KU professor urges greater federal transparency, oversight of corporate whistleblower programs

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SEC, CFTC payouts to tipsters linked to concentrated groups of private lawyers

TOPEKA — A two-year inquiry into federal whistleblower programs created to thwart corporate fraud led a University of Kansas law professor to conclude two prominent initiatives aimed at identifying misconduct were undermined by cronyism and secrecy.

Alexander Platt, an associate professor specializing in securities regulation and corporate governance, said lack of transparency existed in programs at the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission compensating business insiders offering evidence of malfeasance.

A concentrated group of private attorneys representing a big chunk of SEC and CFTC whistleblowers earned hundreds of millions of dollars while avoiding accountability beneficial to the public and policymakers, he said.

Platt said the SEC and CFTC were obligated to preserve anonymity of whistleblowers, many of whom disclosed secrets while remaining employed at companies accused of misdeeds.

“The problem is the agencies have invoked this justification as an excuse to also hide embarrassing or controversial information about the programs’ operations,” said Platt, who published findings through the Columbia Law School.

The SEC has been entrusted with protecting investors by enforcing U.S. securities law and taking action against wrongdoers. CFTC’s mission is to protect the public from fraud, manipulation and abusive practices in the sale of commodity and financial futures and options.

The SEC didn’t respond to requests for comment, but the commission has awarded more than $1.3 billion to 281 whistleblowers since issuing its first award in 2012. Whistleblowers may be eligible for compensation when voluntarily providing the SEC with original, timely and credible information leading to an enforcement action. Whistleblower awards range from 10% to 30% of money collected when sanctions exceeded $1 million.

A Bloomberg report in July delved into secrecy of the SEC’s whistleblower program and pointed to problems raised by Platt.

Meanwhile, CFTC chairman Rostin Behnam this spring told the U.S. House agriculture committee the commission’s enforcement division prioritized cutting-edge investigative and analytical techniques to preserve market integrity.

“A part of the enforcement program’s success is rooted in its whistleblower program,” Behnam said.

Platt said the SEC received an average of 50 tips each workday in 2021, which explained the commission’s outsourcing of the process of sifting through information.

Disclosures emerging from U.S. Freedom of Information Act requests submitted by Platt led him to conclude the SEC disproportionately favored tipsters represented by former SEC officials. About 25% of the SEC’s total whistleblower awards went to clients of attorneys who previously worked for the SEC, he said.

In terms of the SEC, Platt said, a single law firm accounted for one-fifth of all money paid out under the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act’s whistleblower bounty program created in 2010 following disclosures of pyramid scheme fraudster Bernie Madoff’s deceptive and predatory financial practices.

Platt said CFTC awarded nearly two-thirds of cash distributed to corporate tipsters were represented by a single law firm.

“Private lawyers have likely extracted hundreds of millions of dollars in fees and expenses from these programs,” he said. “Unlike traditional plaintiffs’ side securities attorneys and attorneys who represent clients seeking government payments in many other contexts, private whistleblower lawyers operate free from virtually all public accountability, transparency or regulation.”

Platt said more congressional oversight and public transparency of the whistleblower programs, including work of private attorneys, would improve the government’s ability to operate programs in the public’s interest.

“Ten years in, I think it’s time to tighten the reins a bit. These are good programs that could be, and should be, better,” Platt said.

Kansas Reflector is part of States Newsroom, a network of news bureaus supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Kansas Reflector maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Sherman Smith for questions: info@kansasreflector.com. Follow Kansas Reflector on Facebook and Twitter.

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