![]() The case addresses the False Claims Act (“FCA”) retaliation actions filed by Jason Mann against his former employer, Heckler and Koch Defense, Inc. Mann spoke up on Weber’s fraudulent attempts, and as a result he was placed on administrative leave and then his employment was terminated. It wasn’t long after the Secret Service commenced utilization of HKD’s firearm that complaints of deficiencies were brought up, and evidently, the HK-416 rifles were rejected. In addition to that, Mann claims that despite the concerns of several employees, including Mann himself, Weber went through unregulated, back-channels to land this firearm into the hands of the Secret Service. Mann accused Wayne Weber, his supervisor, of committing fraud by intentionally submitting a bid for a firearm that did not conform to the Secret Service’s requirements. (“HKD”) for alleged attempts to defraud the U.S. In the Spring of 2008, Jason Mann blew the whistle on the firearms company Heckler and Koch Defense Inc.
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