Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Justices appear skeptical of whistleblo­wer shield

Gorsuch: Those who don’t report to SEC unprotecte­d

- By David G. Savage david.savage@latimes.com

WASHINGTON — Supreme Court justices Tuesday sounded ready to bar whistleblo­wers from suing companies for illegal retaliatio­n under a 2010 law if they’ve only reported wrongdoing internally, and not to the Securities and Exchange Commission.

If so, their ruling, due early next year, could strike down part of an SEC rule that interprete­d the law as more broadly protecting whistleblo­wers, including those who disclosed fraud only to other company officials.

The Dodd-Frank Act, passed in the wake of the Wall Street collapse of 2008, sought to encourage auditors, lawyers and other employees to sound an alarm if they spotted serious wrongdoing.

Employers were told they could not “discharge, demote, suspend, threaten (or) harass” anyone for “making disclosure­s” of potential violations. Employees who were fired could sue and win double back pay if they showed they were victims of retaliatio­n.

But the law also defined a whistleblo­wer as someone who provides informatio­n “to the SEC.”

During oral arguments Tuesday in Digital Realty v. Somers, the justices were quick to say that such a narrow definition leaves out an employee who only made an internal disclosure to company supervisor­s, or was fired before contacting the SEC.

“I’m just stuck on the plain language here. How much clearer could Congress have been?” asked Justice Neil Gorsuch in the first of a series of pointed questions directed at an attorney for a fired whistleblo­wer. The law protects those who “report to the commission. What would you have had Congress do?” he asked.

Gorsuch has insisted that the high court should interpret laws based strictly on their text, not on their broad aims. He voiced surprise and irritation that “we have two circuits courts that actually gave deference” to the SEC’s “unreasoned opinion” extending protection to internal whistle blowers. He was referring to the 9th Circuit Court in San Francisco and the 2nd Circuit in New York, both of which ruled that the intent of the DoddFrank Act was to protect whistleblo­wers, whether they raised concerns with regulators or company officials.

In the case before the court, Paul Somers, a vice president and portfolio manager at Digital Realty Trust in Singapore, says he was dismissed in 2014, weeks after telling senior executives in San Francisco of a possible $7 million cost overrun on a project in Hong Kong. He did not contact the SEC before his firing, or file a complaint after with the Labor Department within 180 days, as permitted under another law.

The company disputed Somers’ claims of wrongdoing, and it urged his suit be dismissed because he was not a protected whistleblo­wer under the Dodd-Frank Act.

But a federal judge in San Francisco and the 9th Circuit cleared the suit to proceed.

Daniel Geyser, a lawyer for Somers, said Congress wanted to protect internal whistleblo­wers. “Every piece of modern, major whistleblo­wing legislatio­n” sets out to “protect internal whistleblo­wing,” he said.

He was joined by Justice Department lawyer Christophe­r Michel, who was defending the SEC’s rule. “I think it’s quite clear that what Congress was trying to do in Dodd-Frank was to bolster the remedies that were available under Sarbanes-Oxley,” Michel said, referring to the 2002 law that extended protection to employees who file complaints with the Labor Department.

Gorsuch said he was not impressed with that argument. “We don’t follow what they are trying to do. We follow what they do,” he said.

Several liberal justices said they were troubled about leaving internal whistleblo­wers unprotecte­d, but none voiced support for allowing Somers to sue.

Justice Elena Kagan said the law as written was “quite odd. A typical anti-retaliatio­n provision, you would think, (would say) if I report internally and I’m fired for it, then I get my protection,” she said. “It’s odd. It’s peculiar. It’s probably not what Congress meant. But what makes it the kind of thing where we can just say we’re going to ignore it?” she asked Michel, an assistant to the Solicitor General.

 ?? OLIVER CONTRERAS/TNS ?? Justice Neil Gorsuch said the law’s protection was clearly limited.
OLIVER CONTRERAS/TNS Justice Neil Gorsuch said the law’s protection was clearly limited.

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