United States v. Wells Fargo ( 2019 )


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  •      18‐1746
    United States v. Wells Fargo
    United States Court of Appeals
    for the Second Circuit
    _______________
    AUGUST TERM, 2018
    (Argued: April 4, 2019               Decided: November 21, 2019)
    Docket No. 18‐1746
    _______________
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA EX REL. ROBERT KRAUS AND PAUL BISHOP,
    Plaintiffs‐Appellants,
    STATE OF NEW YORK, EX REL. PAUL BISHOP, EX REL ROBERT KRAUS, STATE OF
    DELAWARE, EX REL PAUL BISHOP, EX REL ROBERT KRAUS, DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA,
    EX REL PAUL BISHOP, EX REL ROBERT KRAUS, STATE OF FLORIDA, EX REL PAUL
    BISHOP, EX REL ROBERT KRAUS, STATE OF HAWAII, EX REL PAUL BISHOP, EX REL
    ROBERT KRAUS, STATE OF CALIFORNIA, EX REL PAUL BISHOP, EX REL ROBERT
    KRAUS, STATE OF INDIANA, EX REL PAUL BISHOP, EX REL ROBERT KRAUS, STATE OF
    ILLINOIS, EX REL PAUL BISHOP, EX REL ROBERT KRAUS, STATE OF MINNESOTA, EX
    REL PAUL BISHOP, EX REL ROBERT KRAUS, STATE OF NEVADA, EX REL PAUL BISHOP,
    EX REL ROBERT KRAUS, STATE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE, EX REL PAUL BISHOP, EX REL
    ROBERT KRAUS, COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS, EX REL PAUL BISHOP, EX
    REL ROBERT KRAUS, STATE OF NEW MEXICO, EX REL PAUL BISHOP, EX REL ROBERT
    KRAUS, STATE OF MONTANA, EX REL PAUL BISHOP, EX REL ROBERT KRAUS, STATE
    OF NORTH CAROLINA, EX REL PAUL BISHOP, EX REL ROBERT KRAUS, STATE OF NEW
    JERSEY, EX REL PAUL BISHOP, EX REL ROBERT KRAUS, STATE OF OKLAHOMA, EX REL
    PAUL BISHOP, EX REL ROBERT KRAUS, STATE OF RHODE ISLAND, EX REL PAUL
    BISHOP, EX REL ROBERT KRAUS, STATE OF TENNESSEE, EX REL PAUL BISHOP, EX REL
    ROBERT KRAUS, COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA, EX REL PAUL BISHOP, EX REL
    ROBERT KRAUS,
    Plaintiffs,
    —v.—
    WELLS FARGO & COMPANY, WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A.,
    Defendants‐Appellees.
    _______________
    Before: KATZMANN, Chief Judge, CABRANES AND CARNEY, Circuit Judges.
    _______________
    Paul Bishop and Robert Kraus appeal from a judgment of the United States
    District Court for the Eastern District of New York (Cogan, J.) granting the
    motion to dismiss of Wells Fargo & Company and Wells Fargo Bank, N.A.
    Bishop and Kraus argue that the district court erred in concluding that
    fraudulent loan requests knowingly presented to one or more of the Federal
    Reserve System’s twelve Federal Reserve Banks (“FRBs”) are not “claims” within
    the meaning of the False Claims Act (“FCA”), and hence do not give rise to FCA
    liability. We agree in an opinion narrowly focused on the FCA. The FCA’s
    definition of a “claim” is capacious. Although FRB personnel are not “officer[s]”
    or “employee[s] . . . of the United States,” 31 U.S.C. § 3729(b)(2)(A)(i), the FRBs
    administer the Federal Reserve System’s emergency lending facilities on behalf
    of the United States, using authority delegated by Congress and money provided
    by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. We conclude,
    therefore, that the FRBs are “agent[s] of the United States” within the meaning of
    § 3729(b)(2)(A)(i). We also conclude that the “money . . . requested” by
    defendants and other Fed borrowers is “provided” by the United States to
    advance a Government program or interest within the meaning of §
    3729(b)(2)(A)(ii). Accordingly, we VACATE the judgment of the district court
    and REMAND the case for further proceedings.
    _______________
    JAY W. EISENHOFER (James J. Sabella, Sharad A. Samy, Kyle J. McGee,
    Proskauer Rose LLP, New York, New York, and Tejinder
    Singh, Goldstein & Russell, P.C., Bethesda, Maryland, on the
    2
    brief), Proskauer Rose LLP, New York, New York, for Plaintiffs‐
    Appellants.
    AMY PRITCHARD WILLIAMS (Stephen G. Rinehart, on the brief),
    Troutman Sanders LLP, Charlotte, North Carolina, for
    Defendants‐Appellees.
    Joseph H. Hunt, Assistant Attorney General, Richard P. Donoghue,
    United States Attorney for the Eastern District of New York,
    Charles W. Scarborough, Joshua M. Salzman, for the United
    States, Amici Curiae.
