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In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 D EBRA L EVESKI, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. ITT E DUCATIONAL S ERVICES, INCORPORATED , Defendant-Appellee, and A PPEALS OF: M OTLEY R ICE LLP, P LEWS SHADLEY R ACHER & B RAUN LLP, T HE L AW O FFICES OF T IMOTHY J. M ATUSHESKI and T IMOTHY J. M ATUSHESKI. Appeals from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Indiana, Indianapolis Division. No. 1:07-cv-00867-TWP-MJDāTanya Walton Pratt, Judge. A RGUED JANUARY 17, 2013āD ECIDED JULY 8, 2013 2 Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 Before M ANION and T INDER, Circuit Judges, and L EE, District Judge. Ā T INDER, Circuit Judge. Debra Leveski brings this law- suit against ITT Educational Services, Inc. on behalf of the United States, pursuant to the qui tam provision of the False Claims Act (FCA), 31 U.S.C. § 3730(b). ITT is a for- profit institution with over 140 locations across the United States that offers post-secondary educational training, including associateās, bachelorās, and masterās degrees. Leveski, who worked at the ITT campus in Troy, Michigan, for more than a decade, alleges that ITT knowingly submitted false claims to the Department of Education in order to receive funding from federal student financial assistance programs. Four years after Leveski filed this lawsuit, the district court dismissed it for want of jurisdiction, finding that Leveskiās allegations had already been publicly disclosed and that Leveski was not the original source of her al- legations. In addition, the district court granted sanc- tions in the amount of $394,998.33 against all three law firms representing Leveski and against one of Leveskiās attorneys individually. Accusing Leveskiās attorneys of āpluck[ing] a plaintiff out of thin air and tr[ying] to manufacture a lucrative case,ā the district court found Leveskiās allegations wholly āfrivolous.ā Contrary to the district court, we believe that Leveskiās allegations merit further development, and more impor- Ā The Honorable John Z. Lee of the Northern District of Illinois, sitting by designation. Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 3 tantly, we believe they are sufficiently distinct from prior public disclosures to give the federal district court jurisdiction over Leveskiās lawsuit. Consequently, we reverse both the dismissal and the sanctions, and we remand the case back to the district court for further proceedings. I Leveskiās FCA allegations turn on the restrictions placed on schools that receive funding from federal student financial assistance programs by the Higher Education Act (HEA), 20 U.S.C. § 1001 et seq. Therefore, before turning to the specifics of Leveskiās allegations, we first review the specifics of the relevant HEA restric- tions. The HEA was originally passed in 1965 ā[t]o strengthen the educational resources of our colleges and universities and to provide financial assistance for students in postsecondary and higher education.ā Pub. L. No. 89-329, 79 Stat. 1219. At issue in this case is Title IV of the HEA, āGrants to Students in Attendance at In- stitutions of Higher Education,ā codified at 20 U.S.C. § 1070 et seq. In passing Title IV, Congress had the best of intentions: to provide, through institutions of higher educa- tion, educational opportunity grants to assist in making available the benefits of higher education to qualified high school graduates of exceptional financial need, who for lack of financial means of their own or of their families would be unable to obtain such benefits without such aid. 4 Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 Pub. L. No. 89-329, 79 Stat. 1219, § 401(a). Today, Title IV governs the administration of over $150 billion in annual federal financial assistance awards for higher education. U.S. Dept. of Educ., Federal Student Aid: About Us, http://studentaid.ed.gov/about (last visited July 1, 2013). Notwithstanding Congressās good intentions in passing Title IV, the colossal sums of money now administered under Title IV have led to abuses. Specifically, Congress became concerned in 1992 that ārecruiters [of students for institutions of higher education] paid by the head are tempted to sign up poorly qualified students who will derive little benefit . . . and may be unable or unwilling to repay federal guaranteed loans.ā United States ex rel. Main v. Oakland City Univ., 426 F.3d 914, 916 (7th Cir. 2005). As a result, Congress amended Title IV to prohibit institutions receiving federal financial assis- tance funding from āprovid[ing] any commission, bonus, or other incentive payment based directly or indirectly on success in securing enrollments or financial aid to any persons or entities engaged in any student recruiting or admission activities or in making decisions regarding the award of student financial assistance.ā 20 U.S.C. § 1094(a)(20). In 2002, the Department of Education issued regula- tions that softened the blow of the 1992 amendments for institutions of higher education by declaring certain types of activities and compensation schemes compliant with 20 U.S.C. § 1094(a)(20). Known as āsafe harbors,ā these twelve provisions allowed, among other things, Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 5 institutions receiving federal financial assistance award money to pay student recruiters and financial aid officers āfixed compensation, . . . as long as that compensa- tion is not adjusted up or down more than twice during any twelve month period, and any adjustment is not based solely on the number of students recruited, ad- mitted, enrolled, or awarded financial aid.ā 34 C.F.R. § 668.14(b)(22)(ii)(A) (2002). These safe harbors remained in effect for almost a decade, until the Department of Education became concerned that they had failed to curtail abusive recruiting practices. See, e.g., Depart- ment of Education, Program Integrity Issues: Incentive Com- pensation, 46-52, http://www2.ed.gov/policy/highered/ reg/hearulemaking/2009/integrity-session3-issues.pdf (last visited July 1, 2013) (detailing common abuses and rec- ommending that āthe elimination of all of the regula- tory āsafe harborsā would best serve to effectuate con- gressional intentā). Thus, the Department of Education eliminated the safe harbor provisions from its regula- tions in 2011, and its current regulations now flatly pro- hibit institutions receiving federal award money from adjusting the salaries of student recruiters and financial aid officers ābased in any part, directly or indirectly, upon success in securing enrollments or the award of financial aid.ā 34 C.F.R. § 668.14(b)(22)(ii)(A) (2013). Institutions of higher education must continually certify their compliance with the current Department of Educa- tion regulations through program participation agree- ments (PPAs) in order to receive federal financial assis- tance award money. 20 U.S.C. § 1094(a). With this brief history of HEA regulations in mind, we turn back to the allegations in the case at hand. 6 Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 Leveskiās decade-long employment with ITT began on January 8, 1996, meaning that the 2002 safe harbor provi- sions were in effect during the latter half of her employ- ment. ITT initially hired Leveski as an Inside Recruit- ment Representative (RR) for the Troy campus. (Dkt. 75, 2.) As an Inside RR, Leveski was responsible for ācontact[ing] consumers via telephone through leads provided . . . by ITTās directors of recruitment at the Troy campus, . . . persuad[ing] them to visit the Troy campus[, and] . . . persuad[ing] them to enroll and start classes at ITT.ā (Dkt. 49-1, 1-2.) (Inside RRs did their recruiting inside the ITT campus. Outside RRs, in contrast, visited high schools to recruit students.) (Dkt. 141-6, 101.) From the beginning of Leveskiās employment as an Inside RR, ITT made the importance of her ānumbersā very clear. (Dkt. 75, 11.) According to Leveski, both Inside and Outside RRs were directed to increase āapplications, enrollments, and startsā at every group meeting. (Dkt. 75, 10.) A prospective student who had filled out an ITT application and paid a $100 fee (before ITT waived the fee in 2001) was counted as an āapplicationā for Leveski. A prospective student who had additionally passed an entrance exam and completed the financial aid pro- cessābasically, anyone who had ādone everything but sat in classāācounted as an āenrollmentā for Leveski. A prospective student who actually attended a class counted as a āstartā for Leveski. (Dkt. 141-6, 53-54.) By all appearances, these applications, enrollments, and starts had real ramifications for Leveski and the other RRs; RRs were constantly reminded by the Troy campus direc- tor āthat if they wanted an increase in pay, they must Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 7 increase applications, enrollments, and starts.