          United States Court of Appeals
                       For the First Circuit


No. 18-1487

 UNITED STATES, ex rel. JAMES BANIGAN and RICHARD TEMPLIN; STATE
     OF FLORIDA, STATE OF ILLINOIS, STATE OF INDIANA, STATE OF
   LOUISIANA, COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS, STATE OF MICHIGAN,
    STATE OF NEW MEXICO, STATE OF NEW YORK, STATE OF TENNESSEE,
      STATE OF TEXAS, COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA, STATE OF NORTH
        CAROLINA, ex rel. JAMES BANIGAN and RICHARD TEMPLIN,

                      Plaintiffs, Appellants,

  STATE OF CALIFORNIA, STATE OF COLORADO, STATE OF CONNECTICUT,
STATE OF DELAWARE, DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, STATE OF GEORGIA, STATE
    OF HAWAII, STATE OF MARYLAND, STATE OF MINNESOTA, STATE OF
 MONTANA, STATE OF NEVADA, STATE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE, STATE OF NEW
    JERSEY, STATE OF OKLAHOMA, STATE OF RHODE ISLAND, STATE OF
  WISCONSIN, CITY OF CHICAGO, ex rel. JAMES BANIGAN and RICHARD
                             TEMPLIN,

                            Plaintiffs,

                                 v.

                         PHARMERICA, INC.,

                        Defendant, Appellee,

 OMNICARE, INC.; ORGANON PHARMACEUTICALS USA, INC.; ORGANON USA,
 INC.; SCHERING PLOUGH CORP.; AKZO NOBEL NV.; MERCK & CO., INC.;
      ORGANON BIOSCIENCES N.V.; ORGANON INTERNATIONAL, INC.,

                            Defendants.


          APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
                FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

              [Hon. Rya W. Zobel, U.S. District Judge]
                              Before

                  Torruella, Lipez, and Kayatta,
                          Circuit Judges


     Zenobia Harris Bivens and Michael Hurta, with whom Joel M.
Androphy, Berg & Androphy, Michael E. Mone, Jr., Patricia L. Kelly,
and Esdaile, Barrett, Jacobs & Mone were on brief, for appellants.
     Benjamin M. McGovern, with whom James D. Smeallie, Michael
Manthei, and Holland & Knight LLP were on brief, for appellee.


                        February 19, 2020
           LIPEZ, Circuit Judge.             James Banigan and Richard Templin

(collectively, "relators") brought this qui tam action under the

False Claims Act ("FCA") and several of its state law equivalents

alleging   that        PharMerica,    Inc.     ("PharMerica")     defrauded    the

government by participating in a Medicaid scheme that rewarded it

financially      for    incentivizing        physicians   to   change    patients'

prescriptions to the drug manufacturer Organon's antidepressant

medications. The district court dismissed the relators' FCA action

under the public disclosure bar, which excludes from the subject

matter jurisdiction of federal courts qui tam actions that are

"based upon the public disclosure of allegations or transactions"

in   a   civil     "hearing,"        among     other   sources.         31   U.S.C.

§ 3730(e)(4)(A) (2006).1

           Although we share the district court's view that an

earlier FCA action involving the same scheme triggers the public

disclosure bar, we conclude, contrary to the district court, that

Banigan falls within an exception to that bar as an "original


     1 The public disclosure bar was jurisdictional in nature until
the FCA was amended through the Patient Protection and Affordable
Care Act of 2010 ("PPACA").     The PPACA amendments replaced the
prior language of the provision, which provided that "no court
shall have jurisdiction over an action" that is based on a prior
public disclosure, 31 U.S.C. § 3730(e)(4)(A) (2006), with a
mandate that courts "shall dismiss" such an action, see Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act, Pub. L. No. 111-148, 124 Stat.
119, at 901 (2010). The pre-PPACA version of the FCA applies here
because the relators' original complaint was filed in 2007.
Therefore, all citations to the FCA are to the 2006 edition of the
statute.


                                       - 3 -
source of the information." Id. We therefore reverse the district

court's dismissal of the FCA action against PharMerica and remand

for further proceedings.

                                   I.

A.   Legal Background

          "The FCA prohibits the knowing submission of false or

fraudulent claims to the United States."       United States ex rel.

Poteet v. Bahler Med., Inc., 619 F.3d 104, 107 (1st Cir. 2010)

(citing 31 U.S.C. § 3729(a)).     The relators' FCA claims are based

on PharMerica's alleged violations of the Anti-Kickback Statute

("AKS"), which prohibits the solicitation or receipt of "any

remuneration   (including   any   kickback,   bribe,   or   rebate)"   in

exchange for purchasing or ordering any good or item "for which

payment may be made in whole or in part under a Federal health

care program."       42 U.S.C. § 1320a-7b(b)(1)(B).         The AKS was

designed to prevent medical providers from making decisions based

on improper financial incentives rather than medical necessity and

to ensure that federal health care programs do not bear the costs

of such decisions.    See United States v. Patel, 778 F.3d 607, 612

(7th Cir. 2015).   The AKS was amended in 2010 "to create an express

link to the FCA," Guilfoile v. Shields, 913 F.3d 178, 189 (1st

Cir. 2019), but the courts had already recognized that "liability

under the False Claims Act can be predicated on a violation of the

Anti-Kickback Statute."     United States ex rel. Westmoreland v.


