Compliance
Trio Of Law Firms Spark Transatlantic Whistleblower Initiative

To date, the Securities and Exchange Commission has granted more than $110 million in awards to whistleblowers in dozens of cases and has taken in more the $500 million in related fines.
A US-based whistleblower law firm has partnered with two European
companies to launch a collaborative platform to help Europeans
expose financial wrongdoing and exploit US laws.
Meissner &
Associates, a New York-based firm that represents
whistleblowers and securities professionals, has joined forces
with Stuttgart-and Berlin-based Naegele and London-based
Brahams
Dutt Badrick French to create a new transatlantic
whistleblower intiative, the first of its kind, according to
Meissner & Associates.
The three-way alliance aims to help employees, suppliers and
other stakeholders of international companies who identify
financial misconduct in European operations to bring lawsuits and
advance enforcement actions by the US Securities and Exchange
Commission. Eligible clients include anyone working with a
European or multinational business whose securities trade on US
exchanges, as well as American companies that trade in
Europe.
Under the 2010 Dodd-Frank legislation, individuals whose original
information assists US financial watchdogs in bringing a
successful enforcement proceeding are entitled to a bounty
payment as high as 30 per cent of any penalty exceeding $1
million imposed on a company.
Although certain regulatory aspects of the Dodd-Frank act could
be rolled back once President-elect Trump enters into power next
month, whistleblower commission provisions are expected to remain
in place as a tool for encouraging those with inside
information to step forward and work with regulators to curtail
wrongdoing.
Under the new alliance, Naegle and BDBF will advise clients on
local legal issues stemming from their role as whistleblowers,
including helping with challenges that may arise from their
employers such as retaliatory action. Stuart Meissner, a former
securities regulator and prosecutor who is heading the
collaboration, will help clients navigate the arduous process of
filing and pursuing cases with the SEC.
“We’re excited to align with two leading European employment law
firms in Naegele and BDBF to provide a legal support system for
individuals in Europe who may want to come forward as
whistleblowers but up to now have not had the confidence that
their voices would be heard and actions taken to protect them,”
Mr Meissner said.