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October 2, 2018 8:24AM

Feds: We’re Not Going To Stand For Asbestos‐​Bankruptcy Fraud

By Walter Olson

SHARE

For well over a decade it’s been apparent that the distinctive arrangements by which asbestos plaintiff’s lawyers acquire control of the bankrupt remains of defendant corporations they’ve sued, and then exercise control over those firms’ claims, disbursements, and general management, is fraught with self‐​dealing and sometimes fraud, ranging from the charging of unnaturally high fees to the concealment of double‐ and triple‐​dipping by claimants. Business interests have pursued a campaign in the states and Congress to require more transparency and better judicial oversight of asbestos bankruptcy trusts. Now they may have a powerful ally indeed in the federal government, which has weighed in with an early statement of interest in one such bankruptcy to insist on better controls against fraud and abuse. Its standing for such an intervention arises in part from its role as Medicare and Medicaid payor (entitled by law to recoup some health‐​related outlays) rather than merely from any interest it might have in heading off fraud generally. Daniel Fisher at Forbes:

In the Trump administration, at least, the government will no longer look the other way as asbestos lawyers negotiate lenient terms that make it easy for their current clients to get money at the expense of future claimants and federal entitlement programs….


The government’s unusually blunt statement of interest in the Kaiser Gypsum bankruptcy, long before any plan of reorganization has been approved, warns lawyers against including terms that make it hard to ferret out fraud and abuse, including confidentiality requirements that make it impossible to determine how much claimants have been paid and the basis for their claims….


The Justice Department also warned it will be looking for excessive fees and may not allow claimants to deduct those fees from reimbursement due the government for Medicare and Medicaid expenses.

[cross‐​posted, slightly adapted, from Overlawyered]

Related Tags
Constitutional Law, Robert A. Levy Center for Constitutional Studies

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