Whistleblowing soars to record with Americans working from home

The work-from-home phenomenon has triggered a fresh frustration for U.S. corporations: Americans are blowing the whistle on their employers like never before.

The work-from-home phenomenon has triggered a fresh frustration for U.S. corporations: Americans are blowing the whistle on their employers like never before.

The proof is in the data, with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission receiving 6,900 tips alleging white-collar malfeasance in the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30, a 31 percent jump from the previous 12-month record. Officials at the agency, which pays whistleblowers for information that leads to successful investigations, say the surge really started gaining traction in March when COVID-19 forced millions to relocate to their sofas from office cubicles.

CORONAVIRUS IMPACT: ADDITIONAL COVERAGE

As a co-founder and managing director of BrandCulture, Eric leads BrandCulture's strategy practice. Across his career, Eric has worked with big and small organizations alike to put their respective best feet forward through strategic branding, naming, print and digital media.

Prior to BrandCulture, Eric served in a variety of client- and agency-side executive positions, including Head of Corporate Affairs and Head of Strategic Marketing for LRN Corporation and Senior Vice President at global branding and interactive media consultancy Siegel + Gale. Earlier, Eric was an attorney with Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati in Palo Alto, where he specialized in representing technology clients.

Eric is an honors graduate of Harvard Law School, holds Bachelor's and Master's degrees from Stanford University where he was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. He also studied at St. Catherine's College, Oxford and the University of Urbino in Italy.

Jon is a pioneer in wedding the disciplines of strategic branding and culture development united in Shared Purpose. From the time he had the prescience to purchase the domain "BrandCulture.com" back in the last Millennium, Jon cultivated the idea of forming a new kind of agency that integrates brand and organizational development as the flip sides of the same coin. With BrandCulture now in its second decade, Jon takes singular satisfaction in finding that the world has, at long last, come around to his point of view.

Jon has previously held senior strategic and business development roles within Wolfgang Puck, Siegel + Gale, Imagination and Caribiner International, where his clients have included BMW, BEA Systems, Ford, The Coca-Cola Company, Holiday Inn Worldwide, Jiffy Lube, Lexus, Motorola, Philips Electronics and other global organizations.

Jon serves on the board of the Michael Hoefflin Foundation and holds a BS in Finance from the University of Wisconsin La Crosse and an MS in Real Estate and Urban Affairs from J. Mack Robinson College of Business at Georgia State University.

Dr. Laura Hambley Lovett is an organizational psychologist, keynote speaker and thought leader on the evolution of work who is based in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. 

The isolation that comes with being separated from a communal workplace has made many employees question how dedicated they are to their employers, according to lawyers for whistleblowers and academics. What’s more, people feel emboldened to speak out when managers and co-workers aren’t peering over their shoulders.

SEC building with official seal
The Securities and Exchange Commission headquarters in Washington, D.C.
Joshua Roberts/Bloomberg

“You’re not being observed at the photocopy machine when you’re working from home,” said Jordan Thomas, a former SEC official who helped set up the agency’s whistleblower program a decade ago. “It’s never been easier to record a meeting when you can do it from your dining room table,” added Thomas, who now represents tipsters as an attorney at Labaton Sucharow in Washington.

Adam Waytz, a psychologist and professor at Northwestern University’s Kellogg School of Management, agrees.

“When you feel disconnected from work, you feel more comfortable speaking up,” said Waytz, who has studied the motivations of whistleblowers.

Massive award

Intended or not, the SEC itself has played a big role in encouraging informants to come forward by showing how lucrative whistleblowing can be. Since the pandemic hit the U.S., the agency has paid out some $330 million in awards, including an eye-popping $114 million to a single tipster in October. While the payments are tied to SEC investigations that almost certainly predate coronavirus, the amount of money going out the door is unprecedented in the decade since the regulator started its whistleblower program.

For corporations, the rise in tips risks triggering a consequence from work from home that will last long after employees return to the office. Even if few of the tips lead to SEC enforcement cases, companies could still be dealing with years of compliance distractions as the agency launches investigations, subpoenas documents and grills senior executives.

“Corporations and their lawyers are acutely aware of the fact that tips are flooding in and that whistleblower awards have ballooned,” said Joseph Grundfest, a former SEC commissioner who’s now a law professor at Stanford University. “You pay whistleblowers more than $100 million, you’re going to get more whistleblowers.”

The SEC gained authority to pay whistleblowers as part of the 2010 Dodd-Frank Act after lawmakers assailed the agency for missing signs of corporate wrongdoing that were later found to have laid the groundwork for the 2008 financial crisis. Another massive black eye was the regulator’s failure to catch Bernard Madoff’s Ponzi scheme despite repeated warnings from whistleblower Harry Markopolos.

Under the program, tipsters can receive financial awards if they voluntarily provide unique information that results in an enforcement action. Payouts can range from 10 percent to 30 percent of the money collected in cases where sanctions exceed $1 million. Awards are paid from a fund set up by Congress — not money owed to harmed investors.

Leveraging whistleblowers has become one of the SEC’s most potent tools for rooting out financial crime, despite the fact that most of the tips the SEC receives don’t lead to enforcement cases. Information has come from more than 100 countries, with whistleblowers providing evidence such as texts, emails and recorded calls.

Altered voices

The SEC never discloses the names of whistleblowers and what cases were brought with their help. Agency officials sometimes don’t even know the identity of tipsters. Thomas, the whistleblower attorney, has gone so far as to use voice-changing technology to disguise clients’ genders on conference calls with the SEC.

About $737 million has been paid to 133 individuals since the SEC issued its first payment in 2012, with most tipsters waiting months or even years after the agency wraps up its investigations to get their awards. Part of the reason payouts have quickened recently is that the SEC has streamlined its process so that enforcement lawyers who work with tipsters can actively vouch for how crucial their help was.

Discussing the dramatic jumps in tips since the start of the pandemic, then SEC Enforcement Director Stephanie Avakian said Dec. 3 that it’s too soon to assess the quality of the information the agency is receiving. She credited the huge awards that the SEC paid out last year as an important factor in encouraging whistle-blowing.

“Making more awards — certainly larger awards — all those things do go toward incentivizing whistle-blowers to come forward,” Avakian, who left the SEC last month, said at an event hosted by the American Conference Institute.

Overwhelmed regulators

Grundfest, the Stanford Law professor, just hopes the SEC doesn’t get overwhelmed.

“The problem is that they’re being flooded with tips and don’t have a robust mechanism for separating the wheat from the chaff,” he said.

In recent months, the SEC has received reports on possible financial-disclosure violations and the mismarking of assets. The coronavirus’ impact on businesses has also triggered allegations of wrongdoing, as companies have a responsibility under SEC rules to be truthful about how the pandemic is affecting their bottom lines.

“It’s very convenient for management to blame COVID for underperformance,” said Howard Schilit, author of “Financial Shenanigans: How to Detect Accounting Gimmicks & Fraud in Financial Reports.” “It becomes an alibi for a company’s problems.”

— With assistance from Tom Schoenberg