                                  - 4 -
Amgen, Inc., 812 F. Supp. 2d 39, 54 (D. Mass. 2011) (collecting

cases).

              When a relator brings a qui tam action on behalf of the

government, the United States is entitled, but not required, to

intervene and take over the prosecution of the case.                      31 U.S.C.

§ 3730(b)(2). If the government declines to intervene, the relator

has the right to proceed with the suit on the government's behalf.

Id. § 3730(c)(3).          Whether the government intervenes or not, the

relator   is    usually      entitled    to   receive    a    percentage    of   any

settlement or any damages that are awarded.              Id. § 3730(d)(1)-(2).

              The   public    disclosure      bar   is   designed     to    prevent

opportunistic relators enticed by the financial incentives that

the FCA provides "from bringing parasitic qui tam actions," see

Poteet, 619 F.3d at 107, that is, suits that are "based upon the

public disclosure of allegations or transactions in," as relevant

here, a civil "hearing."2            31 U.S.C. § 3730(e)(4)(A).           A lawsuit

is   "based    upon"   a     prior   public     disclosure     if   the   relator's

allegations are "substantially similar to" the information already

in the public domain.           United States ex rel. Ondis v. City of

Woonsocket, 587 F.3d 49, 58 (1st Cir. 2009).                 The statute includes


      2"[A]s used in the statute, 'hearing' is synonymous with
'proceeding.'"  Poteet, 619 F.3d at 113.   "[A] disclosure in a
civil complaint is a disclosure in a civil proceeding" and thus
constitutes a public disclosure from a statutorily enumerated
source. Id.



                                        - 5 -
an exception to the jurisdictional bar, however, when "the person

bringing the action is an original source" who has "direct and

independent knowledge of the information on which the allegations

are based."   Id. § 3730(e)(4)(A)-(B).    Thus, the court retains

jurisdiction over the qui tam action if the relator is an original

source, even though the allegations are substantially similar to

the information revealed in the prior public disclosure.

B.   Factual Background

     1. Facts Alleged by Relators3

          PharMerica is one of the largest long-term care pharmacy

companies in the United States, providing pharmacy supplies and

services to nursing homes and other facilities. Most nursing homes

contract with long-term care pharmacy companies like PharMerica

which, in turn, contract with pharmaceutical companies4 to purchase

the medications that will be dispensed to nursing home residents.




     3 We draw these facts from the relators' third amended
complaint and the exhibits that accompany it. See Rockwell Int'l
Corp. v. United States, 549 U.S. 457, 473 (2007) (holding that the
term "allegations" as used in § 3730(e)(4) "is not limited to the
allegations in the original complaint" and "includes (at a minimum)
the allegations in the original complaint as amended" (emphasis in
original)); see also United States ex rel. Cunningham v. Millennium
Labs. of Cal., Inc., 713 F.3d 662, 670-71 (1st Cir. 2013)
(comparing allegations "in the original complaint and retained in
the amended complaint" to prior public disclosure).

     4 The long-term care pharmacy companies also contract with
larger long-term care buying groups or group purchasing
organizations,   which    negotiate contracts   on  behalf   of
pharmaceutical companies.


                              - 6 -
Nursing homes also often have a dedicated physician who works

closely with the in-house nurses and pharmacy staff to provide

medical care to residents.           This structure means that long-term

care pharmacy companies and their pharmacists exert considerable

influence over the choice of medications used in nursing homes.

           The    relators     are     both    former   employees     of   the

pharmaceutical company Organon, which manufactures antidepressants

called Remeron Tablet and Remeron SolTab.               Remeron Tablet was

patented, developed, and put on the market first.            The patent for

Remeron Tablet expired in 1998, and generic manufacturers were

expected   to    enter   the   market    in    2001.    To   stymie   generic

competition, Organon developed Remeron SolTab -- a disintegrating

tablet that is a "variant" form of Remeron Tablet -- and launched

it in 2001. Because Remeron SolTab was not considered "equivalent"

to Remeron Tablet, generic competitors were unable to manufacture

and market a similar product to Remeron SolTab.

           For years, Organon offered only modest discounts of

about 2% on its medications as incentives when contracting with

long-term care pharmacy companies.            The relators acknowledge that

those incentives arguably fall within a limited exception to the

AKS for fixed discounts given to group purchasing organizations.

