Facing a qui tam or False Claims Act case in Downtown San Diego? Former federal prosecutor John D. Kirby defends companies and individuals in whistleblower-initiated federal cases.
Federal CourtQui Tam DefenseSan Diego CountyFormer Federal Prosecutor25+ Years
U.S. District Court — Southern District of California
333 West Broadway, San Diego, CA 92101
Federal cases for San Diego & Imperial Counties
Judges: District Judges: Dana M. Sabraw (Chief), Cynthia A. Bashant, Cathy Ann Bencivengo, Michael M. Anello, Janis L. Sammartino, Jeffrey T. Miller, Thomas J. Whelan, M. James Lorenz, Barry Ted Moskowitz, Marilyn L. Huff, Roger T. Benitez, William Q. Hayes, Anthony J. Battaglia, Gonzalo P. Curiel, Jinsook Ohta, Linda Lopez, Ruth Bermudez Montenegro, Robert S. Huie, Todd W. Robinson
This courthouse handles all federal criminal cases originating in San Diego and Imperial Counties, including major drug trafficking, cross-border smuggling, and white collar cases. High-profile cases include United States v. Javier Arellano-Felix (cartel RICO) and United States v. Elizabeth Holmes (Theranos — related proceedings).
Qui Tam Defense Practice Areas — Downtown San Diego
White Collar Crime
Fraud, embezzlement, insider trading, securities violations, public corruption
Drug Crimes
Federal trafficking, conspiracy, manufacturing, possession with intent to distribute
2255 motions, direct appeals to the Ninth Circuit, post-conviction relief
Healthcare Fraud
Medicare/Medicaid fraud, false claims, anti-kickback statute, Stark law violations
PPP & COVID Fraud
PPP loan fraud, EIDL fraud, pandemic relief program investigations
Qui Tam Defense in Downtown San Diego — What You Need to Know
How does hiring a Qui Tam defense attorney in Downtown San Diego differ from hiring one in a smaller city?
In Downtown San Diego, your case lands at the U.S. District Court — Southern District of California on West Broadway, a courthouse notorious for its heavy docket of cross-border fraud cases tied to Tijuana trade. A local attorney knows that Judge Michael M. Anello’s chambers often impose strict sealing orders on qui tam whistleblower complaints, requiring immediate procedural precision that out-of-town counsel may miss.
If I live in Downtown San Diego and face a False Claims Act investigation, why should I hire a lawyer familiar with the Southern District’s local rules?
The Southern District’s Local Civil Rule 40.1 governs case assignment here, and the courthouse at 333 West Broadway frequently rotates qui tam cases to judges with deep experience in cross-border healthcare fraud—a common issue given San Diego’s proximity to Mexican medical suppliers. A lawyer who has litigated at this courthouse can exploit these local assignment patterns to negotiate pre-filing resolutions before the government intervenes.
What unique risks do Downtown San Diego whistleblowers face that require a specialized qui tam defense?
Because the Southern District prosecutes high-volume customs violations from the San Ysidro port of entry, your qui tam case might involve alleged underreporting of imported goods—a charge that could trigger parallel criminal smuggling investigations by the U.S. Attorney’s Office in the same building. An experienced Downtown defense attorney knows to immediately file a sealed response under Local Rule 7.1 to prevent your cooperation from being used against you in a separate drug-trafficking probe.
Why Local Counsel Matters for Federal Cases in Downtown San Diego
The U.S. District Court — Southern District of California operates under its own local rules, its own judges, and its own assigned federal prosecutors. An attorney who regularly practices in this courthouse understands how specific judges handle suppression motions, what the assigned AUSA typically offers in plea negotiations, and what sentencing outcomes are realistic for cases from the Downtown San Diego area. Do not hire a general practitioner who will be learning the federal system at your expense — your freedom deserves experienced representation that knows this courthouse.
For full practice area coverage — white collar crime, drug crimes, RICO, money laundering, tax evasion, healthcare fraud, PPP fraud, and federal appeals: