About Simon
Simon Fischer has focused his exercise on False Claims Act litigation on behalf of whistleblowers in health care, pharmaceutical, customs obligation and government contracts qui tam cases.
Mr. Fischer interned in the Affirmative Civil Enforcement unit on the U.S. Lawyer’s Office for the District of Massachusetts, mainly on False Claims Act instances. He also interned for the Honorable Bruce Selya of the First Circuit Court of Appeals, in addition to Oxfam America, the Suffolk County District Lawyer’s Office, and Altshuler Berzon LLP. Prior to regulation college, Mr. Fischer worked for the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and the Joint Improvised Explosive Device Defeat Organization where he helped oversee over $four hundred million in government contracts.
Mr. Fischer acquired his law diploma from Northeastern University School of Law, in which he become involved in the school’s Prisoners’ Rights Clinic, drafting parole hearing memoranda and arguing complex parole hearings for Massachusetts prisoners serving life sentences. He is a graduate of the Boston Latin School and received his B.A. in Political Science from the University of Vermont. Mr. Fischer received his Masters in Sustainable International Development from the Brandeis Heller School for Social Policy and Management.
Mr. Fischer interned in the Affirmative Civil Enforcement unit on the U.S. Lawyer’s Office for the District of Massachusetts, mainly on False Claims Act instances. He also interned for the Honorable Bruce Selya of the First Circuit Court of Appeals, in addition to Oxfam America, the Suffolk County District Lawyer’s Office, and Altshuler Berzon LLP. Prior to regulation college, Mr. Fischer worked for the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and the Joint Improvised Explosive Device Defeat Organization where he helped oversee over $four hundred million in government contracts.
Mr. Fischer acquired his law diploma from Northeastern University School of Law, in which he become involved in the school’s Prisoners’ Rights Clinic, drafting parole hearing memoranda and arguing complex parole hearings for Massachusetts prisoners serving life sentences. He is a graduate of the Boston Latin School and received his B.A. in Political Science from the University of Vermont. Mr. Fischer received his Masters in Sustainable International Development from the Brandeis Heller School for Social Policy and Management.