    Richard M. Ashton, Joshua P. Chadwick, Yvonne F. Mizusawa,
    Katherine A. Pomeroy, for Amici Curiae Board of Governors of
    the Federal Reserve System.
    Meghann E. Donahue, Michele Kalstein, for Amici Curiae Federal
    Reserve Bank of New York.
    Keith Goodwin, Gregory J. Ewald, for Amici Curiae Federal Reserve
    Bank of Richmond.
    _______________
    KATZMANN, Chief Judge:
    This case arises out of the 2008 financial crisis. This appeal—appellants’
    second—asks us to decide whether the False Claims Act (the “Act” or the
    “FCA”), 31 U.S.C. § 3729 et seq., applies to persons who defraud the emergency
    lending facilities of the Federal Reserve System (the “Fed”).
    3
    Paul Bishop and Robert Kraus (“relators”) allege that Wells Fargo &
    Company and Wells Fargo Bank N.A. (jointly, “Wells Fargo”) fraudulently
    misrepresented their financial condition to one or more of the Fed’s twelve
    regional Federal Reserve Banks (“FRBs”) so that they could obtain emergency
    loans at favorable interest rates for which they were not qualified. The district
    court (Cogan, J.) granted Wells Fargo’s motion to dismiss, holding that
    knowingly presenting false or fraudulent loan applications to FRBs does not
    violate the FCA because (1) FRB personnel are not “officer[s], employee[s], or
    agent[s] of the United States” within the meaning of § 3729(b)(2)(A)(i); and (2)
    the United States does not “provide[] . . . the money . . . requested or demanded”
    by Fed borrowers within the meaning of § 3729(b)(2)(A)(ii).1 See United States ex
    rel. Kraus v. Wells Fargo & Co. (“Bishop IV”), 11‐cv‐5457, 
    2018 WL 2172662
    , at *2
    (E.D.N.Y. May 10, 2018).2
    Although we agree that FRB personnel are not “officer[s]” or “employee[s]
    . . . of the United States” within the meaning of 31 U.S.C. § 3729(b)(2)(A)(i), we
    1   For the full statutory text as of May 2009 see infra at 14.
    2 Unless otherwise noted, when quoting cases, all internal quotation marks,
    citations, and alterations are omitted.
    4
    conclude that loan requests presented to the FRBs under the Discount Window
    and Term Auction Facility are nonetheless “claims” under the FCA because the
    FRBs are “agents of the United States” within the meaning of § 3729(b)(2)(A)(i),
    and also because the “money . . . requested” by Fed borrowers is “provided” by
    the United States to advance a Government program or interest within the
    meaning of § 3729(b)(2)(A)(ii).
    The FRBs are instrumentalities of the federal government and the
    operating arms of its central bank. See Starr Int’l Co. v. Fed. Reserve Bank of N.Y.,
    
    742 F.3d 37
    , 40 (2d Cir. 2014). The Federal Reserve Act (“FRA”) empowers the
    FRBs, in conjunction with the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
    (the “Board”), to issue legal tender and to finance the Fed’s activities by
    purchasing public and private debts. The FRA also authorizes the FRBs to
    administer the Fed’s emergency lending facilities. Requests for loans made to
    these facilities are requests for loans from the United States. And as the FRBs are
    required to remit all their excess earnings to the United States Treasury, a
    borrower’s failure to pay the appropriate amount of interest on a loan from an
    FRB injures the public fisc, not merely the FRBs’ nominal shareholders.
    5
    The Fed, as it has evolved over the last century, involves a complex set of
    relationships that any court must be wary of unsettling. Thus, the opinion that
    follows is narrowly focused on the FCA and our analysis may not be relevant to
    questions involving the status of the FRBs in other contexts. Because we conclude
    that, in the context of the Fed’s emergency lending facilities, the FCA applies to
    fraud involving the FRBs, we VACATE the judgment of the district court and
    REMAND the case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    BACKGROUND
    On de novo review, as stated infra at 12, we accept the facts as alleged in the
    complaint as true. From approximately June 2005 to September 2006, Kraus was
    employed by Wachovia Capital Markets LLC (“WCM”), a subsidiary of
    Wachovia Corporation (“Wachovia”), as Vice President, Controller for the Real
    Estate Capital Markets group, and Controller for the Corporate and Investment
    Bank Finance group. From about November 2002 to May 2006, Bishop was
    employed by World Savings, Inc. (“WSI”) as a retail salesperson.
    According to Kraus and Bishop, during these periods, and in the years that
    followed, Wachovia and WSI (which was acquired by Wells Fargo in October
    6
    2006) engaged in a “pervasive pattern of financial, regulatory and accounting
    fraud.” Joint App’x at 27 (Compl. ¶ 3). Among other things, Wachovia and WSI,
    by and through their subsidiaries and affiliates, originated and “securitized”
    low‐quality real estate loans and, to avoid financing these loans with the
    required amount of equity capital, cooked their books, improperly hiding certain
    assets in off‐balance‐sheet entities and classifying them as “trading assets” or
    “assets held for sale.” 
