Host Jonathan Porter welcomes Husch Blackwell partner Cormac Conner back to the podcast to discuss DOJ’s recent release of last fiscal year’s False Claims Act statistics, along with recent public statements by a senior DOJ official who oversees False Claims Act enforcement. DOJ’s statistics and public statements show that qui tams are hitting record numbers and DOJ is taking a much more active approach to dismissing improper qui tams. Our conversation starts by examining how DOJ’s statistics signal increased scrutiny of the healthcare and defense contracting industries, with a growing role of qui tams. We look at how DOJ uses the False Claims Act to address the Trump Administration’s policy priorities in the areas of DEI and tariffs enforcement, along with healthcare claims that involve substandard patient care. We then move on to discuss how DOJ’s statistics and public statements led to several major approaching legal battles, including the constitutionality of qui tams and DOJ’s use of artificial intelligence in vetting False Claims Act theories. We close the conversation by focusing on what those in False Claims Act-enforced industries should do to prepare for the growing number of qui tams and False Claims Act investigations.
Host Jonathan Porter welcomes Husch Blackwell partner Cormac Conner back to the podcast to discuss DOJ’s recent release of last fiscal year’s False Claims Act statistics, along with recent public statements by a senior DOJ official who oversees False Claims Act enforcement. DOJ’s statistics and public statements show that qui tams are hitting record numbers and DOJ is taking a much more active approach to dismissing improper qui tams.
Our conversation starts by examining how DOJ’s statistics signal increased scrutiny of the healthcare and defense contracting industries, with a growing role of qui tams. We look at how DOJ uses the False Claims Act to address the Trump Administration’s policy priorities in the areas of DEI and tariffs enforcement, along with healthcare claims that involve substandard patient care.
We then move on to discuss how DOJ’s statistics and public statements led to several major approaching legal battles, including the constitutionality of qui tams and DOJ’s use of artificial intelligence in vetting False Claims Act theories. We close the conversation by focusing on what those in False Claims Act-enforced industries should do to prepare for the growing number of qui tams and False Claims Act investigations.
Jonathan Porter | Full Biography
Jonathan focuses on white collar criminal defense, federal investigations brought under the False Claims Act and litigation against the government and whistleblowers. He guides clients in sensitive and enterprise-threating litigation, drawing on his experience as a former federal prosecutor. At the Department of Justice, Jonathan earned a reputation as a top white-collar prosecutor and trial lawyer and was a key member of multiple international healthcare fraud takedowns and high-profile financial crime prosecution teams. He serves as a vice chair of the American Health Law Association’s Fraud and Abuse Practice Group and teaches white collar crime as an adjunct professor of law at Mercer University School of Law.
Cormac Conner | Full Biography
A partner with Husch Blackwell based in Washington, D.C., Cormac has two decades of experience with high-stakes litigation and investigations, both as a prosecutor and as defense counsel. He has advised dozens of clients facing criminal and civil investigations involving all manner of federal criminal investigations, False Claims Act allegations, antitrust allegations, and Foreign Corrupt Practices Act claims. Cormac regularly assists clients with responses to formal and informal investigative inquiries, including Grand Jury subpoenas, Office of Inspector General subpoenas, civil investigative demands, and 28 U.S.C. § 1782 subpoenas. Between his stints in private practice, Cormac was an Assistant U.S. Attorney for nearly four years in the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia, serving as lead prosecutor in 24 criminal trials. In that role, he investigated hundreds of criminal cases, managed Grand Jury investigations, and coordinated investigative activities by law enforcement personnel.