Agencies as Litigation Gatekeepers: An Empirical Analysis of DOJ Intervention Under the Qui Tam Provisions of the False Claims Act

2区 法学 Q1 Social Sciences
D. Engstrom
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Abstract

Recent years have seen mounting calls to vest agencies with litigation gatekeeper authority across a range of regulatory areas, including civil rights, antitrust, and financial and securities regulation. Agencies, it is said, can rationalize litigation regimes through the power to oversee, control, and even terminate private enforcement efforts. Yet there exists strikingly little theory or evidence on how such agency gatekeeper authority might work in practice. This paper aims to fill that gap by offering the first large-scale quantitative study of an often-invoked but little-studied example of a private enforcement regime incorporating such authority: the qui tam regime established by the False Claims Act (“FCA”). The FCA’s qui tam provisions empower private persons, dubbed “relators,” to sue private parties alleging fraud against the United States and earn a bounty equal to a portion of any proceeds returned to the federal treasury. The FCA also grants the United States Department of Justice (“DOJ”) substantial oversight authority, including the ability to intervene into qui tam lawsuits, thus taking primary control over the litigation, or dismiss lawsuits out from under private relators entirely. Using an original data set encompassing some 4,000 qui tam lawsuits filed between 1986 and 2008, I ask a deceptively simple question: What drives DOJ intervention decisions? My analysis recovers a number of political and non-political correlates of DOJ intervention decision-making, provides an empirical baseline against which to measure proposed FCA amendments as well as proliferating calls to export its unique public-private enforcement structure to other regulatory areas, and suggests the need to reorient scholarly debate around the possibilities and limits of private enforcement of public law.
作为诉讼守门人的机构:美国司法部依据《虚假申报法》奎坦条款的干预实证分析
近年来,越来越多的人呼吁在民权、反垄断、金融和证券监管等一系列监管领域赋予机构诉讼看门人的权力。据说,机构可以通过监督、控制甚至终止私人执法努力的权力,使诉讼制度合理化。然而,关于这种机构看门人权力如何在实践中发挥作用的理论或证据却少得惊人。本文旨在填补这一空白,通过对一个经常被提及但很少被研究的私人执法制度纳入这种权力的例子进行首次大规模定量研究:《虚假申报法》(“FCA”)建立的小组制度。FCA的合组条款授权被称为“关联方”的个人起诉指控对美国进行欺诈的私人当事方,并获得相当于任何收益返还给联邦财政部的一部分的赏金。FCA还授予美国司法部(“DOJ”)实质性的监督权力,包括干预集体诉讼的能力,从而对诉讼进行主要控制,或者完全驳回私人关系下的诉讼。使用包含1986年至2008年间约4000起集体诉讼的原始数据集,我提出了一个看似简单的问题:是什么推动了司法部的干预决定?我的分析恢复了司法部干预决策的一些政治和非政治相关性,为衡量拟议的FCA修正案以及将其独特的公私执法结构出口到其他监管领域的呼声提供了一个经验基准,并建议有必要重新定位围绕公法私人执行的可能性和局限性的学术辩论。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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