| Reward | 15–30% of recovery |
|---|---|
| Jurisdiction | Connecticut |
| Administered by | Connecticut Attorney General |
| Legal authority | Conn. Gen. Stat. § 4-274 et seq. (expanded by P.A. 23-129) |
| Fraud covered | State & local government funds, Healthcare & Medicare/Medicaid |
| Eligibility / shares | 15–25% intervened; 25–30% declined. Covers ALL claims for state money or property. |
| Anonymous filing | No — Filed under seal initially. |
| Attorney | Required. Qui tam suits effectively require counsel. |
| Status | Active — recently expanded. |
Key takeaways
- Whistleblowers can receive 15–30% of recovery.
- Administered by Connecticut Attorney General.
- Filed under seal initially.
- An attorney is effectively required (contingency — no upfront cost).
- 15–25% intervened; 25–30% declined. Covers ALL claims for state money or property.
How to report and claim your reward
- Retain a whistleblower attorney
- File a qui tam complaint under seal
- Serve the Connecticut Attorney General
Track record
Expanded from Medicaid-only to all state funds effective July 1, 2023.
Good to know
Tax fraud excluded. Many older law-firm charts still show CT as healthcare-only; that is outdated.
Anonymity: Filed under seal initially.
Should you talk to a whistleblower attorney first?
For this program, yes — qui tam suits effectively require counsel.
Statistically, represented whistleblowers recover awards far more often than unrepresented ones, and reporting through the wrong channel — or second — can forfeit your reward entirely. Because whistleblower attorneys work on contingency, a consultation costs nothing.
Last verified: July 4, 2026 against official government sources. Program rules change — always confirm on the official site before filing.