Aug. 26, 2025
The Eleventh Circuit’s published decision in United States ex rel. Smith v. Odom, 2025 WL 2424425 (11th Cir. Aug. 22, 2025), affirms dismissal with prejudice under the False Claims Act’s public-disclosure bar and offers guidance on what counts as a public disclosure, what “substantially the same” really means, and when a relator qualifies as an “original source.”
Although the principles apply to any qui tam case, this case arose from allegations that an airport sponsor falsely certified compliance with FAA grant assurances after a single owner effectively controlled both fixed-base operators at the Destin Executive Airport. However, years before the qui tam was filed, local and industry press had already reported the consolidation and the potential grant-assurance violations in the news.
For defendants, Smith clarifies that “significant overlap” between prior news coverage and the complaint’s core fraud hypothesis is sufficient to apply the public-disclosure bar, even if the relator provides subsequent facts but those facts do not materially add to the publicly disclosed information.
For relators, the opinion is a caution: if the press has already connected the dots, you must either have disclosed to the government first or add genuinely transaction-advancing non-public facts—not mere context or after-the-fact echoes of the same theory.
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