See 42 U.S.C. § 1320a-7b(b)(3)(C). Between 1999 and 2000, however,

Organon began offering contract terms that included greater, non-

exempt discounts on Remeron Tablet in an effort to increase its


                                     - 7 -
market share.   Those contracts included an 8% to 14.8% "ramp-up"

discount for the first five months of the contract term, followed

by a discount of anywhere between 8% and 15% that depended upon

the market share held by Remeron Tablet (referred to as a market-

share discount).   Those deals incentivized long-term care pharmacy

companies to switch prescriptions from other drugs to Remeron

Tablet, thereby boosting its market share and the discount awarded

by Organon to the companies.    Making that switch on the basis of

profit potential rather than the "medical propriety" of a given

drug, the relators allege, violates the AKS.

          The switch from a medication prescribed by the patient's

doctor to a medication preferred by the pharmacy is referred to as

"therapeutic interchange," and it can be accomplished in several

ways.   The pharmacy can try to persuade physicians to write new

prescriptions to move a patient to the preferred drug by touting

its supposed advantages.   Or the pharmacy can use a device called

an "NDC lock," which sets up the pharmacy's computer system so

that only the preferred drug may be dispensed by the pharmacist.

When an NDC lock blocks a drug from being dispensed, the pharmacist

must quickly obtain from the physician a new prescription for that

patient for a preferred drug that is not blocked.   Or the pharmacy

can ask physicians to sign broader agreements that cede to the

pharmacist "their authority to choose what drug will be prescribed

within a particular class."


                               - 8 -
                PharMerica   entered   into     a    series     of   contracts   with

Organon, beginning in 1999 and lasting until 2005, that included

incentives for PharMerica to purchase Remeron Tablet and Remeron

SolTab and to engage in therapeutic interchange.                           The first

iteration of the contract included only a "ramp-up" discount

followed by a market-share discount.                  Then, in 2000, PharMerica

agreed     to    implement   a   therapeutic        interchange       program.    Its

contract with Organon provided for a "ramp-up" discount, a market

share discount, a "therapeutic interchange bonus" for switching

prescriptions for other companies' antidepressants to Remeron

Tablet or Remeron SolTab, and a "conversion rebate" for changing

Remeron Tablet prescriptions to Remeron SolTab.                      Eventually, all

of   the   discounts     were    changed   to       rebates.5        Through   several




      5In 1999, many states determined the Medicaid reimbursement
rate for medications based on the drug's "Average Wholesale Price"
("AWP"). See Grant Bagley et al., Accurate Drug Price Reporting:
A Modest Proposal, 19 No. 11 Andrews Pharmaceutical Litig. Rep. 13
(Jan. 2004). "AWPs are published by private reporting services"
and are "commonly understood as a 'sticker price' with little
connection to market prices." Id. Thus, the AWP did not match
the "actual acquisition cost," i.e., the amount a company actually
paid, to purchase a medication from a drug manufacturer. Around
2001, states began changing their Medicaid reimbursement systems
to calculate reimbursement based upon the actual acquisition cost
rather than AWP. Under that system, companies must often submit
their purchase invoices to receive reimbursement.           Because
discounts are reflected in purchase invoices, long-term care
pharmacy companies could not hide those financial incentives when
seeking Medicaid reimbursement. The change, therefore, prompted
Organon to start offering rebates -- which are not reflected in
purchase invoices because they are "calculated only after the fact"
-- instead of discounts.


                                       - 9 -
contract amendments, Organon continued to provide ramp-up rebates,

market-share    rebates,    conversion     rebates,    and       therapeutic

interchange bonuses to PharMerica in various forms until the end

of 2005.

           Two executives at Organon, Carroll McKenna and John

Maddox, were primarily responsible for coordinating Organon's

contracts with long-term care pharmacy companies.            Together they

devised the business plan that included the discounts and rebates

described above.     The relators' complaint refers to McKenna and

Maddox's plan to influence long-term care pharmacy companies to

obtain prescriptions for Remeron Tablet and Remeron SolTab based

on those financial incentives, rather than medical necessity, as

the "Medicaid scheme." Between 1999 and 2005, Banigan was a member

of the leadership team within the same department as McKenna and

Maddox, but he was not involved with sales or contract negotiations

with long-term care pharmacy companies.

           Nevertheless, word of the Medicaid scheme made its way

to   Banigan.   In   the   middle   of   2000,   Banigan   was    among   the

recipients of an email from Maddox with the subject line "Cost of

Antidepressants in Nursing Homes," in which Maddox first proposed

marketing Organon's antidepressants to long-term care pharmacy

companies by highlighting the potential for those companies to

profit if they switched patients to Organon's medications.                At

that time, Medicaid reimbursement was based on AWP, which could be


                                - 10 -
higher than the amount the company actually paid.             The discounted

prices that Organon offered to long-term care pharmacies lowered

their    acquisition    cost.     If   the    AWP   was   higher   than   that

acquisition cost, the companies would profit from the Medicaid

reimbursement.

            In   his   email,   Maddox   explained     that   this   "spread"

between the AWP and the discounted price long-term care pharmacy

companies paid for Organon's antidepressants was "an advantage"

for Organon "that many pharmacists are not looking at."               A year

and a half later, in late 2001, Maddox emailed Banigan and another

Organon employee asking for their input about a proposal to develop

two contracts -- one version that provided only an "upfront

discount" and the other a "minimal" upfront discount followed by

rebates -- to use in different states depending upon how they

calculated Medicaid reimbursement.           This proposal appears to mark

the beginning of the transition from discounts to rebates in

Organon's contracts, as described above.            See supra note 5.

            Organon underwent some changes in management in 2003,

and concern about job stability percolated through the leadership

ranks.    Against that backdrop, both McKenna and Maddox approached

Banigan in late 2003 and talked with him about the Medicaid scheme.

Banigan first spoke with McKenna, who told him about "marketing

materials and other communications" that were used to inform

"customers how to maximize their profits by influencing providers


                                  - 11 -
to prescribe Remeron."       McKenna also "explained that the Marketing

Department conspired with [the] sales team to market Remeron almost

purely based on profit potential."              He told Banigan that he

considered this information to be his "insurance policy" that he

could use against Organon if the company tried to force him out.

The following day, Banigan had a similar conversation with Maddox,

who also told Banigan about the marketing materials.

             Several years went by before Banigan heard anything else

about the Medicaid scheme.          In 2006, Banigan transferred to a

different position in a different department within Organon, and

Templin was hired for a job in Banigan's former department.               Like

Banigan, Templin soon heard about the existence of the scheme from

one of its creators.        Maddox "divulged" to Templin "the existence

of a 'non-compliant' program that provided him with a 'get-out-

of-jail-free card with Organon.'"             After his conversation with

Maddox, Templin decided to investigate on his own what Maddox told

him.   Over the next few months, Templin "learned that the program

[developed    by   Maddox    and   McKenna]   centered   on   marketing    the

'opportunity to profit' in the long-term care market," a fact which

McKenna later confirmed in a conversation with Templin.

             With this information in hand, Templin sought Banigan

out in April 2007 to see if he knew about the scheme.               Banigan

confirmed that he did and, after speaking with Templin, decided to

conduct his own investigation to see if he could turn up copies of


                                    - 12 -
the marketing materials that McKenna and Maddox had described to

him.   Banigan eventually obtained original copies of the marketing

materials from a former Remeron brand director who had kept the

materials at his home.           The materials confirmed "how blatantly

Organon had promoted the 'opportunity to profit'" with incentives

and kickbacks.       Seeking further confirmation, Templin and Banigan

then located the contracts between Organon and its largest long-

term care pharmacy customers, "and found that the contracts' terms

evidenced the same types of incentives reflected in the promotional

materials."

             The    relators'    complaint      alleges    that,    despite    this

pervasive    Medicaid        scheme,   PharMerica    falsely       certified   its

compliance with state and federal laws applicable to the Medicaid

program, including the AKS, each time it submitted a claim for

reimbursement for Remeron Tablet and Remeron SolTab.

       2. Earlier Qui Tam Action Against PharMerica

             In late 2002, William St. John LaCorte, M.D., filed a

qui tam action under the FCA against PharMerica and its parent

company in federal district court in Louisiana.                     Compl. at 1,

United States ex rel. LaCorte v. AmerisourceBergen Corp., No. 02-

3168 (E.D. La. Oct. 18, 2002), 2002 WL 32943919 (hereinafter

"Amerisource").        A doctor who treated patients in hospitals and

nursing homes in and around New Orleans, LaCorte alleged that

PharMerica         entered     into     contracts         with     pharmaceutical


                                       - 13 -
manufacturers    under   which    PharMerica   received   "financial

inducements in the form of discounts, remuneration, rebates, or

kickbacks" in exchange for using its "Select Formulary"6 to boost

the market share of the manufacturers' drugs by substituting them

for the drugs prescribed by patients' physicians.

           LaCorte's FCA claims were premised on violations of

multiple state and federal statutes, including the AKS.        Like

Banigan and Templin, LaCorte alleged that participants in Medicaid

programs must certify compliance with the requirements of state

and federal law for the services they provide when they seek

reimbursement for those services.    LaCorte alleged that PharMerica

violated the AKS by accepting "illegal remuneration and kickbacks"

and then caused hospitals and nursing homes where it operated to

submit false claims for reimbursement by concealing its non-

compliance with the AKS and other state and federal laws.

