ppp loan fraud & whistleblower defense lawyers
Thanks for visiting Federal Lawyers – a second-generation criminal defense firm managed by our lead attorney, with over 50 years of combined experience defending federal fraud prosecutions and whistleblower retaliation claims nationwide. If you’re facing PPP fraud charges that originated from whistleblower complaints, or if you’re being investigated after someone inside your organization reported alleged fraud to federal authorities, you’re dealing with cases that federal prosecutors treat as particularly credible because they involve insider information. The Department of Justice and SBA Office of Inspector General have paid millions in whistleblower rewards to individuals who reported PPP fraud under the False Claims Act, creating financial incentives for employees, business partners, accountants, and even family members to report alleged misconduct – and once whistleblower complaints are filed, federal prosecutors investigate aggressively because the complaints provide detailed roadmaps to alleged fraud schemes including documentation that would otherwise require months of investigation to uncover.
How Whistleblower Complaints Drive PPP Prosecutions
The False Claims Act allows private citizens to file qui tam lawsuits on behalf of the government, alleging that individuals or businesses defrauded federal programs. Whistleblowers who file these suits can receive 15-30% of any recovery the government obtains, creating enormous financial incentives to report alleged fraud. In PPP cases, whistleblowers have included: former employees who claim you inflated payroll figures or employee counts, business partners who allege you misused loan proceeds, accountants who prepared your applications and later claimed you provided false information, even estranged family members who claim you obtained loans fraudulently.
Once a qui tam complaint is filed, it’s sealed while the Department of Justice investigates the allegations. The government has 60 days to decide whether to intervene – take over the case and prosecute it – but routinely seeks extensions that can last 18-24 months. During this sealed period, you typically don’t know you’re under investigation. Federal prosecutors and investigators use the whistleblower’s information and documentation to build cases: subpoenaing bank records, pulling tax returns, interviewing witnesses, analyzing financial transactions. By the time you learn about the investigation, prosecutors often have comprehensive evidence gathered based on the whistleblower’s detailed allegations.
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(212) 300-5196Challenges in Whistleblower-Initiated Cases
Cases that originate from whistleblower complaints present unique defense challenges. The whistleblower typically has insider knowledge about your business operations, access to internal documents, and detailed information about how loan applications were prepared. This gives prosecutors a head start that they wouldn’t have in cases initiated through data analysis or random audits. Whistleblowers can provide: copies of internal emails discussing loan applications, financial records showing actual payroll versus figures reported on applications, testimony about conversations where you allegedly discussed misusing funds, documentation of expenditures prosecutors claim were personal rather than business-related.
What makes these cases even more difficult is that whistleblowers are protected from retaliation under the False Claims Act. If you fire an employee or take adverse action against a business partner who you suspect reported you to federal authorities, that person can sue you for retaliation – and if they win, they’re entitled to reinstatement, double back pay, and attorney’s fees. This means you often can’t address the source of the allegations without creating additional legal exposure.
Todd Spodek
Lead Attorney & Founder
Featured on Netflix's "Inventing Anna," Todd Spodek brings decades of high-stakes criminal defense experience. His aggressive approach has secured dismissals and acquittals in cases others deemed unwinnable.

Your former bookkeeper filed a whistleblower complaint with the SBA Inspector General alleging that your company inflated payroll figures on its PPP loan application. Federal agents have now subpoenaed your bank records, and you just learned a grand jury is investigating whether you committed wire fraud and made false statements to a federally insured institution.
Can I be charged with PPP fraud based solely on my ex-employee's whistleblower complaint, and what kind of penalties am I looking at?
A whistleblower complaint alone won't sustain charges, but it can trigger a full federal investigation that uncovers independent evidence. PPP loan fraud is typically prosecuted under 18 U.S.C. § 1343 (wire fraud) carrying up to 20 years per count, and 18 U.S.C. § 1014 (false statements to a financial institution) carrying up to 30 years. The government must prove you knowingly made material misrepresentations on your PPP application, so discrepancies between reported and actual payroll records will be central to their case. An experienced defense attorney can challenge the whistleblower's credibility, contest the materiality of alleged misstatements, and negotiate with prosecutors before any indictment is handed down.
This is general information only. Contact us for advice specific to your situation.
Defending Against Whistleblower-Based Charges
The most effective defense strategy challenges the whistleblower’s credibility and motivations. We investigate the whistleblower’s background thoroughly: criminal history, prior employment terminations, financial problems that would create incentive to fabricate allegations for reward money, personal conflicts with you that suggest retaliation motives. We gather evidence showing the whistleblower had limited access to information they’re claiming to know, that they misunderstood business operations, that their allegations are based on assumptions rather than direct knowledge.