ā (Dkt. 75, 10.) To further incentivize them, ITT published each RRās sales goals in a quarterly memorandum distributed throughout the corporate district (Dkt. 75, 10.) Although ITTās sole focus appeared to be on ānumbers,ā it claimed to evaluate employees like Leveski on a multi- tude of criteria, including professional development, the attrition rate of enrolled students, ābeing a team player,ā appearance, and attitude. (Dkt. 141-6, 106-07.) But according to Leveski, these other criteriaāwhich were specifically listed on the employeeās annual evaluation formādid not matter to ITT. Over time, Leveski came to realize that her success in attaining applications, en- rollments, and starts directly correlated with her alleged success in ITTās other job evaluation criteria. In other words, when Leveski had a good numbers year, she also had a good team player, appearance, and attitude year. When Leveski had a bad numbers year, she had similarly bad scores all around. Of course, correlation does not prove causation, and it is certainly plausible that Leveski had good years and bad years all around. But Leveski offers evidence sug- gesting that the direct correlation between her ānumbersā evaluation and her other job criteria evaluations was no coincidence. Rather, Leveski suggests that the other job criteria listed on the employee evaluations were simply a sham to cover up the only thing that truly mat- tered to ITT: the number of applications, enrollments, and starts. In an affidavit, Leveski described the many incidents that led her to believe that the other job criteria were a sham: 8 Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 ITT corporate employees and Troy campus direc- tors continually reminded sales representatives to meet sales targets to obtain raises and stay em- ployed, but never discussed tactics to meet other non-sales targets that were included in our yearly review as sales representatives such as assisting the school in meeting its attrition budget, being a team player, appearance and attitude. (Dkt. 49-1, 12.) During the review process as a sales representa- tive, I questioned Steve Sorensen, Patricia Hyman and Bob Martin regarding how my success in helping ITT Troy Campus to obtain the attrition rate set by ITT corporate was evaluated during the review. I also asked them how ITT defined attrition rate and calculated it. I was never given a clear explanation of what attrition rate meant or how it was calculated, nor how my rating for appearance, attitude, and team player was evalu- ated. In fact, to my knowledge, ITT did not keep track of any non-recruitment criteria during each academic quarter. (Dkt. 49-1, 12-13.) [D]uring my reviews . . . when I did not signifi- cantly exceed my sales targetsāthe non-recruit- ment criteria on my reviews dropped from the top performance level of āVery Exceptional Re- sultsā to āResults at Standard.ā I asked my super- visor who conducted the review why my non- sales criteria decreased in unison with my sales Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 9 criteria. I was reassured that the score I received in my reviewāthe results of which determine the percentage of my pay raiseāwere solely based upon my sales targets. (Dkt. 49-1, 13.) Similarly, when asked at her deposition how she came to believe that ITT only considered the number of applications, enrollments, and starts in evaluating RRs, Leveski provided the following examples: My first year there, 1996, I received a 1 [overall evaluation score, which was the highest possible score]. I did an exceptional job; I got a 1 in my appearance. I wore the same suits the first day I started to work at ITT and the last day I left ITT. I didnāt get a 1 again in appearance. It doesnāt make any sense. And when I questioned managers about this, [they answered,] because, Debbie, they donāt care. All they want you to do is make your numbers. They want you to start students. It is a number game. (Dkt. 141-6, 88.) You received your raises based on the students that started. It didnāt matter how you dressed, it didnāt matter what college courses you took. You didnāt end up getting a raise because you got a masterās degree in education. You didnāt get a 1 for doing that. I didnāt know what the criteria was [sic]. . . . Look at [my professional develop- ment evaluation.] What more did I have to do to get a 1 in that category? Go for a Ph.D.? I mean, we . . . had representatives at that time taking 10 Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 religious classes, because ITT didnāt define what professional development was. So Joie Bowman [another ITT employee] went and took something at her church. (Dkt. 141-6, 87.) Q. Who told you you get paid based on your starts? A. [ITT managers] Patricia Hyman, Dave McDaniel, Steve Sorensen, Bob Martin, [and] representatives. If you want me to name them, I will name them. Q. Yes, what representatives also told you that? A. Joie Bowman, Dave McKinnon . . . I canāt think of any others. Q. What specifically did Ms. Hyman tell you? A. You know itās a numbers game; youāre going to get paid on the number of students you start. (Dkt. 141-6, 73-74.) Despite her concerns over how she was being evaluated, for the most part, the evaluations turned out well for Leveski. For four out of the six years that she was em- ployed as an RR, Leveski met or exceeded her starts goal number, and for five out the six years she received at least the median rating for overall performance. Moreover, Leveski received a salary increase after every evaluation (although this increase was much higher in years that she exceeded her numbers goal). (Dkt. 49-1, 14- Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 11 15.) Consequently, Leveski continued to work for ITT as an Inside RR until a better opportunity arose. That opportunity came in 2002, when ITT offered Leveski the chance to move from the hourly position of Inside RR to the salaried position of Financial Aid Administrator (FAA). (Dkt. 141-6, 50.) Leveski began her new FAA job on April 15, 2002, and quickly discovered it was a new sort of ānumbers game.ā (Dkt. 49-1, 15.) Instead of worrying about the numbers of applications, enrollments, and starts, Leveski now had to worry about the numbers of students she successfully āpackaged.ā Once a student had completed ITTās application process and had passed the entrance exam, the student came to an FAA. There, the FAA āpackagedā the studentācollecting personal and demographic information on the student, inquiring about personal and family income, and helping the student complete the necessary forms to receive financial aid. (Dkt. 141-6, 39-40.) According to Leveski, the number of students success- fully āpackagedā directly impacted an FAAās pay. Despite the fact that FAAs were paid a salary, instead of being paid by the hour, Leveski alleges that an FAAās pack- aging numbers determined whether the FAA received a raise in her salary. (Dkt. 49-1, 17.) Specifically, Leveski came to believe over time that ITT only cared about how much federal financial assistance award money she could secure for the school, and how quickly she could do it. As with her claims about ITTās compensation of RRs, Leveski did not arrive at this conclusion through complete guesswork. Rather, she details specific 12 Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 conversations that led her to reach this conclusion in both her affidavit and her deposition testimony, including: Liz Franck, Kim Zwierzchowski, Stephen Goddard, Richard Zeeman, and Matt Diemling [Leveskiās supervisors as an FAA] . . . stressed to all financial aid administrators at frequent meet- ings that goals of securing financial aid for ITT students must be met to get a raise. (Dkt. 49, 1, 18-19.) Q. What did Mr. Diemling [the director of finan- cial aid at the Troy campus] tell you? A. That I would receive an increase in wages by securing federal funding for students by getting them repacked or packaged. (Dkt. 141-6, 346.) Leveski also notes in her affidavit that her yearly goals were always defined in terms of her ability to secure the most federal award money āby the first available date permitted by Federal law.ā (Dkt. 49-1, 17.) Leveskiās success in meeting these yearly goals directly determined how much of a raise she would receive the following year. (Dkt. 49-1, 17-18.) In sum, it did not take Leveski long in her new position as an FAA to realize that ITT was ālooking for the money, and [it] want[ed] the money to come in on the first day itās avail- able.ā (Dkt. 141-6, 192-93.) With the constant emphasis on numbers throughout the FAA office, Leveski realized, once again, that the only things that mattered to ITT were the numbers. (Dkt. 141-6, 193.) Although the numbers were important for both RRs and FAAs, according to Leveski, the pressure to meet Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 13 number goals led to some particularly unsavory behavior among the FAAs. The pressure to secure as much federal award money for ITT as quickly as possible led many managers and FAAs to underreport studentsā incomes, to overlook discrepancies in the studentsā ap- plications, and even to falsify financial aid documents. Again, Leveski provided specific examples of this behavior in her deposition: Q. Ms. Leveski, were you ever instructed by a manager at ITT to falsify financial aid forms? A. Yes. Q. Who instructed you to falsify financial aid forms? A. Richard Zeeman. ... Q. What did Mr. Zeeman instruct you to do in 2005 that you thought was improper? A. He asked the financial aid advisors and myself to falsify documents so that we could get the students packaged. ... Q. . . . Why do you contend Mr. Zeeman instructed you to falsify financial aid documents? A. Because he called three of us in his office behind closed doors and asked us to falsify documents so that we could get our students packaged. (Dkt. 141-6, 393-94.) 14 Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 Q. Okay. You just testified that youāre aware of other FAAs falsifying documents at ITT; is that right? . . . Why do you contend that they falsified documents, they being the unnamed FAAs? A. When you would meet with an individual, and there were many individuals out there that work under the table. They donāt put down the income on the FAFSA [Free Application for Federal Stu- dent Aid]. And . . . I would say to them, How much money did you make? Oh, I made $10,000, but it was all under the table. I made them write it on the FAFSA. Other FAAs just looked the other way. They didnāt have it recorded. . . . At that point I would say, Okay, . . . you were re- quired by law to file federal income tax. Well, the person would get very upset sometimes. Iād end up calling my manager in, and . . . in some instances the manager would either come back and say to me, and possibly the Director of Fi- nance, that the person made a mistake. He didnāt mean he had made $10,000. (Dkt. 141-6, 151-52.) Despite the less-than-honest atmo- sphere that prevailed throughout the financial aid office, Leveski continued to work there for four more years. In 2005, she filed a sexual harassment lawsuit against ITT, which settled on November 3, 2006. (Dkt. 49-1, 1; Dkt. 141-6, 247.) As part of the settlement agreement, Leveski agreed to end her employment with ITT, and the parties appeared to part company forever. Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 15 But an express mail letter brought the parties back into conflict only six months later. On May 17, 2007, Leveski received a letter from private investigator Davy Keith, informing Leveski that he worked for a Mississippi attorney who would like to speak to her. (Dkt. 141-6, 239.) Leveski was not sure why a Mississippi attorney would want to speak to someone in Michigan; nonetheless, Leveski called Keithās phone number and left a message on his answering machine. Later that day, Leveski received a phone call directly from the Mississippi attorney, who turned out to be Timothy J. Matusheski (one of the original attorneys who filed the present lawsuit). Matusheski, it seems, had hired Keith to find former ITT employees who had previously filed lawsuits against the company. Apparently assuming that they would be predisposed to think ill of their former employer, Matusheski contacted these former employees, with the hope of finding one who had enough damaging information against the school to bring an FCA lawsuit. (Dkt. 141-6, 240-43.) Before talking to Matusheski, Leveski admittedly had never considered filing an FCA suit against ITT. (Dkt. 141- 6, 244.) However, after learning about a potential FCA claim from Matusheski, Leveski began conducting some independent research, which included āt[aking] a closer look at my own reviews . . . [and] doing searches on the Internet in reference to Title IV funding and the rules and regulations.ā (Dkt. 141-6, 294.) During her research, she also reviewed previous qui tam actions against ITT, including United States ex rel. Graves v. ITT Educ. Servs., Inc., 284 F. Supp. 2d 487 (S.D. Tex. 2003) and U.S. ex rel. 16 Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 Olson v. ITT Educ. Servs., Inc., No. 1:04-CV-0647-JDT-WTL, 2006 WL 64597 (S.D. Ind. Oct. 20, 2005). Leveski did not limit her research to ITT; in fact, Leveski also researched Matusheskiāwho had been completely un- known to her before the private investigatorās let- terālooking up information about him on the internet as well as contacting her previous attorney from the sexual harassment suit. (Dkt. 141-6, 247.) After all this research, Leveski decided that she wanted to bring a qui tam action against ITT, and Matusheski was the at- torney to file it. Thus, Matusheski (along with another attorney who has subsequently withdrawn) filed this case under seal in the Southern District of Indiana (the location of ITTās corporate headquarters) on July 3, 2007, and the long procedural history of this case began. The Department of Justice declined to intervene in Leveskiās case on No- vember 13, 2008, and the court unsealed Leveskiās case shortly thereafter. (Dkt. 23, 1.) On January 30, 2009, ITT filed its first motion to dismiss Leveskiās case pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 9(b), 12(b)(1), and 12(b)(6), claiming that (1) the ā āfraudulent schemeā alleged by Leveski in this matter is identicalā to the one alleged in Graves, 284 F. Supp. 2d at 490-93, so 31 U.S.C. § 3730(b)(5) barred subject-matter jurisdiction over Leveskiās case in federal court, (2) Leveskiās case was barred by a release she signed after settling her sexual harassment suit with ITT, (3) Leveski had failed to plead her allegations of fraud with sufficient particularity, as required by Fed. R. Civ. P. 9(b), and (4) Leveski had made her allegations in a conclusory manner, in violation of Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6). Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 17 (Dkt. 40.) On September 23, 2009, Judge William T. Law- rence, the original district court judge assigned to Leveskiās case, dismissed it under Fed. R. Civ. P. 9(b), finding that Leveski had āall but admit[ted] that she has not plead her allegations with sufficient particular- ity,ā but gave Leveski the option to file an amended complaint within fifteen days. In issuing this order, the judge explicitly rejected both ITTās jurisdictional argu- ment and its release argument. The judge rejected the release argument because Leveski had only released ITT from claims ābased uponā and ārelate[d] to her employment,ā but Leveskiās claims in the present FCA suit were āderivative in nature, based on an obligation owed to the Government.ā (Dkt. 74, 4.) With respect to the jurisdictional argument, the judge noted that 31 U.S.C. § 3730(b)(5) only barred subject-matter jurisdic- tion if Leveskiās case could be fairly characterized as a ārelated action based on the facts underlyingā Graves. Since Leveski alleged many facts in her complaint that occurred after the Graves litigation had been resolved, the judge did not see how Leveskiās case could be ābased onā Graves. Thus, the judge concluded, nothing stood in the way of federal subject-matter jurisdiction over Leveskiās case were she to re-file an amended com- plaint alleged with sufficient particularity. (Dkt. 74, 3-4.) Leveski took up the district judgeās offer to amend her complaint, and she filed this amended complaint on October 8, 2009. (Dkt. 75.) ITT immediately filed a second motion to dismiss pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6) and 9(b), this time alleging that (1) Leveski had again failed to plead her fraud allegations with sufficient particularity, (2) Leveski had again failed to 18 Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 state a claim, (3) Leveskiās suit was barred by a settle- ment agreement between ITT and the Department of Education, and (4) at least some of Leveskiās claims were barred by the FCAās six-year statute of limita- tions. (Dkt. 77.) Leveskiās case fared much better on the disposition of ITTās second motion to dismiss than it had on the first, with one exception. On May 12, 2010, Judge Lawrence agreed with ITT that the FCAās six- year statute of limitations applied to Leveskiās case, thus barring all of Leveskiās claims occurring before July 3, 2001 (since Leveski originally filed this action on July 3, 2007). The statute of limitations issue was ITTās only victory, however, as Judge Lawrence rejected the rest of ITTās arguments. After the disposition of ITTās second motion to dismiss, Leveskiās case proceeded in the district court covering only the time period from July 3, 2001 to November 3, 2006 instead of the original January 8, 1996 to November 3, 2007 period, and it contin- ues covering this abbreviated time period today since Leveski did not appeal Judge Lawrenceās order. Yet practically speaking, this abbreviation does not matter much to Leveskiās case since the new time periodāJuly 3, 2001 to November 3, 2006āstill covers Leveskiās em- ployment both as an RR and as an FAA. (Dkt. 92.) By the time that Judge Lawrence issued an order on ITTās second motion to dismiss, he had already been dealing with Leveskiās case for close to three years. None- theless, it appears that because of new judicial appoint- ments to the district court, case assignments were shuffled, and Leveskiās case was reassigned from Judge Lawrenceās docket to Judge Tanya Walton Prattās Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 19 docket on June 25, 2010. (Dkt. 110.) Perhaps believing that it would have better luck with a new judge, ITT filed a third motion to dismiss Leveskiās case on March 16, 2011. (Dkt. 141.) In this third motion, filed pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(1), ITT hearkened back to an argu- ment from its first motion to dismiss, claiming once again that the federal court lacked subject-matter juris- diction over Leveskiās case. Instead of basing its jurisdic- tional argument on 31 U.S.C. § 3730(b)(5), however, ITT now based its jurisdictional argument on the ap- plicable version of 31 U.S.C. § 3730(e)(4): (A) No court shall have jurisdiction over an action under this section based upon the public disclosure of allegations or transactions in a criminal, civil, or administrative hearing, in a congressional, administrative, or Government Accounting Office report, hearing, audit, or investi- gation, or from the news media, unless the action is brought by the Attorney General or the person bringing the action is an original source of the information. (B) For purposes of this paragraph, āoriginal sourceā means an individual who has direct and independent knowledge of the information on which the allegations are based and has volun- tarily provided the information to the Govern- ment before filing an action under this section which is based on the information. Based on this statute, ITT argued that Leveskiās case was ābased upon publicly disclosed allegations,ā and 20 Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 Leveski was ānot the original source of these allegations.ā (Dkt. 141, 1.) Although based on a different subsection of § 3730, ITTās new jurisdictional argument before Judge Pratt was similar to its earlier jurisdictional argu- ment before Judge Lawrence. Still, ITT now claimed to have stronger evidence that the federal court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction over Leveskiās case. (Dkt. 141- 1, 6-7.) This stronger evidence came in the form of Leveskiās deposition testimony from only two weeks prior, whichāaccording to ITTāāfirmly establish[ed that] Leveski lacks direct knowledge of the fundamental premise of her suit . . . and what minimal knowledge she does have was not acquired independently, but through Internet research of prior cases brought against ITT and conversations with the lawyer who recruited her, Matusheski.ā (Dkt. 141-1, 15.) Judge Pratt found ITTās jurisdictional arguments more convincing than her predecessor had found them. On August 8, 2011, Judge Pratt dismissed Leveskiās case for lack of jurisdiction under 31 U.S.C. § 3730(e)(4), finding that Leveskiās allegations had already been publicly disclosed in Graves and that Leveski was not the original source of these allegations. Judge Pratt noted that, like Leveski, the Graves relators had also been employed by ITT as RRs, and they had also āalleged that ITT violated the HEA by compensating its admissions and recruit- ment representatives based directly on the number of their enrolled students.