Reed Smith In-depth

Key takeaways

  • DOJ Criminal Division’s May 2025 memorandum recalibrates white-collar crime enforcement, prioritizing high-impact threats, especially health care fraud and abuse of government programs like Medicare and Medicaid.
  • DOJ has expanded its Corporate Whistleblower Awards Pilot Program to cover more types of federal fraud, including non-health-care contract fraud and violations involving foreign commerce and immigration, offering substantial financial incentives for whistleblowers and encouraging both self-reporting by companies and whistleblowing by individuals.
  • Health care fraud remains a top enforcement priority, with the DOJ emphasizing both civil and criminal actions.
  • DOJ has updated its broader corporate enforcement and voluntary self-disclosure policies, increasing transparency about benefits for cooperation, clarifying resolution terms, and encouraging early self-disclosure by companies to mitigate liability.

Overview

A May 12, 2025 memorandum from the U.S. Department of Justice’s (DOJ) Criminal Division sets forth a recalibrated approach to white-collar crime enforcement under the new administration. The guidance emphasizes a strategic focus on high-impact threats, a commitment to fairness in prosecuting both individuals and corporations, and a drive for greater efficiency in investigations and resolutions, including through utilizing incentives for whistleblowing and self-reporting of corporate misconduct. Of particular note – and the focus of this alert – are the memorandum’s implications for companies operating in the health care and life sciences space.

Key enforcement priorities

The DOJ’s Criminal Division will concentrate its resources on domestic issues and threats to the American public. The memorandum lists several priority areas, but notably, first on the list of priorities is health care fraud and abuse of government programs, including Medicare and Medicaid. The DOJ will also prioritize cases involving senior-level corporate personnel, significant financial loss, and efforts to obstruct justice. Asset forfeiture and victim compensation will be emphasized where authorized.

Policy amendments and whistleblower incentives

To align with these priorities, the DOJ is amending and expanding its Corporate Whistleblower Awards Pilot Program (Pilot Program), initially announced in August 2024, to add several new categories of “Subject Areas,” which now include tips leading to forfeiture in areas such as non-health-care federal contract or program fraud, violations of laws regarding foreign commerce, and immigration. This move is intended to further encourage reporting of high-impact corporate misconduct.