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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 Awards Over $6 Million to Whistleblowers in Three Seperate Awards

January 13th, 2023|Media, Securities, Whistleblower News and Qui Tam Blog|

On January 12 and 13, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) issued three separate whistleblower awards totaling over $6.2 million. The awarded whistleblowers voluntarily provided original information to the SEC that led to successful enforcement actions. Through the SEC Whistleblower Program, the SEC pays out monetary awards to qualified whistleblowers, individuals who voluntarily disclosures contribute to the success of an enforcement action. SEC whistleblower awards are for 10-30% of the funds collected by the agency in the enforcement action. In the award issued on January 13, the SEC awarded over $5 million to a whistleblower who “submitted a tip and additional information that helped Commission staff shape its investigative strategy, identify witnesses, and draft document and information requests and subpoenas, saving Commission time and resources during the investigation,” according to the award order. "­Th­­­­­­­­­e whistleblower in this case provided helpful information and substantial ongoing assistance, saving the SEC ...

SEC Awards Whistleblower $5 Million in First Award of 2023

January 10th, 2023|Media, Securities, Whistleblower News and Qui Tam Blog|

On January 6, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) issued a $5 million whistleblower award to an individual who voluntarily provided original information that contributed to the success of an enforcement action. It is the first award granted by the agency in 2023. Through the SEC Whistleblower Program, qualified whistleblowers, individuals who voluntarily report original information that leads to a successful enforcement action, are eligible to receive monetary awards between 10-30% of the sanctions collected in the enforcement action. The SEC also provides anti-retaliation protections to whistleblowers, including confidentiality. According to the award order, the whistleblower “provided original information based on independent knowledge and analysis and not already known to the Commission from any other source.” The SEC determined that the whistleblower “voluntarily” provided the information despite having previously been subpoenaed by the agency because “that subpoena and the underlying investigation did not ‘relate[] to the subject matter ...

The Anti-Money Laundering Whistleblower Improvement Act: Justice for Whistleblowers; No Peace for Russian Oligarchs

January 3rd, 2023|Anti-Money Laundering, Whistleblower News and Qui Tam Blog|

This piece originally appeared in JD Supra. A two-year campaign to create an effective law incentivizing whistleblowers to report money laundering and sanctions busting has ended with a stunning and surprise victory for whistleblowers. It started in December 2020 when Congress released the Conference Committee report on the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA). The report contained a whistleblower law for AML violations. Initially greeted with strong praise, a leading expert in whistleblower law pointed out the law was full of loopholes, dangerously misleading, and would utterly fail. A December 7, 2020 column in The Hill said it all: “Big Banks get at Big Break in Pending Whistleblower Law.” On January 1, 2021, the banks won, and the whistleblowers lost. The flawed AML bill became law. Time proved the expert was right; the law was a complete flop. The reason was simple. On the one hand, the NDAA-based Anti-Money Laundering law looked on its face ...

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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