ā (Dkt. 241, 5-6.) Although Leveski had attempted to distinguish her case from Graves, the judge did not find her attempts persuasive. The judge acknowledged that Leveskiās allegations Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 21 against ITT spanned a later time period than the Graves allegations. The judge also recognized that Leveski made additional allegations not present in the Graves complaintāmost notably, the allegation that ITT compen- sated both FAAs and RRs in a manner that violated the HEA. (In contrast, the Graves relators had alleged that ITT only compensated RRs in a manner that violated the HEA.) But citing Glaser v. Wound Care Consultants, Inc., 570 F.3d 907, 920-21 (7th Cir. 2011), for the proposition that āthough a complaint may add a few allegations not covered by the previous disclosure, it is not enough to take this case outside the jurisdictional bar,ā the judge ultimately concluded that Leveskiās additional allegations were āinsufficient to withstand the ābased upon public disclosureā analysis.ā (Dkt. 241, 6.) Thus, Judge Pratt concluded that 31 U.S.C. § 3730(e)(4)(A) required her to dismiss Leveskiās suit for lack of subject- matter jurisdiction. (Dkt. 241.) Following this dismissal for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction, things went from bad to worse for Leveski. Leveski filed a motion to alter or amend the judgment under Fed. R. Civ. P. 59(e) on September 2, 2011, arguing that the dismissal order had ānot take[n] into considera- tion the material factual differences between this case and . . . Gravesā and had also ignored binding Seventh Circuit precedent. (Dkt. 255, 2.) A sharp denial ruling referred to Levesiās 59(e) motion as a āsecond bite at the apple.ā (Dkt. 297, 15.) The denial did note that āthe me- chanics of this scheme [alleged by Leveski] are perhaps not identical to the mechanics of the scheme alleged in Graves,ā but emphasized that āthe two cases need not be 22 Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 identicalā in order to be barred by 31 U.S.C. § 3730(e)(4)(A). (Dkt. 297, 20.) In response to Leveskiās allegation that binding Seventh Circuit precedent had not been followed, the denial ruling noted that āthe Courtās decision to grant ITTās motion to dismiss was not an anomaly. To the contrary other courts have dismissed nearly identical qui tam suits where the plaintiffās attorney [Matusheski] clearly recruited the relators to serve as makeshift and manufactured whistleblowers wielding generic and cookie-cutter complaints.ā (Dkt 297, 20.) Along those lines, the order concluded with a stern criticism of the way in which attorney Matusheski had recruited Leveski to bring her case. Noting that Matusheski had recently apologized to another federal district court for his behavior in a separate FCA case involving a different for-profit educational institution, the district judge characterized Matusheskiās continual pursuit of Leveskiās case as ābrazen.ā (Dkt 297, 20.) Leveski, according to the district judge, was āworlds apart from the type of genuine whistleblower contem- plated by the FCA,ā leading the judge to conclude that both āthe existence of nearly on-point cases reaching identical results [and] the attorney-driven nature of this lawsuitā demanded the dismissal of Leveskiās suit for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction under 31 U.S.C. § 3730(e)(4)(A). (Dkt. 297, 21.) The final blow to Leveskiās lawsuit came in the form of sanctions. ITT had sought sanctions in the district court against both Leveski and her counsel, principally contending that the qui tam suit was frivolous. Upon the dismissal of Leveskiās case for lack of subject- Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 23 matter jurisdiction, the district judge awarded sanctions against counsel only. (Note that in addition to Matusheski, Leveski had secured additional counsel by the time that the district court dismissed her case and granted sanctions. The law firm of Plews Shadley Racher & Braun had joined Matusheski in the representation of Leveski on April 30, 2009, and the law firm of Motley Rice LLP had joined both Matusheski and Plews Shadley in the representation of Leveski on June 2, 2011. Despite their differing lengths of involve- ment with Leveskiās case, all counsel were included in the sanctions order.) Nevertheless, because we now reverse the dismissal, this sanctions order will require little discussion. Leveski and her counsel filed a timely appeal of both the dismissal and the sanctions order with our court. We review Leveskiās appeal concerning the district courtās dismissal of her case for lack of subject-matter jurisdic- tion de novo. Apex Digital, Inc. v. Sears, Roebuck & Co., 572 F.3d 440, 443 (7th Cir. 2009). Furthermore, because ITT raised a factual (instead of a facial) challenge to jurisdic- tion, we are ānot bound to accept as true the allegations of the complaint which tend to establish jurisdiction.ā Grafon Corp. v. Hausermann, 602 F.2d 781, 783 (7th Cir. 1979). Instead, we may āproperly look beyond the jurisdic- tional allegations of the complaint and view whatever evidence has been submitted on the issueāāsuch as Leveskiās deposition testimony. Id.; see also Hay v. Ind. State Bd. of Tax Commārs, 312 F.3d 876, 879 (7th Cir. 2002). 24 Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 II Both Leveski and ITT agree that federal subject-matter jurisdiction over this case turns on our interpretation of 31 U.S.C. § 3730(e)(4). The version of § 3730(e)(4) appli- cable to Leveskiās lawsuit is the version that was āin force when the events underlying this suit took place.ā United States ex rel. Goldberg v. Rush Univ. Med. Ctr., 680 F.3d 933, 934 (7th Cir. 2012) (noting that the language of § 3730(e)(4) was āaltered in 2010, but that change is not retroactiveā). This version of § 3730(e)(4), which re- mained effective from October 27, 1986 until March 22, 2010āa time period that encompasses both Leveskiās employment at ITT and her subsequent filing of this lawsuitābars federal court ājurisdiction over an [FCA] action . . . based upon the public disclosure of allega- tions . . . unless . . . the person bringing the action is an original source of the information.ā Pub. L. No. 99-562, § 3, 100 Stat. 3153 (1986). Congress added this provision to the FCA in order to avoid the ārisk that unnecessary āme tooā private litigation would divert funds from the Treasury.ā Goldberg, 680 F.3d at 934. With this con- gressional purpose in mind, we have previously inter- preted the phrase ābased upon [a] public disclosureā to mean āsubstantially similar to publicly disclosed allegations,ā in accordance with virtually every other circuit that has interpreted this phrase.1 Glaser, 570 1 The current version of 31 U.S.C. § 3730(e)(4), which went into effect on March 23, 2010, expressly incorporates the āsubstan- (continued...) Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 25 F.3d at 920. Moreover, the applicable version of § 3730(e)(4)(B) defines the term āoriginal sourceā to mean āan individual who has direct and independent knowledge of the information on which the allegations are based and has voluntarily provided the information to the Government before filing an [FCA] action.ā Applying the definitions of these terms to the instant case, we must first determine whether Leveskiās allega- tions are āsubstantially similar to publicly disclosed allegations.ā 570 F.3d at 920. If we decide that Leveskiās allegations are not substantially similar, then our juris- dictional inquiry ends, and Leveski can proceed to litigate her case on the merits in the federal district court. On the other hand, if we decide that Leveskiās allegations are substantially similar, then our jurisdic- tional inquiry has a second step. In this second step, we must assess whether Leveski has ādirect and indep- endent knowledge of the information on which [her] allegations are based.ā 31 U.S.C. § 3730(e)(4)(B). (Both sides agree that Leveski contacted the government before bringing this action, so we need not inquire whether Leveski āvoluntarily provided [her] information to the Government before filing.ā) (Dkt. 334-3, 4.) If 1 (...continued) tially similarā standard previously used by our circuit and most other circuits under the prior version of the statute. See 31 U.S.C. § 3730(e)(4)(A) (2013) (commanding courts to ādismiss an action or claim under this section, unless opposed by the Government, if substantially the same allegations or transac- tions as alleged in the action or claim were publicly disclosed.ā 26 Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 we decide that Leveski has direct and independent knowl- edge of her allegations, then once again, Leveski can proceed to litigate her case on the merits in the federal district court. If we decide that Leveski does not have direct and independent knowledge, however, then 31 U.S.C. § 3730(e)(4)(A) bars subject-matter jurisdiction, and Leveski cannot litigate her case in federal court. A The first step of our jurisdictional inquiry requires us to determine whether Leveskiās allegations are substan- tially similar to the relatorsā allegations in Graves, 284 F. Supp. 2d at 490-93, which was filed more than five years before Leveskiās case on April 22, 2002. (Dkt. 241.) Although we have already reviewed Leveskiās allega- tions in Section I, we must also review the Graves allega- tions before making this determination. We turn to this review now. Much like the present case, the Graves case was brought by relators who were former employees of ITT. The two relators, Susan Newman and Dan Graves, had worked for ITT as Inside RRsāthe same job that Leveski had once held at ITT. Moreover, the two Graves relators alleged in their complaint that ITT had violated the HEA by illegally paying incentive compensation to its RRs. (Dkt. 241, 6.) Certainly, the allegations in Graves seem very similar to Leveskiās allegations on first impression. But first impressions can be deceiving. A closer examination reveals four critical differences between the two cases. First, we note that the relators in Graves had much Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 27 shorter tenures at ITT than did Leveski. Relator Susan Newman was employed by ITT for approximately nineteen months (from June 2, 1998 to February 7, 2000), while relator Dan Graves was employed for less than one year (from July 1999 to February 2000). (Dkt. 141-9, 3.) Leveski, in contrast, worked for ITT for over a decade (January 8, 1996āNovember 3, 2006). (Dkt. 75.) The relatively long span of Leveskiās employment, of course, does not directly impact her FCA claim. Nevertheless, because Leveski worked at ITT for so much longer than the Graves relators, she has greater potential than the Graves relators to possess relevant evidence about ITTās compensation scheme that could directly impact her FCA claim. Second, and relatedly, the long span of Leveskiās employ- ment allows her to make allegations against ITT that cover a different time period than the Graves allegations. Al- though the Graves relators worked for ITT for less than two years, they allege that āITT paid illegal incentive compensation to its admissions representativesā from ā1993 to 1999āāi.e. during the five years prior to their being hired by ITT as well as during their brief employ- ment. (Dkt. 141-9, 24-25.) Leveski, on the other hand, alleges that ITT paid illegal incentive compensation throughout her decade-long employment at ITT from 1996 to 2006. After excluding the earlier years of Leveskiās employment (since Judge Lawrence found allegations from these years barred by the six-year statute of limitations), Leveskiās allegations cover the period from July 3, 2001 to November 3, 2006. (Dkt. 92.) Thus, there is no temporal overlap between the Graves allegations and Leveskiās allegations. 