Forgotten Dairies

Record False Claims Act Recoveries Expose America’s Deep Fraud Accountability Crisis -By Fransiscus Nanga Roka

That is the awful reality behind those triumphal press releases. Not only is America recovering from fraud. It shows how reliant it has become on after-the-event accountability in a market where fraud still seems, too often, to be worth the risk.

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Whenever the U.S. government gives news of record levels of recoveries under the False Claims Act, officials trumpet how those numbers reflect a working system. That reading is too comfortable. Record recoveries do not merely mirror the strength of enforcement: they also imply that fraud has become ingrained in both public contracting and healthcare billing, as well as appearing to be an integral part of any commerce with government funds.

This is America’s anti fraud paradox. There is not much dishonesty, and only an exceptionally dishonest government keeps breaking recovery records. It repeatedly breaks recovery records, and that’s because the scale of alleged fraud is immense enough, recurring enough, and lucrative enough that it can keep supplying an enforcement pipeline year after year. And then, somewhere along the line, celebration begins to sound like penance.

The purpose of the False Claims Act was to punish those who steal from the public purse. In theory, it is one of the most potent legal weapons against corporate misbehaviour in the United States. However, its repeat appearances in the headlines with these remarkable recoveries raise a grimmer prospect: that the law has mastered turning fraud into profit after it spreads but is still hapless in preventing or stopping before damageroars.

That distinction matters. Ultimately, there is a hypothetical moral line separating the act of deterring fraud from that of simply invoicing it. When corporate actors can manipulate reimbursement systems, make inflated claims, dodge the legal process and exploit regulatory vagueness for years and turn around with a big settlement without parallel cultural change then that’s hardly public accountability at its strongest. What it is seeing, however, are a tidy and efficient clean up in an acceptable contamination-due-to-business-costs system.

When such fraud reaches as deep as healthcare, defense, disaster relief and other sectors where public funds are meant to respond to pressing human needs which is part of the grotesque. Fraud in these spaces is no victimless crime of accounting. It can overwhelm health systems, undermine care, erode public trust and divert resources from the people who need them most. The scandal is the mass market acceptance of fraud.

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If this is America, then it often presents itself as global model rule of law and market accountability. However, the continued whoppers in False Claims Act recoveries suggest a less flattering story. This points to a political economy in which institutions are willing to wage ostentatious retribution against fraud, while hesitating or giving little thought to contesting the incentives that quietly breed it. Boards demand growth. Investors reward aggressive performance. Contractors chase federal money. Your compliance departments may talk a good game about ethics, but your business units are driving for targets that would make ethical restraint seem like lack of ambition.

That is how fraud flourishes in the modern day, not only through hazardous if bombastic criminality but by benevolent ambition and systemic stress leading to moral diffusion. Responsibility is divided between departments, obscured across decision-making powers and hidden under technical justifications. When the government shows up at a firm with subpoenas and demands for settlements, it is usually too late: The malfeasance has been digested as revenue by this time; bonuses have gone out; market valuation absorbed.

This is why record recoveries should frighten not comfort. The public is asked to clap at the recoveries of stolen or misappropriated funds, while being distracted by a more foundational question: why was it so easy for the system to be abused in that way? And why does bad behaviour seem to reach industrial scale before anybody calls for results? Why does the enforcement architecture seem designed to respond dramatically rather than preemptively?

The defenders of the status quo will counter that high recoveries are evidence it is working, whistleblowers incentivized and empowered under the law cannot possibly be discarded as a useful tool for rooting out bad actors from which eventually come penalties. There is truth in that. The False Claims Act is still a necessary protection, and its whistleblower provisions have drawn out conduct that probably otherwise would not stay face. But a society should think twice before confusing expensive failure with institutional success. Recovering billions is impressive. It would be way more honourable to stop billions from being stolen.

That is when, and where the fraud accountability crisis begins to stare us in the face. The US created a system which can punish lies only by the confluence of investigators, relators, prosecutors and years of litigation. What it has not articulated well is a system that makes fraud structurally unattractive before metastasis occurs. Deterrent effects will always be incomplete as long as illegal profits can be privatized early and prosecutions delayed late.

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There is also a democratic price to be paid. This involves theft from the Treasury but it is not just public fraud. It is theft from civic trust. Each of the big recoveries strengthens a suspicion that large institutions play two games: they make money privately from public funds, then publicly negotiate accountability. The average citizen is lectured that their taxes pay for schools, the hospital system, emergency services and national defence. They are seldom explained how much institutional capital must be later spent fundraising to reclaim those dollars from institutions that should never have been involved with them improperly in the first place.

The country has to stop cheering itself for uncovering fraud that it is perpetually unable to prevent. High numbers of recoveries are not just trophies for excellence in enforcing a law. These are warning flares from a system that remains deeply susceptible to orchestrated fraud. If fraud can continue to grow in record-breaking proportions under the black clouds of one of the most feared anti-fraud statutes ever enacted by an American Congress, then we are clearly talking about more than weak ethics around the edges. At base, it is a more profound opportunism — the culture of job placement at the Enterprise.

That is the awful reality behind those triumphal press releases. Not only is America recovering from fraud. It shows how reliant it has become on after-the-event accountability in a market where fraud still seems, too often, to be worth the risk.

Fransiscus Nanga Roka

Faculty of Law University 17 August 1945 Surabaya Indonesia

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