Government Contractor Pays $2.6M to Settle False Claims Act Suit
https://www.justice.gov/usao-edva/pr/government-contractor-pays-26m-settle-false-claims-act-suit
Department of Justice
U.S. Attorneys Office
Eastern District of Virginia
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Monday, October 16, 2017
Government Contractor Pays $2.6M to Settle False Claims Act Suit
ALEXANDRIA, Va. Triple Canopy, Inc. (Triple Canopy), located in Reston, has agreed to pay $2.6 million to settle civil False Claims Act allegations that the company submitted false claims for payment to the Department of Defense for unqualified security guards stationed in Iraq.
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The allegations stem from Triple Canopys one-year contract with the Joint Contracting Command in Iraq (JCC-I), an entity established to provide contracting support related to the governments relief and reconstruction efforts in Iraq. Under the 2009 contract, Triple Canopy was required to perform a variety of security services at Al Asad Airbase, the second largest air base in Iraq.
The governments complaint in intervention alleges that Triple Canopy knowingly billed the United States for security guards who could not pass contractually required firearms proficiency tests. The tests were designed by the Army to ensure that the guards hired to protect U.S. and allied personnel were capable of firing their assigned weapons safely and accurately. The government further alleges that Triple Canopy concealed the guards inability to satisfy the firearms testing requirements by creating false test scorecards that Triple Canopy was required to maintain for government review, in an effort to induce the government to pay for the unqualified guards.
The governments claims are based on a whistleblower suit initially filed by a former employee of Triple Canopy in 2011. The suit was filed in the federal district court for the Eastern District of Virginia under the qui tam provision of the False Claims Act, which allows private persons to file suit on behalf of the United States. Under the False Claims Act, the government has a period of time to investigate the allegations and decide whether to intervene in the action or to decline intervention and allow the whistleblower, also called the relator, to go forward alone. The government intervened in the relators suit in June 2012. The False Claims Act also provides the whistleblower a share of the governments recovery. As part of the resolution, the whistleblower will receive approximately $500,000.
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