28 Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 Third, because the Graves relators were employed by ITT for a relatively short period of time, they were only able to make allegations about the one department to which they were briefly exposed: the recruitment office. Leveski, on the other hand, is able to present evidence about ITT practices in a second department, the financial aid office, since her long employment afforded her the opportunity to hold two different positions (RR and FAA). Indeed, Leveskiās experience as an FAA during the latter half of her employment at ITT allows her to make allegations both about the way that ITT com- pensated its employees in the financial aid office and about the way that ITT applied to the federal government for financial aid. Specifically, Leveski alleges that the FAAsā salaries āwere directly tiedā to how much finan- cial aid they could secure for ITT āby the first available date permitted by Federal law.ā (Dkt. 75, 13-14.) With regard to ITTās applications for federal financial aid, Leveski testified in her deposition that other ITT employees, and even her manager, condoned students underreporting their income on the FAFSA (which would, of course, increase the amount of financial aid for which they were eligible). (Dkt. 141-6, 151-53). If true, both of Leveskiās allegations would constitute clear violations of the HEAāand yet, these allegations are wholly absent from the Graves case. Fourth, even putting aside Leveskiās additional allega- tions about the ITT financial aid office, we see significant differences in her allegations about the recruitment office. The scheme alleged by the Graves relators Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 29 involved a flagrant violation of Department of Educa- tion requirements. According to them, ITTās salary administration program for admis- sions and recruitment personnel provided in part for the payment of ā5% of earned revenues for Inside Representatives and 10% of earned revenues for Outside Representatives.ā The level of āearned revenueā was a direct function of the new and continuing students and graduates who are enrolled by the admissions and recruit- ment representative. (Dkt. 141-9, 24.) In addition to this allegation that ITT paid direct commissions to its RRs, the Graves relators alleged that ITT āhad minimum enrollment quotas for recruiters. Recruiters failing to meet their enrollment quotas were fired. Each campus had a minimum enroll- ment quota that was determined by ITTās officers and directors as part of the annual budgeting process.ā Brief of Petitioner-Appellant at 6, United States ex rel. Graves v. ITT Educ. Servs., No. 03-20460 (5th Cir. Nov. 4, 2003). The scheme alleged by Leveski, in contrast, involves a much more sophisticatedāand more difficult to de- tectāviolation of Department of Education require- ments. Leveski does not allege that either her compensa- tion or her continuation as an ITT employee depended on explicit percentages or quotas. In fact, she acknowl- edges that ITT claimed to compensate her based on a wide range of factors (including appearance, attitude, and participation in continuing education classes). But Leveski alleges that how ITT claimed to compensate her and 30 Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 how ITT actually compensated her were very different. Despite ITTās claims, Leveski believes that her compensa- tion was based on only one thing: the number of students Leveski brought into ITT (and as a result, the amount of money Leveski brought into ITT). Moreover, through her affidavit and deposition testi- mony, Leveski provides evidence to support her allega- tions that ITTās claimed practices in its recruitment and financial aid offices did not match ITTās actual practices. As the excerpts from Leveskiās testimony in Section I demonstrated, Leveski was able to name specific indi- viduals in positions of authority at ITT who told her that her recruitment and financial aid ānumbersā were all that mattered. Leveski also provided evidence that ITT never considered any other factors besides her num- bers. For example, Leveski indicated that ITT did not police what types of continuing education classes that its employees took, even though the employees were allegedly evaluated on these classes. As a result, ITT employees who āgot a masterās degree in educa- tionā appeared to get the same amount of āprofessional developmentā credit as employees who ātook something at [their] church.ā (Dkt. 141-6, 87.) Furthermore, although ITT employees were allegedly evaluated on their ap- pearance, ITTās evaluation of appearance did not cor- relate with how the employee actually appeared. Leveski testified that she āwore the same suits the first day [she] started to work at ITT and the last day [she] left ITT.ā (Dkt. 141-6, 88.) Yet she only received an excellent appearance evaluation during her first year at ITTā coincidentally, the same year that her recruitment ānum- Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 31 bersā were also āexceptional.ā (Dkt. 141-6, 88.) Leveskiās testimony suggests that ITTās supposed multi-factor evaluation system was little more than a sham. Undoubtedly, the sham compensation scheme and the financial aid violations alleged by Leveski are different than the outright quota system alleged by the Graves relators. But the question we must face is whether Leveskiās allegations are different enough from the Graves allegations to bring her suit outside the public disclosure bar of 31 U.S.C. § 3730(e)(4). A review of our recent case law leads us to the conclusion that they are different enough. Indeed, Leveskiās allegations against ITT are only similar to the Graves allegations when viewed at the highest level of generality. But in the last few years, we have indicated on more than one occasion that viewing FCA claims āat the highest level of generality . . . in order to wipe out qui tam suits that rest on genuinely new and material information is not sound.ā Goldberg, 680 F.3d at 936. For instance, in United States ex rel. Baltazar v. Warden, 635 F.3d 866, 869-70 (7th Cir. 2011), we reversed a dismissal under the § 3730(e)(4) jurisdictional bar after we found that the district court had viewed the relatorās claims too generally. There, chiropractor Kelly Baltazar brought an FCA claim against the chiropractic group for which she had previously worked, alleging that the group had āadded to her billing slips services that had not been rendered and [upcoded] for services that had been performed.ā Id. at 866. Prior to Baltazarās suit, the General Accounting Office (GAO) had issued 32 Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 several reports detailing widespread, abusive Medicare billing practices by chiropractic groupsāwithout naming specific groups that were guilty of these abusive practices. Nevertheless, the district judge believed that these reports were enough to preclude federal court jurisdiction over Baltazarās claim. On appeal, we pointed out that Baltazarās suit was ā ābased onā her own knowledge rather than the published reportsā and had āsupplied vital facts that were not in the public domain.ā Id. at 869. Because the GAO reports did ānot disclose the allegations or transactions on which Baltzarās [suit was] . . . based,ā we found that § 3730(e)(4) did not stand in the way of Baltazarās suit. Id. at 868. Like Baltazarās allegations, Leveskiās allegations are clearly based on her own knowledge; in her affidavit and dep- osition, she provides the court with relevant names, meetings, and other details specific to her employment with ITT. And like Baltazar, Leveski has supplied the court with vital facts that were not alleged in Graves. Leveski has suggested that ITT developed a sophisticated, yet illegal employee evaluation and com- pensation scheme designed to avoid detection by the Department of Education. As helpful as the Baltazar decision is to Leveski, even more helpful to her is our decision last year in Goldberg, 680 F.3d at 936. There again, we reversed a district court that had dismissed an FCA suit for lack of jurisdiction under § 3730(e)(4) after viewing the relatorās claims too generally. Id. The relators in Goldberg were an orthopedic surgeon and a director of real estate at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago. Together, they alleged Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 33 that Rush was improperly billing Medicare for services performed by teaching physicians that were, in reality, performed by inadequately supervised residents. Id. at 934-35. During the 1990s, both the Department of Health and Human Services and the GAO had issued research studies concluding that improper billing for services performed by unsupervised residents was a widespread problem in teaching hospitals nationwide. Id. at 934. Much like Leveski, however, the relators in Goldberg alleged a more sophisticated, harder to detect scheme than the kind described in the governmental reports. The reports had accused teaching hospitals of billing for services performed by residents who were wholly unsupervised. The Goldberg relators, on the other hand, alleged that Rush billed for services performed by residents who were not adequately supervised. Ac- cording to them, Rush scheduled teaching physicians for multiple surgeries at once, such that āeven if the teaching physician were present for the ācriticalā portion of one [surgery], . . . the surgeon could not have been āimmediately available for the rest of each procedure,ā as required by Medicare. Id. at 935. After reviewing the relatorsā allegations, we found that they had āallege[d] a kind of deceit that the GAO report does not attribute to any teaching hospital. Unless we understand the āunsu- pervised servicesā conclusion of the [governmental reports] at the highest level of generalityāas covering all ways that supervision could be missing or inade- quateāthe allegations of these relators are not āsubstan- tially similar.