           The Amerisource complaint provides a non-exhaustive list

of PharMerica's preferred drugs, including "Remeron."7       Remeron

SolTab is identified as a preferred drug in a copy of PharMerica's

Select Formulary from 2003, which is attached as an exhibit to

both the first and second amended complaints.       LaCorte alleged




     6   The Select Formulary is PharMerica's list of preferred
drugs.

     7 The parties to this appeal use "Remeron" and "Remeron
Tablet" interchangeably.


                                 - 14 -
that PharMerica caused physicians' prescriptions to be changed to

Select Formulary drugs by either making the change without a

physician's knowledge or consent or by obtaining the physician's

consent     by   providing   the   physician    with   information     that

misrepresented the "preferred" drug's safety, effectiveness, and

cost savings.      The case ultimately settled and was dismissed by

stipulation of the parties in 2008.

C.   Procedural Background

            On September 13, 2007, Banigan and Templin filed their

qui tam action under seal against Organon, PharMerica, and other

companies    involved   in   the   fraudulent   scheme   that   they   had

discovered.      After the submission of two amended complaints, the

United States notified the court that it declined to intervene and

the case was unsealed shortly thereafter.       The relators then filed

a third amended complaint.         In 2011, PharMerica and the other

defendants each sought dismissal of the claims against them.           The

district court resolved PharMerica's motion to dismiss in two

separate orders, the first in June 2012 ("2012 Order") and the

second in April 2018 ("2018 Order").

            In the 2012 Order, the district court dismissed the

relators' federal FCA claims against PharMerica under the public

disclosure bar based on the Amerisource lawsuit.8           The district


     8 In addition to the public disclosure bar, the district
court's 2012 Order relied on the first-to-file bar, which precludes


                                   - 15 -
court also dismissed the relators' state FCA claims that were

brought under statutes that mirror the FCA but declined to dismiss

the other state FCA claims pending further briefing from the

parties.

           After the relators filed a motion to reconsider, the

district   court   deferred   decision   on   that   motion,   and   on

PharMerica's motion to dismiss the remaining state law claims,

until the relators' remaining federal FCA claims against other

defendants were resolved.     Between 2014 and 2017, the relators

reached settlements with the other defendants.9       In 2017, after

those defendants had been dismissed, the district court permitted

supplemental briefing on the relators' motion for reconsideration.




a relator's suit if there is already a separate, pending lawsuit
that involves related claims.   See 31 U.S.C. § 3730(b)(5).   In
2015, however, the Supreme Court clarified that "an earlier suit
bars a later suit while the earlier suit remains undecided but
ceases to bar the suit once it is dismissed." Kellogg Brown &
Root Servs., Inc. v. United States ex rel. Carter, 575 U.S. 650,
135 S. Ct. 1970, 1978 (2015). Therefore, as the district court
later noted in its 2018 Order, Amerisource ceased to bar the
relators' qui tam action under the first-to-file bar after the
case was dismissed in 2008.

     9 The relators first entered into a settlement agreement with
Azko Nobel and the "Organon Defendants" -- Organon USA Inc., Merck
& Co., Inc., Schering Plough Corp., Organon Pharmaceuticals USA,
Inc., Organon Biosciences N.V., and Organon International, Inc.
-- and the district court dismissed those defendants on October
27, 2014.   Almost three years later, the relators settled with
Omnicare, Inc., and the district court dismissed it as a defendant
on May 26, 2017.


                               - 16 -
The relators sought reconsideration on multiple grounds, including

the original source exception.

            In   its    2018    Order,    the    district      court       denied    the

relators' motion for reconsideration of the 2012 Order and granted

PharMerica's motion to dismiss the remaining state law claims.

The district court concluded that neither Banigan nor Templin

qualified as an "original source" because neither had direct

knowledge of the information underlying their allegations.                          This

timely appeal followed.

                                         II.

            The relators argue that the public disclosure bar does

not apply to their claims and, alternatively, that they fall within

the original source exception.                 We review a district court's

dismissal for lack of subject matter jurisdiction de novo.                        United

States ex rel. Cunningham v. Millennium Labs. of Cal., Inc., 713

F.3d 662, 669 (1st Cir. 2013).

A.     Public Disclosure Bar

            The public disclosure bar applies when (1) "there has

been   a   prior,   public      disclosure      of   fraud,"    (2)    "that      prior

disclosure of fraud emanated from a source specified in the

statute's public disclosure provision," and (3) "the relator's qui

tam action is 'based upon' that prior disclosure of fraud."

Poteet,    619   F.3d   at     109.   The      relators   focus       on    the    third




                                      - 17 -
requirement, arguing that their qui tam action is not "based upon"

the Amerisource litigation.10

           "[T]he 'based upon' requirement is satisfied when the

relator's allegations are substantially similar to allegations or

transactions already in the public domain at the time he brings

his qui tam action."11       Ondis, 587 F.3d at 58.          Thus, if the

relators' allegations "ultimately target[] the same fraudulent

scheme" that was previously disclosed, "[t]hat is enough to trigger

the   public    disclosure   bar."         Poteet,   619    F.3d    at   115.

