reported commodities fraud. This includes a whistleblower award of approximately $30 million, the largest whistleblower award to-date in a commodities fraud case, in July given to a whistleblower who voluntarily provided key original information that led to a successful enforcement action. Another first for the program came when a whistleblower reward ...

Excluding FBAR Violations from IRS Whistleblower Award Calculations “Negatively Affected Whistleblowers’ Willingness” to Report Tax Fraud

November 1st, 2018|Tax Fraud, Whistleblower News and Qui Tam Blog|

The Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018, passed in February required the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) to include penalties for Report of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts (FBAR) violations in calculating IRS whistleblower awards. Prior to this statutory change being signed into law, FBAR violations were not included in the calculation of IRS whistleblower awards. The Government Accountability Office (GAO) issued a report this week that reviewed the impact of the former exclusion for FBAR and other non-Title 26 collections from whistleblower awards. The GAO found that whistleblower lawyers limited the number of clients alleging FBAR noncompliance they were willing to represent when such collections were excluded from IRS whistleblower reward determinations. Whistleblower attorneys also reported that many would-be whistleblowers would not come forward to report tax fraud due to the exclusion of criminal fines from collected proceeds. This is significant because the “estimated value of undisclosed offshore accounts may be ...

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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