ā ā Id. at 936. Thus, we found that § 3730(e)(4) did not destroy federal court jurisdiction over the relatorsā claims. Id. 34 Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 Like Goldberg and Baltazar, we believe that Leveskiās case is yet another instance of a district court dismissing an FCA suit after viewing the allegations at too high a level of generality. To be sure, Leveskiās case looks similar to the Graves case at first blush. The relators in both cases are former employees of ITTāand even held the same job title. The relators in both cases also allege that ITT violated the incentive compensation provision of the HEA. But this is where the similarities between the two cases end. The details of how ITT allegedly vio- lated the HEA are quite different in Leveskiās case than they were in Graves. Unlike the Graves relators, who alleged a more rudimentary scheme by ITT to violate the HEA incentive compensation provision, Leveski alleges a more sophisticated, second-generation method of violating the HEA. Furthermore, although we know from Leveskiās deposi- tion testimony that she reviewed the Graves case before filing her lawsuit, we are convinced that Leveski has done more than just āadd[] a few allegationsā to the Graves complaint. Glaser, 570 F.3d at 920. In Glaser, we upheld a district courtās dismissal for lack of jurisdiction under § 3730(e)(4) after finding that a relator had done just thatācharacterizing the Glaser relatorās allegations as āwrongdoing [that was] virtually identicalā to prior, publicly disclosed allegations. Id. The relator, Carol A. Glaser, brought an FCA suit accusing a medical clinic of fraudulent billing practices; but this time, the relator was a patient, not an employee, of the medical clinic. Unlike Leveski, Glaser had no inside information from her own personal experience at the clinic; instead, she Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 35 appeared to have learned all of the relevant information in her FCA complaint from her attorney. Id. at 921. More- over, Glaserās allegations covered the same time period covered by an ongoing Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) investigation of the clinic. Id. at 909. The CMS investigation centered on whether the defendant medical clinic had billed patients for seeing a doctor when they had actually seen a physicianās assistant. Glaser alleged exactly the same fraudulent billing practices in her complaint. Indeed, Glaserās only unique contribution was pointing out a couple of instances in which the clinic billed patients for seeing a doctor (instead of the physicianās assistant whom they had actually seen) that were not mentioned in the CMS report. It was under these circumstances we held that āadd[ing] a few allegations . . . is not enough to take [a] case outside the jurisdictional bar, properly understood; ābased uponā does not mean āsolely based upon.ā ā Id. at 920. In contrast to Glaser, Leveski has used inside informa- tion that she obtained during her decade-long employ- ment to make allegations that are noticeably different from any prior allegations against ITT. Leveskiās case would be more analogous to Glaser if Leveski had merely added a few examples from her own personal experience at ITT to the Graves complaint, re-alleging that ITT maintained minimum enrollment quotas for its recruiters and paid its recruiters direct commissions. But Leveski has done much more than re-package the Graves complaint. She has alleged new tactics by ITT to avoid the mandates of the HEAātactics that extend 36 Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 beyond the recruiting office (the focus of Graves) to the financial aid office. The extent to which Leveskiās complaint goes beyond a mere re-packaging is perhaps most apparent when viewed in light of two other recent FCA cases that were unsuccessfully litigated by her attorney, Timothy Matusheski. Matusheski, who bills himself as the āMissis- sippi Whistle Blower,ā has apparently recruited many other FCA relators besides Leveski to pursue HEA- related cases against for-profit educational institutions. The Law Offices of Timothy J. Matusheski, available at http://mississippiwhistleblower.com (last visited July 1, 2013). For at least two of these cases, Matusheski appears to have recruited relators who possessed little to no knowledge beyond what was already in the public domain. In United States ex rel. Lopez v. Strayer Educ., Inc., 698 F. Supp. 2d 633 (E.D. Va. 2010), the relator recruited by Matusheski, Magdalis Lopez, was a former recruiter for Strayer University who alleged that Strayer paid its recruiters incentive compensation in violation of the HEA. Like the Graves relators, Lopez only alleged viola- tions in the recruiting office (not the financial aid of- fice), and Lopez appeared to allege a more straight- forward scheme of outright recruitment commissions and bonuses. Nevertheless, the exact details of Lopezās alleged scheme were never clear due to her total inability to produce any evidence of specific people, statements, and incidents to support her allegations. For instance, when asked at her deposition to explain certain allega- Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 37 tions in her complaint, Lopez could not provide any details: Q. Do you have any factual knowledge of any of the statements in your complaints from para- graphs 43 through 72? A. I have knowledge. Q. What knowledge? Point toāme to one factual statement that you knew before talking to [Matusheski]. A. (after objection by counsel) Iām not an attor- ney. You know, I cannot give you, you know, like, details. Lopez, 698 F. Supp. 2d at 639. Lopezās inability to provide relevant details in her deposition testimony stands in sharp contrast Leveskiās ability to name specific people and describe specific incidents in her deposition testimony, as recounted in Section I. Similarly, in United States ex rel. Schultz v. DeVry Inc., No. 07 C 5425, 2009 WL 562286 (N.D. Ill. Mar. 4, 2009), the relator recruited by Matusheski, Jennifer S. Schultz, was also a former recruiterābut this time, for DeVry Univer- sityāwho alleged that DeVry paid its recruiters incen- tive compensation in violation of the HEA. Like Lopez, Schultz only alleged violations in the recruiting office, and Schultz alleged a straightforward bonus incentive compensation system for recruiters that violated the HEA. And just like Lopez, Schultz was completely incapa- ble of providing any relevant details in her deposition testimony. During Schultzās deposition, she refused 38 Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 to answer any questions about what information Matusheski had provided her, and what information she had provided Matusheski, citing the attorney-client privilege. Id. at *1, *4. Leveski, in contrast, was much more candid about the information that Matusheski had provided her, and the information she had pro- vided him. (Dkt. 141-6, 239-44.) More importantly, the specific names and incidents that Leveski provided though her deposition testimony and her affidavit are details specific to Leveskiās employmentādetails that Matusheski was incapable of supplying to Leveski. It is true that serious questions have been publicly raised about whether some for-profit educational institu- tions have violated the incentive compensation provi- sions of the HEA. See, e.g., Editorial, An Industry in Need of Accountability, N.Y. Times, Aug. 15, 2011, at A20. The fact that Matusheski alone has litigated multiple FCA lawsuits against for-profit educational institutions demonstrates that this general knowledge is well within the public domain. But Leveski has added new facts and new details to this general knowledge that were not previously in the public domain. Even though prior relators represented by Matusheski, such as Lopez and Schultz, were not able to add new facts and new details, Leveski is different. Through her deposition testimony and her affidavit, Leveski has informed the public about a new method of violating the HEA prohibition against incentive compensationāa method much more difficult to detect than outright commission and bonus schemes. Leveski has also informed the public that HEA viola- tions in for-profit educational institutions may extend Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 39 beyond recruiting departments and bleed into financial aid departments. And Leveskiās allegations do not appear to be baseless; as the excerpts from Leveskiās deposition and affidavit in Section I demonstrate, she has recounted specific conversations with specific indi- viduals that support her allegations. In closing our discussion of why Leveskiās allegations are not ābased uponā Graves for the purposes of 31 U.S.C. § 3730(e)(4)(A), we pause to emphasize two im- portant points. First, we have not ignored ITTās argument that Leveski has altered her