Consequently,    "a   complaint   that   targets     a   scheme    previously


      10The relators assert in passing that they dispute the
district court's finding that there was a prior, public disclosure
of fraud sufficient to satisfy the first requirement, but they do
not develop that argument further or otherwise support it. The
argument is therefore waived. See United States v. Zannino, 895
F.2d 1, 17 (1st Cir. 1990)("[I]ssues adverted to in a perfunctory
manner, unaccompanied by some effort at developed argumentation,
are deemed waived."). In any event, the argument has no merit --
the prior disclosures at issue were made in "a civil complaint
filed in court," which "qualifies as a public disclosure." Poteet,
619 F.3d at 111.

      11Although our definition of "based upon" as "substantially
similar to" is not readily reconcilable with the statutory language
of the public disclosure bar, it best "comports with the overall
structure and purpose of the FCA." Ondis, 587 F.3d at 58. As we
explained in Ondis, if we interpreted the public disclosure bar to
require that a relator's allegations actually be derived from a
public disclosure, "the relator's knowledge never could be
independent of that disclosure" and he could never be an original
source. Id. (emphasis in original). Such an interpretation would
"read the 'original source' exception out of the statute,"
contravening the "canon of statutory construction that requires
courts, whenever possible, to give meaning to every word and phrase
contained in the text of a statute." Id.



                                  - 18 -
revealed through public disclosures is barred even if it offers

greater detail about the underlying conduct."                           United States ex

rel. Winkelman v. CVS Caremark Corp., 827 F.3d 201, 210 (1st Cir.

2016).

                   To distance the allegations raised in their complaint

from the allegations disclosed in Amerisource, the relators argue

that they describe "two distinct schemes" -- the "switching scheme"

and the "conversion scheme" -- while the Amerisource relator, "at

best,"       alleged       facts       related   only    to   the   switching    scheme.12

Under        the    relators'        framework,    the      switching   scheme    includes

PharMerica's acceptance of discounts, rebates, and other financial

inducements specifically for switching patients' prescriptions

from competitor manufacturers' drugs to Remeron Tablet.                                The

conversion              scheme,      they    assert,        encompasses     PharMerica's

acceptance          of    those      same   financial       inducements    to    "convert"

prescriptions for one Organon drug, Remeron Tablet, to another,

Remeron SolTab.

                   We    are   not     persuaded     that     the   relators'    complaint

describes two schemes.                 Indeed, the complaint itself refers to the

fraudulent          conduct       as    a   single      "Medicaid    scheme."       Though

PharMerica's contracts with Organon applied different labels to


        12
         At oral argument, counsel for the relators referred to a
single scheme with two components rather than two separate schemes.
Discerning no meaningful difference between the two formulations,
we adopt the nomenclature set forth in the relators' brief.


                                             - 19 -
different financial incentives -- for example, a "therapeutic

interchange bonus" for switching prescriptions for competitor

antidepressants   to    Remeron    Tablet     or   Remeron      SolTab    and   a

"conversion rebate" for changing Remeron Tablet prescriptions to

Remeron SolTab -- those labels are of no legal import.                   The AKS

broadly prohibits the acceptance of "any remuneration (including

any   kickback,   bribe,   or     rebate)"    in   return    for    purchasing

medications that will be paid for under Medicaid.               See 42 U.S.C.

§ 1320a-7b(b)(1) (emphasis added).           Thus, the fraudulent conduct

at the heart of the Medicaid scheme -- the use of financial

incentives to induce PharMerica to persuade or mislead doctors to

prescribe   preferred   antidepressants       --   was    the    same    despite

variations in the kind of remuneration PharMerica received or the

specific drug it substituted.13

            Hence, the Medicaid scheme described in the relators'

complaint is indistinguishable in all material respects from the

fraudulent scheme disclosed in Amerisource.              Both suits revealed

that PharMerica violated the AKS by accepting kickbacks in exchange




      13 The two-scheme formulation and the relators' effort to
distinguish their action from Amerisource on that basis reflects
our decision in Cunningham, which identified three distinct
"aspects" of a fraudulent scheme and found that only two of those
aspects had been previously disclosed. 713 F.3d at 665-66, 675-
76. But as we have said before, "Cunningham turned on the entirely
unremarkable proposition that allegations of fraud distinct from
previous disclosures are not blocked by the public disclosure bar."
Winkelman, 827 F.3d at 210. We do not have that situation here.


                                   - 20 -
for causing prescriptions to be switched to Remeron Tablet and

Remeron SolTab, regardless of the medical propriety of the change,

and then lied to the government about its compliance with the law

to improperly obtain Medicaid reimbursement for the kickback-

tainted medications.

            Persisting in their effort to distinguish their claims

from    those    in   Amerisource,     the    relators      argue     that    their

allegations     encompass   a   longer      period     of   time    and   describe

different and "more aggressive" methods that PharMerica used to

change patients' prescriptions from Remeron Tablet to Remeron

SolTab.     But   providing     "greater      detail    about   the    underlying

conduct" is not enough to avoid the public disclosure bar when the

complaint "targets" the same fraudulent scheme that was revealed

in a prior public disclosure.              See Winkelman, 827 F.3d at 210.

That is precisely the situation that we have here.                  We therefore

conclude that the public disclosure bar applies.

B.     Original Source Exception

            Under the FCA, a court retains jurisdiction over an

action that is based on a prior public disclosure if "the person

bringing the action is an original source of the information."                    31

U.S.C. § 3730(e)(4)(A).         To qualify as an original source, a

relator   must    have   "direct     and    independent     knowledge        of   the

information upon which his own allegations were based."                      Ondis,

587 F.3d at 58-59; see also Rockwell, 549 U.S. at 470-71.                         On


                                     - 21 -
appeal, the parties focus on the "direct" knowledge requirement of

the   statute.      PharMerica    does    not    dispute    the   "independent"

requirement.14

             The FCA provides definitions for only a handful of terms

that appear in the statute, and "direct" is not one of them.                   In

a prior FCA case, we resorted to the dictionary and adopted its

definition     of   "direct"     as   being     "marked    by   absence   of   an

intervening agency, instrumentality, or influence: immediate."

Ondis, 587 F.3d at 59 (quoting Webster's Third New International

Dictionary 640 (2002)).        Employing that definition, we agree that

knowledge based entirely on "research into public records, review

of publicly disclosed materials, or some combination of these

techniques is not direct."        Id.    On the other end of the spectrum,

knowledge obtained from personal observation of a fraudulent act

or    participation    in   it    would    clearly    meet      the   directness

requirement.     Banigan's knowledge falls between those parameters.

             Banigan received two emails from Maddox, one of the two

architects of the fraudulent scheme, in 2000 and 2001, both of

which were suggestive of the scheme but did not include much


      14The relators rely solely on Banigan's original source
status to meet the jurisdictional requirement in § 3730(e)(4) and
do not argue that Templin is an original source.       PharMerica,
therefore,   argues   that   "Templin    cannot   ride   Banigan's
jurisdictional coat-tails" and that we must dismiss all claims
asserted by Templin.      Because Templin does not respond to
PharMerica's position that he cannot continue as a relator, he has
waived any argument to the contrary. See Zannino, 895 F.2d at 17.


                                      - 22 -
detail.   In the first email, Maddox informed his colleagues that

he had hatched a plan to market Remeron Tablet to long-term care

pharmacies by focusing on profit.   In the second, he sought input

about different versions of the contract that Organon was offering

to those companies.    Although the 2000 and 2001 emails lacked

specifics, additional information came in 2003 when Maddox and

McKenna told Banigan about materials that had been developed "to

market Remeron almost purely based upon profit potential." Banigan

obtained the remaining information underlying the relators' claims

through his own investigation, which led him to uncover original

copies of marketing materials as well as the contracts that

reflected the discounts and rebates at the heart of the Medicaid

scheme.

          PharMerica argues that Banigan's knowledge is not direct

because he learned of the Medicaid scheme from McKenna and Maddox.

It emphasizes that Bangian was not involved directly in creating

the scheme, nor did he observe the scheme in operation.   Also, he

did not know about it until it was "winding down" and he did not

conduct his independent investigation until after the scheme had

ended. In short, PharMerica would require a relator to have either

participated in the fraud or observed it in operation to qualify

as an original source and would exclude a relator who discovered




                              - 23 -
the fraud after the fact and brought it to the government's

attention.15

          We disagree with that reading of the statute.   Indeed,

Pharmerica's reading would exclude a relator who is told by

managers at his company that a department he does not work for is

engaging in fraud. See United States ex rel. Saldivar v. Fresenius

Med. Care Holdings, Inc., 841 F.3d 927, 936 (11th Cir. 2016).   In

Saldivar, the relator brought a qui tam action alleging that his

company violated the FCA by billing the government for excess

medication that it had received at no cost after company managers

told him what the billing department was doing.    Id. at 930-31.

The Eleventh Circuit held that he did not qualify as an original




     15 The limitations that PharMerica urges us to adopt track
those employed by the district court, which concluded that Banigan
did not have "direct" knowledge because he did not have
contemporaneous knowledge of the fraud, he did not see any
corroborating documents until more than a year after the scheme
had concluded, and he did not discover those documents in the
regular course of his job duties. A number of circuits disqualify
relators who did not participate in or witness the ongoing fraud.
See, e.g., United States ex rel. Schumann v. Astrazeneca Pharm.
L.P., 769 F.3d 837, 847 (3d Cir. 2014) ("[K]nowledge of a scheme
is not direct when it is gained by reviewing files and discussing
the documents therein with individuals who actually participated
in the memorialized events."); United States ex rel. Newell v.
City of St. Paul, Minn., 728 F.3d 791, 797 (8th Cir. 2013) ("[A]
person who obtains secondhand information from an individual who
has direct knowledge of the alleged fraud does not himself possess
direct knowledge and therefore is not an original source under the
[FCA]." (second alteration in original) (quoting United States ex
rel. Barth v. Ridgedale Elec., Inc., 44 F.3d 699, 703 (8th Cir.
1995)).



