Education Fraud
Education Fraud Attorney- Tim McInnis
The Princeton Review Admits NYC After-School Tutoring Education Fraud Charges, Falsifying Attendance, According to Manhattan-Based Qui Tam Whistleblower Attorney Timothy J. McInnis, Esq.
Massachusetts-based Education Holdings 1, Inc., formerly known as The Princeton Review, Inc., has agreed to pay $200,000 to the Government within five days and, depending upon possible corporate changes or sale, could pay up to $9.8 million more. It earlier had sold the name and brand of “The Princeton Review, Inc.” to an unaffiliated party.
Under the False Claims Act, Qui Tam actions allow private citizens with knowledge of fraud to help the Government recover ill-gotten gains and additional civil penalties. The FCA allows the Government to collect up to three times the amount it was defrauded, in addition to civil penalties from $5,500 to $11,000 per false claim.In successful Qui Tam whistleblower cases in which the Government intervenes, whistleblowers are typically entitled to receive awards representing 15-to-25 percent of Qui Tam recoveries. However, in cases where allegations are not resolved and taken to trial, the relator’s share increases to 25-to-30 percent. In this case the relator received 20 percent, McInnis explained.McInnis is a former federal prosecutor with offices in New York City who concentrates his practice on federal and state FCAs and its Qui Tam whistleblower provisions.The United States is represented in the Princeton Review case by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York, Preet Bharara, U.S. Attorney, and Assistant U.S. Attorney Christopher B. Harwood, of the U.S. Attorney’s Civil Frauds Unit. The relators’ allegations were investigated by Special Agents of the Office of the Inspector General for the U.S. Department of Education.This case was assigned to United States District Court Judge Barbara S. Jones, in the Southern District of New York, who approved the settlement.
Docket Number, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York,: Civil Action No. 09- Civ. 6876 (BSJ).