allegations on appeal in order to distinguish them from the Graves allegations. But we have saved our discussion of this argument to the end because we think it lacks merit. Accusing Leveski of ābrief[ing] a different case from the one Leveski actually filed,ā ITT asserts that Leveski did not emphasize the allegations that most con- vincingly distinguish her case from Graves in the district court. ITT argues that Leveski did not emphasize that ITT ācreated a matrix to feign complianceā with the HEA even though it āwas still illegally compensating student recruitersā in her second amended complaint (the controlling complaint in this case). Yet we had no trouble finding this allegation in paragraph thirty-two of the second amended complaint: While continually reminding sales representatives to meet sales targets to obtain raises and stay employed, ITT corporate employees and Troy campus directors never discussed tactics to meet non-sales targets that were included in sales 40 Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 representativesā yearly review such as assisting the school in meeting its attrition budget, being a team player, appearance, and attitude. (Dkt. 75, 12.) Similarly, ITT accuses Leveski of not previ- ously emphasizing her allegations that ITTās illegal com- pensation scheme extended beyond the recruiting office to the financial aid office. But again, we had no trouble finding this allegation in paragraph thirty-eight of Leveskiās second amended complaint: āRelatorās and other financial aid administratorsā salary increases were directly tied to financial aid: rising and falling based on whether the representative exceeded or failed to meet financial aid goals.ā (Dkt. 75, 14.) Perhaps ITTās most puzzling argument, however, is that Leveski has somehow waived the right to distinguish her case from Graves because she failed to mention Graves in her second amended complaint. But Leveski had no reason to mention Graves in her second amended complaint. Her allegations had nothing to do with the Graves case. Her allegations were based upon her own personal ex- perience at ITT, not the allegations of the Graves relators. Graves only became an issue in Leveskiās case once ITT brought it to the district courtās attention in its final motion to dismiss for lack of subject-matter jurisdic- tion. (Dkt. 143.) As soon as ITT raised Graves, Leveski im- mediately responded. In her brief opposing ITTās final motion to dismiss for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction, Leveski pointed out to the district court that her ācom- plaint allege[d] different misconduct during a different time period than Gravesā and that āGraves d[id] not address financial aid advisors.ā (Dkt. 154, 12.) In sum, Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 41 ITT has failed to produce any convincing evidence that Leveski has altered her allegations on appeal. Second, although we believe that Leveski has evidence to support her allegations, we do not necessarily imply that Leveski has a winning case. As we have noted before, ā[r]elatorsā allegations may be incorrect . . . [b]ut these are questions on the merits.ā Goldberg, 680 F.3d at 936. In other words, we believe that Leveski could have a winning case, but ultimately, it is up to her to convince a trier of fact that her allegations are true. For now, we only evaluate whether the federal district court has subject-matter jurisdiction under 31 U.S.C. § 3730(e)(4)(A) to let Leveskiās case proceed. All we care about at this stage is whether Leveskiās allegations ārest on genuinely new and material information.ā Id. We find that Leveskiās case does rest on genuinely new and material information, and as a result, Leveskiās allegations are not āsubstantially similar to publicly disclosed allega- tions.ā Glaser, 570 F.3d at 920. Leveskiās case is not ābased uponā the prior Graves allegations, and so the federal district court has subject-matter jurisdiction over her case under § 3730(e)(4)(A). B Because we find that Leveskiās allegations are not ābased upon the public disclosure of allegationsā under 31 U.S.C. § 3730(e)(4)(A), our jurisdictional inquiry need not go any further. Nevertheless, we pause here to note that even if we had found that Leveskiās allega- tions were based on a prior public disclosure, Leveski 42 Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 would still be allowed to proceed as an āoriginal sourceā of her information. 31 U.S.C. § 3730(e)(4)(A). Recall that Leveski may litigate her case on the meritsāeven if her allegations are based upon a prior public disclo- sureāas long as she has ādirect and independent knowl- edge of the information on which [her] allegations are based.ā 31 U.S.C. § 3730(e)(4)(B). In evaluating whether Leveski is an āoriginal sourceā of her claims, we find our language in Baltazar, 635 F.3d at 869, particularly enlightening: āThe question is whether the relator is an original source of the allega- tions in the complaint and not, as the district court sup- posed, whether the relator is the source of the informa- tion in the published reports.ā Thus, it is not appropriate to ask whether Leveski was the original source of the allegations in Graves. Nor is it appropriate to ask whether Leveski was the first person to bring HEA violations by for-profit educational institutions to the publicās attention. Rather, it is appropriate to ask whether Leveski is the original source of the specific allegations in her complaint. For the same reasons that we found that Leveskiās allegations are not ābased uponā a prior public disclosure under § 3730(e)(4)(A), we also find that she has direct and independent knowledge of her allegations, and thus, is the original source of them. In Glaser, 570 F.3d at 921, we indicated that a relatorās knowledge was not ādirectā if the relator āhad no knowledge whatsoever of the fraudulent conduct before hearing from an attorney.ā We further indicated that a relatorās knowledge was not Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 43 āindependentā if the relator would not ā āhave learned of the allegation or transactions independently of the public disclosure.ā ā Id. (quoting United States v. Bank of Farmington, 166 F.3d 853, 865 (7th Cir. 1999)). Along these lines, ITT argues that Leveskiās knowledge of the RR and FAA compensation schemes was neither direct nor independent since Leveski admitted at her deposition that she had not considered filing an FCA suit until attorney Matusheski contacted her. Dkt. 141-6, 244. Yet just because Leveski had never considered filing suit until an attorney contacted her does not neces- sarily mean that she lacked sufficient knowledge to bring suit. It could simply mean that Leveski did not know her rights under the law. And that appears to be the case hereāalthough we know that Leveski reviewed prior FCA complaints against ITT after speaking with Matusheski, including Graves, 284 F. Supp. 2d 487, and Olson, 2006 WL 64597, Leveski has provided the court with many pieces of evidence that could have only come from her. As detailed in Section I, Leveski has recalled specific conversations with her personal super- visors that indicate ITT was in violation of the HEA throughout the course of Leveskiās decade-long employ- ment. Matusheski could not have fed this evidence to Leveski. Matusheski never worked for the Troy, Michigan campus of ITTāhe lives at the other end of the country in Mississippiāso he would have no way of knowing what occurred on that specific campus. Nor could the Graves complaint have fed this evidence to Leveski. The Graves complaint is extremely general, providing absolutely no details about how either relator 44 Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 surmised through their employment that ITT might be in violation of the HEA. Ironically, the allegations con- tained within the Graves complaint read like something that came from an attorney, and not the relators them- selves. (Dkt. 141-9.) In contrast, virtually all of Leveskiās evidence in sup- port of her allegations against ITT comes from conversa- tions to which she was a party. For instance, in her dep- osition, Leveski makes some references to information she learned from other ITT employees, but for the most part, Leveski discusses statements that were made directly to her by her supervisors at ITT. Leveskiās main evidence is personal and specific to her; it is not second- or third- hand evidence learned from another source like an at- torney, a co-worker, or a prior lawsuit. Therefore, we find that Leveskiās evidence is based on her own direct and independent knowledge. Because the most com- pelling evidence against ITT could have only come from Leveski herself, we are not troubled by Leveskiās admission that she had not contemplated filing suit until Matusheski contacted her. Attorneys are allowed to advise potential future clients of both the contents of the law and their rights under the law; it is upon that basis that attorneys are permitted to advertise their services. See Bates v. State Bar of Ariz., 433 U.S. 350, 376 (1977) (noting that advertising allows a āsupplier [attor- ney] to inform a potential purchaser [client] of the avail- ability and terms of exchangeā). After all, āpotential clients rarely know in advance what services they do in fact need,ā and in some cases, potential clients do not know that they need any services from an attorney. Id. at 386 Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 45 (Burger, C.J., concurring in part and dissenting in part). Here, Leveski had no idea that she was sitting on infor- mation that was potentially valuable to the govern- ment until Matusheski contacted her. The fact that Leveski first learned the potential value of her informa- tion from Matusheski does not bar her claim.2 Moreover, just because a party first learns that she may have a valuable legal claim from an attorney seeking her business does not mean that the partyās case is bogus. Leveskiās counsel drew an analogy at oral argu- ment between the events underlying Leveskiās decision to file her FCA suit and the events underlying the de- fendantsā decision in the famous case, Lawrence v. Texas, 539 U.S. 558 (2003), to pursue their appeal all the way to the Supreme Court. According to a recent book by University of Minnesota law professor Dale Carpenter, the Lawrence defendants would never have appealed the constitutionality of their sodomy convic- tions on their own. See Flagrant Conduct: The Story of Lawrence v. Texas 132 (W. W. Norton & Co. 2012) (noting that neither of the Lawrence defendants had the ā āfire in the bellyā reaction [to their arrest] of activists ready to take on the legal systemā). Instead, the ālegal trajectoryā of Lawrence was the result of gay activists learning of the 2 Because ITT makes much of Matusheskiās ātrack record of improper behaviorā in its brief, we specifically asked ITT at oral argument what rule of professional conduct that Matusheskiās ārecruitmentā of Leveski violated. ITT could not supply us with a single rule. 46 Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 defendantsā arrest and subsequently putting the defen- dants in touch with a lesbian, gay, bisexual, and trans- gender legal defense organization. Id. at 118. With- out the encouragement of attorneys from this organiza- tion, the defendants never would have known their rights. They would have never known that they had a strong constitutional challenge to the Texas sodomy law, and thus, would never have pursued an appeal. Id. at 117-32. Leveski contends that she is in the same position: without the encouragement of attorney Matusheski, she would have never known her rights. This analogy is interesting, but unnecessary. The annals of legal history are full of examples of lawyers playing a vital role in encouraging parties to litigate. If done in a proper mannerāthat is, within the confines of the applicable rules of professional conductāthere is nothing about such attorney involvement that negates the validity of a suit. As applied to the case at hand, ITT has not shown that Matusheskiās conduct invalidates Leveskiās claim. Although we find ITTās argument regarding Matusheskiās role in this suit unpersuasive, ITT raises a second argument challenging the directness and inde- pendence of Leveskiās knowledge. Leveski, ITT points out, was never in a position of authority during her employment; she was never responsible for setting em- ployee compensation or filing PPAs. As a result, ITT argues that Leveski lacks āsufficient knowledge of ITTās allegedly illegal compensation practices.ā In response to this argument, we note that we have never required a relator to have previously occupied a position of author- Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 47 ity, and in fact, we have previously found relators who were even greater outsiders than Leveski to possess direct and independent knowledge of their FCA claims. For instance, in United States ex rel. Lamers v. City of Green Bay, 168 F.3d 1013 (7th Cir. 1999), the relator, Allen Lamers, owned a private bus company that had once contracted with the city of Green Bay to bus school children. After it lost the contract, the owner filed an FCA suit alleging that the city of Green Bay had fraudulently represented to the Federal Transit Administration (FTA) that it was in compliance with FTA regulations in exchange for FTA funding. Lamers had never even worked for the city of Green Bayālet alone witnessed or participated in the cityās filing of compliance forms. Yet still we found that Lamersās FCA suit had adequate subject-matter jurisdiction because he had direct and independent knowledge derived from āwalk[ing] the streets of Green Bay observing the buses in action.ā Id. at 1017. Lamers had spent time observing the Green Bay buses, and his ob- servations called into question whether Green Bay was in compliance with FTA regulations. It was unnecessary for Lamers to prove personal knowledge that Green Bay had fraudulently certified its compliance with FTA regulations at the outset of his suit. Clearly, Green Bay was certifying that it was in compliance since it was still receiving FTA fundingāwhich meant that if Lamersās allegations were true, Green Bay was falsely certifying it was in compliance. A decade after Lamers, we reaffirmed that a relator need not produce a copy of the actual document 48 Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 making the false claim at the outset of the lawsuit in United States ex rel. Lusby v. Rolls-Royce Corp., 570 F.3d 849, 854 (7th Cir. 2009). There, Curtis J. Lusby, a former Rolls-Royce engineer, brought an FCA suit claiming that the company was falsely certifying that the engines it built for the Air Force conformed to military specifica- tions. Id. at 850. In response, Rolls-Royce argued that as an engineer, Lusby had not seen āany of the invoices and representations that Rolls-Royce submitted to its cus- tomers. He kn[ew] about shipments and payments, but he d[id] not have access to the paperwork.ā Id. at 854. Although Lusby admitted that he had not had access to the paperwork, he countered that āRolls-Royce must have submitted at least one such certificate [of compli- ance], or the military services would not have paid for the goods.ā Id. We agreed with Lusby, holding: We donāt think it essential for the relator to pro- duce the invoices (and accompanying representa- tions) at the outset of the suit. True, it is essential to show a false statement. But much knowledge is inferentialāpeople are convicted beyond a reasonable doubt of conspiracy without a written contract to commit a future crimeāand the infer- ence that Lusby proposes is a plausible one. Id. Moreover, we noted that ā[s]ince a relator is unlikely to have those documents unless he works in the defen- dantās accounting department,ā holding otherwise would have ātake[n] a big bite out of qui tam litigation.ā Id. Both Lamers and Lusby stand for the proposition that Leveski need not produce copies of the PPAs in which Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 49 ITT certified compliance with the HEA at the outset of her lawsuit. For now, an inference is enough. Leveski observed ITT receive federal funding throughout her employment, and ITT could only have received federal funding by certifying compliance with the HEA. Conse- quently, if Leveskiās allegations about incentive com- pensation are true, then ITT must have been falsely cer- tifying compliance with the HEA. Furthermore, our holding in Lamers completely refutes ITTās contention that Leveski needed to be in a position of authority or responsible for setting the compensation of other em- ployees at ITT in order to have direct and independent knowledge of her FCA claim. Recall that relator Lamers never worked for the city of Green Bay before filing an FCA suit against it, and yet we found that he had sufficiently direct and independent knowledge based on his personal observations as a total outsider. 168 F.3d at 1017. If Lamersās observations as a total out- sider from the defendant were sufficient to constitute ādirect and independent knowledge of the information on which the allegations were based,ā then certainly Leveskiās observations as a ten-year employee of the defendant company are sufficient. 31 U.S.C. § 3730(e)(4)(B). III Given our finding that Leveskiās allegations are suffi- ciently distinguishable from Gravesānot to mention our finding that she has direct and independent knowledge of her allegationsāour sanctions analysis becomes quite easy. The district judge sanctioned Matusheski personally 50 Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 under 28 U.S.C. § 1927 and sanctioned the Law Offices of Timothy J. Matusheski, Plews Shadley, and Motley Rice under Fed. R. Civ. P. 11. Although these sanctions were granted under two different rules, they were all granted for the same reason: the district judge con- cluded that Leveskiās counsel had continued to pursue a āfrivolousā case despite āunmistakably clear warnings that [they were] playing with fire by pushing the case forward.ā (Dkt. 318, 23.) As indicated above, we disagree with this conclusion. Our lengthy discussion of Leveskiās case has shown that Leveskiās case appears to be substantial, not frivo- lous. Even disregarding the fact that Leveskiās allegations cover a later time period than the Graves allegations, Leveski has still provided the district court with at least two ways in which her allegations substantially differ from the Graves allegations: (1) Graves alleged an outright scheme to violate the HEA incentive com- pensation ban, in which ITT did not even attempt to feign compliance, and (2) Graves was solely concerned with the ITT recruitment office and had nothing to say about the ITT financial aid office. Moreover, through her affidavit and deposition testimony, Leveski has provided the district court with numerous pieces of evidence both supporting her allegations and demon- strating that her knowledge is direct and independent. At this stage of the litigation, we think that Leveski has produced more than enough to overcome the 31 U.S.C. § 3730(e)(4) jurisdictional bar. We do not know whether Leveski will ultimately prevail, nor do we Nos. 12-1369, 12-1967, 12-1979, 12-2008 & 12-2891 51 state any opinion as to whether Leveski should ultimately prevail. But we do believe that Leveski should be allowed to litigate her case on the merits, and thus, sanctions for bringing a frivolous lawsuit are inappropriate. Of course, if it becomes clear later in the course of litigation that Leveski has made up all of her allegations and all of her supporting evidence, then sanctions may be warranted. But for now, the truth of Leveskiās allega- tions is not appropriately resolved on a motion to dismiss for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. Leveski has presented enough to move forward with this litiga- tion. Consequently, we R EVERSE both the district courtās dismissal of Leveskiās case for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction and the district courtās award of sanctions in the amount of $394,998.33 against Leveskiās counsel, and we R EMAND the case back to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. Circuit Rule 36 will apply on remand. 7-8-13
Case Information
- Court
- 7th Cir.
- Decision Date
- July 8, 2013
- Status
- Precedential