WASHINGTON, May 4, 2018 /PRNewswire/ -- The Wall Street Fraud Watchdog says, "We are urging a corporate manager at a Fortune 500 company to call us anytime at 866-714-6466 if they have proof their CEO has engaged in a cover up to protect shareholder value. The SEC has an amazing whistleblower program for corporate insiders who possess this type of information and the rewards for this type of information can be in the millions if the cover up is severe enough. The typical types of cover up we are referring to involve a company not disclosing a huge liability, a major project failure, creative accounting on a big miss on earnings, or any other type of extremely negative news." http://WallStreetFraudWatchdog.Com
To be properly insulated we are urging a corporate whistleblower like this to not call the SEC. Any public revelation of information including to the government could eliminate a whistleblower's possible reward. A whistleblower needs very good lawyers to insulate them from the government and the Wall Street Fraud Watchdog can make that happen.
"If an employee has information about a Fortune 500 Company misleading or not being honest about serious issues that would impact a publicly traded company's price per share value-please call the Wall Street Fraud Watchdog anytime at 800-714-0303 for a conversation about whistleblower reward potential. The most amazing thing about the SEC whistleblower program is the whistleblower may be able to remain anonymous." http://WallStreetFraudWatchdog.Com
The types of Fortune 500 company whistleblowers the Wall Street Fraud Watchdog would like to hear from include:
- A manager with proof a bank, insurance company or financial institution is intentionally gouging their customers with ridiculous fees-that if made public would erode public trust and cause numerous lawsuits.
- A drug maker that knows one of their pharmaceutical product is either killing people or the product has severe undisclosed side effects.
- A home builder or real estate investment trust that is misrepresenting their profitability or the number of units being sold or rented.
- A defense contractor grossly overbilling the Department of Defense for logistics, food services, fuel, or transportation costs.
- An insurance company that is colluding with other insurance companies to fix prices in a specific state or on a regional basis.
- A technology company that is misrepresenting the quality of their products.
- A cable TV and Internet provider that is colluding with other cable companies to fix prices in a state or region.
According to the Wall Street Fraud Watchdog, "If you possess this type of information and you are an original source-in other words this information has not yet been made public please call us at 866-714-6466 and lets to figure out the value of your information. Your call will be strictly confidential. Why sit on a potentially winning lotto ticket without ever knowing what it might have been worth?" http://WallStreetFraudWatchdog.Com
For attribution please refer to a recent SEC Whistleblower reward: https://www.sec.gov/news/pressrelease/2017-27.html.
Contact:
Thomas Martin
866-714-6466
SOURCE Wall Street Fraud Watchdog
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