                             - 24 -
source because "[b]eing told what another department is doing is

almost    necessarily     not   direct   knowledge   of   that   department's

behavior."     Id. at 936.      We find that result incompatible with a

core purpose of the FCA -- to incentivize disclosures of fraudulent

activity underlying claims for reimbursement from the government.

See S. Rep. No. 99-345, at 23-24 (1986), as reprinted in 1986

U.S.C.C.A.N. 5266, 5288-89.

             Moreover, nothing in the statutory text limits "direct

knowledge"     to    knowledge     gained    from    participation       in   or

observation of the fraud.          The statute requires only that the

person have "direct and independent knowledge of the information

on which the allegations are based," not direct and independent

knowledge     of    the   fraudulent     acts   themselves.       31     U.S.C.

§ 3730(e)(4)(B) (emphasis added); see also Kennard v. Comstock

Res., Inc., 363 F.3d 1039, 1044 (10th Cir. 2004) ("A relator need

not . . . have in his possession knowledge of the actual fraudulent

conduct    itself;   knowledge     underlying   or   supporting    the    fraud

allegation is sufficient." (alteration in original) (quotation

marks omitted)).16


     16 We note that the 2010 amendments to the FCA removed the
word "direct" from the original source exception.      See Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act, Pub. L. No. 111-148, 124 Stat.
119, at 901-02 (2010). The Judiciary Committee's report on the
amendments to the FCA reflects a frustration that court decisions
interpreting the public disclosure bar and original source
provision had created "ambiguities" and "created a chilling effect
on relators coming forward with claims because certain types of


                                    - 25 -
              We   also     decline     to   impose     the     contemporaneousness

requirement that PharMerica urges us to adopt because it likewise

finds no support in the text of the FCA and would only discourage

reports of fraud.           See United States ex rel. Duxbury v. Ortho

Biotech Prods., L.P., 579 F.3d 13, 27 (1st Cir. 2009) (rejecting

a restrictive interpretation of the original source exception that

"did    not   have       textual    support"     and    would    have     discouraged

"productive private enforcement suits").

              Accordingly,         we   readily    conclude        that       Banigan's

knowledge satisfies our definition of "direct" as "immediate."

See    Ondis,      587    F.3d     at   59   (quoting     Webster's       Third    New

International Dictionary 640 (2002)).                  As we explained in Ondis,

"immediate" is shorthand for being "marked by absence of an

intervening agency, instrumentality, or influence."                     Id.    Banigan

was a corporate insider at Organon who learned of the fraudulent

scheme in which his own company and department participated while

he was employed there.17            He gained knowledge of the fraud from

emails and conversations with Maddox and McKenna, the architects




cases cannot survive dismissal."     S. Rep. No. 110-507, at 22
(2008), 2008 WL 4415147. The report explains that "erroneous court
interpretations of the public disclosure bar" and narrow
constructions of "the terms 'direct' and 'independent' under the
original source exception" had led to the dismissal of "real
meritorious cases." Id. at 24.

       17
        We are not suggesting that one must be a corporate insider
to meet the "direct" knowledge requirement.


                                        - 26 -
and   primary   perpetrators   of    the     fraudulent   scheme,   and    from

documents generated as part of the fraudulent scheme that he

obtained through his own investigative efforts.                There is no

"intervening agency, instrumentality, or influence" between these

sources and Banigan's knowledge of the Medicaid scheme.             We do not

think that Congress intended to reward as original sources only

those who participated in the fraud.           Indeed, Banigan would seem

to be the most likely type of person to function as an original

source.   Congress's attempt to preclude parasitic claims need not

preclude claims by whistleblowers.

           As required by the statute, the allegations of fraud in

the complaint are based upon Banigan's direct knowledge.                    The

complaint uses the first Maddox email, sent in 2000, to mark the

moment when the idea to market Remeron Tablet based on profit

potential was born.    It reveals that Banigan's conversations with

Maddox and McKenna, and later with Templin, prompted him to search

for the marketing materials they described to him.              And much of

the detail in the complaint is, in turn, drawn from the internal

Organon documents that Banigan located as the result of that search

-- for example, it lists in detail the various financial incentives

that PharMerica received from Organon over a six-year time span

based on multiple iterations of their purchase agreement.                 These

sources easily meet the statutory requirement -- "direct and




                                    - 27 -
independent knowledge of the information on which the allegations

are based."   31 U.S.C. § 3730(e)(4)(B).18

          We therefore reverse the dismissal of the FCA action,

direct the district court to dismiss Templin as a relator, and

remand for further proceedings.

          So ordered.




     18 As noted, PharMerica does not dispute the "independent"
requirement of the statute.


                              - 28 -
