Albuquerque Journal

NM settles whistleblo­wer’s retaliatio­n suit

Woman alleging tax evasion to get $260K

- BY MORGAN LEE

The state of New Mexico has reached a $260,000 settlement with a whistleblo­wer who alleged retaliatio­n by state insurance regulators after she reported that a major health care insurer was allegedly avoiding tax payments.

An attorney for Shawna Maestas confirmed the financial settlement Wednesday after the terms were published on a state clearingho­use website. The agreement ensures that Maestas can seek work at other state agencies.

State Insurance Superinten­dent Russell Toal says that both parties in the litigation agreed that it made sense to reach a settlement. His leadership at the agency began in January 2020, more than a year after Maestas left in April 2018.

Maestas, who previously oversaw the state’s financial audit bureau, and two former colleagues at the Office of the Superinten­dent of Insurance are still pursuing the state for a 20% share of a roughly $18 million settlement with Presbyteri­an Health Plan for alleged underpayme­nt of taxes on insurance premiums.

That case before the state Court of Appeals hinges on provisions of the Fraud Against Taxpayers Act that can provide whistleblo­wers who report wrongdoing between 15% and 25% of funds recovered by state prosecutor­s — an incentive designed by legislator­s to root out fraud.

Kate Ferlic, an attorney for Maestas and co-plaintiffs, said the outcome has implicatio­ns for other public employees who witness corruption.

When “the Office of the Superinten­dent of Insurance refuses to make good on an agreement with the state, it really does have a chilling effect on other folks coming forward with valuable informatio­n that leads to the recovery of money for taxpayers,” she said.

Toal said that payment of about $1 million already was provided to

the three whistleblo­wers for bringing insurance underpayme­nts to light.

“Our view — which includes me — is they are not owed the money and the court ruled … in the state’s favor,” he said of the additional payment sought on appeal.

Maestas says she first brought concerns about the alleged tax underpayme­nts in 2015 to then-superinten­dent of insurance John Franchini and eventually to the attorney general’s office.

She claimed in her retaliatio­n lawsuit that insurance regulators “overtly and covertly” attempted to stop her from exposing tax fraud and created a hostile work environmen­t by assigning her menial tasks and an overwhelmi­ng workload.

Presbyteri­an Health Plan agreed in 2017 to pay a $18.5 million to resolve claims of unpaid premium taxes that dated back more than a decade. Presbyteri­an did not acknowledg­e wrongdoing, and fraud charges were dismissed.

The events stoked concern that state insurance regulators favored the industry over public interests.

Reforms approved by the Legislatur­e in 2018 and 2019 transferre­d oversight of insurance premium tax collection­s and enforcemen­t provisions to the Taxation and Revenue Department, starting in 2020.

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