Back in September, Liz blogged about the SEC’s adoption of amendments to the SEC’s whistleblower awards program, which had been in the works for a while. With a new SEC, whistleblower awards continue rolling along. Last week the SEC issued two press releases relating to awards that high-lighted certain aspects of the amendments.
First, a SEC press release announced an award of more than $9 million. What’s unique about this award is that the SEC’s press release says it marks the first SEC whistleblower award based on a non-prosecution agreement or deferred prosecution agreement since the amendments to the SEC’s whistleblower program became effective last December. Some may recall the amendments to the SEC whistleblower rules included a change allowing awards based on deferred prosecution agreements and non-prosecution agreements entered into by the DOJ. The SEC’s press release doesn’t say how much the whistleblower received from the original award, but another $9 million coming from the related DOJ action is a nice payday. Here’s an excerpt:
The whistleblower provided significant information about an ongoing fraud to the SEC that enabled a large amount of money to be returned to investors harmed by the fraud. The SEC in turn provided that information to the DOJ. The whistleblower also provided significant assistance by traveling at the whistleblower’s own expense to be interviewed by DOJ.
Also last week, the SEC announced two additional whistleblower awards totaling more than $1.7 million. Although the award amounts were smaller for these awards, the SEC highlighted in its press release that the whistleblowers provided Forms TCR to the Commission within 30 days of their first learning of the Form TCR filing requirement under the agency’s new whistleblower rules. Not sure we’ve seen the agency draw attention to Form TCR previously, here’s an excerpt about that:
‘As these awards show, deserving whistleblowers may receive an award if they comply with the Form TCR filing requirements within 30 days of first obtaining actual or constructive notice of the filing requirement or 30 days from the date the whistleblower hires a lawyer to represent them in connection with the whistleblower’s previous submission of information to the Commission, whichever occurs first, and they otherwise meet the eligibility requirements,’ said Jane Norberg, Chief of the SEC’s Office of the Whistleblower. ‘These whistleblowers earned their awards by providing high quality information that supported a pair of successful Commission enforcement actions.’
-Lynn Jokela, TheCorporateCounsel.net March 2, 2021