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Do I Need a Lawyer? Find the Right Attorney for Your Case

We help match your case with the right attorneys based on your situation and where your case should be filed.

You can't file a qui tam case without a lawyer — but the question isn't whether to hire one. It's which one. The wrong attorney is one of the most common reasons strong cases fail or pay less than they should.

Risks of filing without the right counsel

  • Losing your share of the reward entirely
  • Getting the case dismissed for procedural errors
  • Losing priority to another relator who files faster with better counsel
  • Missing strategic decisions about jurisdiction, venue, and intervention

Benefits of filing with the right counsel

  • A case structured to match how DOJ actually evaluates evidence
  • Full protection under anti-retaliation law
  • Strategic venue selection — filing in the right jurisdiction can change the outcome
  • Experience negotiating intervention decisions and settlements

Ready to find out where you stand?

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Finding the right lawyer

The right attorney depends on three things: the type of fraud involved (healthcare, defense, financial services), the jurisdiction where the case should be filed, and whether the firm actually handles qui tam at the federal level. A Medicare fraud case in Texas needs a different team than a defense contractor case in Virginia.

Common mistakes when picking a lawyer

  • Hiring a general employment or personal injury lawyer who doesn't handle whistleblower cases
  • Choosing an attorney in the wrong jurisdiction for where the case should be filed
  • Going with the first firm that returns the call without checking their FCA track record
  • Picking a firm that doesn't have capacity to actually work the case once filed

How TruthArrow helps

  • Evaluate your case and identify its strongest legal theories
  • Identify the right jurisdiction and venue for your specific facts
  • Route your case to experienced whistleblower attorneys who actually handle cases like yours
  • Keep you anonymous while you review offers and decide who to work with

Frequently asked questions

Can I do it myself?
No. Qui tam cases cannot be filed by a self-represented individual — federal courts require counsel. You can report a tip to a government hotline without a lawyer, but that doesn't qualify you for a reward.
Do lawyers take a cut?
Whistleblower attorneys typically work on contingency — they get paid only if the case recovers. Fees come out of the reward share, not out of your pocket. Exact percentages vary, and the right firm will be transparent about them upfront.
Can I use a lawyer in another state?
Often yes. Qui tam cases are filed in federal court, and many top whistleblower firms practice nationally. The right lawyer for your case may not be the closest one — it's the one with experience in your type of fraud and the right federal district.
Do all lawyers handle whistleblower cases?
Absolutely not. Qui tam is a specialized practice area — most lawyers, including many great ones, don't touch it. Always confirm a firm has actual FCA case experience before signing.

Have information about fraud?

Take the quiz or submit your case securely — whichever feels right.