    Id. at 28
    (Compl. ¶ 3).
    When “cracks started to show in Wachovia’s fragile financial façade,” 
    id. at 59,
    the bank turned to the Fed for help. As relevant herein, the Fed is comprised
    of twelve FRBs, which are separately incorporated banks dispersed
    geographically throughout the country, and a Board, which is based in
    Washington, D.C. and is an independent agency within the executive branch. See
    12 U.S.C. §§ 241‐252, 264, 341‐362.3 Through its banking subsidiary—Wachovia
    Bank National Association (“WBNA”)—Wachovia requested billions of dollars
    3 The Fed also contains the Federal Open Market Committee (“FOMC”),
    composed of officials from the Board and the FRBs. The FOMC is authorized to
    direct the Fed’s open market operations. See 12 U.S.C. § 263.
    7
    in loans from two of the emergency lending facilities operated by the Fed: the
    Discount Window and the Term Auction Facility (“TAF”).
    The Discount Window is a standing facility through which the Fed makes
    short‐term loans to depository institutions. See Bloomberg, L.P. v. Bd. of Governors
    of the Fed. Reserve Sys., 
    601 F.3d 143
    , 145 n.1 (2d Cir. 2010). The terms of these
    loans depend on a borrower’s financial condition: The FRA and related
    regulations promulgated by the Board authorize the FRBs to extend credit at a
    “primary credit rate” as a “backup source of funding to a depository institution .
    . . that is in generally sound financial condition,” 12 C.F.R. § 201.4(a), and at a
    higher, “secondary credit rate” as “a backup source of funding to a depository
    institution that is not eligible for primary credit if, in the judgment of the Reserve
    Bank, such a credit extension would be consistent with a timely return to a
    reliance on market funding sources,” 
    id. at §
    201.4(b).
    FRBs are also authorized to extend longer‐term secondary credit to
    depository institutions if “such credit would facilitate the orderly resolution of
    serious financial difficulties.” 
    Id. And FRBs
    may extend emergency credit to
    other persons in “unusual and exigent circumstances” if certain further
    8
    requirements are met. See 
    id. at §
    201.4(d). But the FRBs are not permitted to
    extend credit through the Discount Window to those institutions that are
    insolvent or to those that are borrowing for the purpose of lending to a person
    who is insolvent. See 
    id. at §
    201.4(d)(5)(i).
    The TAF was a temporary facility created by the Board on December 12,
    2007, to increase liquidity in financial markets at the outset of the financial crisis.
    The program’s goal was to address the reluctance of financial institutions to
    borrow from the Discount Window at that time. Unlike the Discount Window,
    the TAF provides financial institutions with loans of up to 84 days in amounts
    and at rates set by auction. Only firms in a generally sound condition are eligible
    to participate. See 
    id. at §
    201.4(e); see also Extensions of Credit by Fed. Reserve
    Banks, 72 Fed. Reg. 71,202, 71,202–03 (Dec. 17, 2007).
    During the second half of 2008, Wachovia borrowed substantial amounts
    from the TAF and the Discount Window. For example, on October 6, 2008,
    WBNA borrowed $29 billion from the Discount Window at the primary credit
    rate, then 2.25%. Two days later, on October 8, WBNA borrowed another $7
    billion at 1.75%. On October 9, WBNA borrowed $15 billion from the TAF at a
    9
    rate of 1.39%, and on October 23 the bank won at auction a $15 billion TAF loan
    at a rate of 1.11%. See Joint App’x at 147. These loans were not enough to enable
    Wachovia to survive as a standalone entity, and Wachovia merged into Wells
    Fargo in December. Thereafter, Wells Fargo itself sought loans from the Fed,
    including $15 billion in January 2009 and $30 billion in February 2009. Wells
    Fargo borrowed these sums at an interest rate of 0.25%.
    According to relators, Wachovia, WBNA, and Wells Fargo were not
    eligible for loans at these highly favorable interest rates. Among other things,
    WBNA and Wells Fargo were inadequately capitalized and in poor financial
    condition. The banks are alleged to have falsely certified their compliance with
    the material legal requirements of the Fed’s programs, including that they were
    “not in violation of any laws or regulations in any respect which could have any
    adverse effect whatsoever upon the validity, performance or enforceability of
    any of the terms of” their lending agreements with the FRBs. 
    Id. at 522
    (Operating Circular No. 10 at § 9.1(b)).
    10
    In November 2011, Kraus and Bishop4 filed the instant FCA action on
    behalf of the United States against Wells Fargo. Relators allege that Wells Fargo
    and Wachovia fraudulently requested loans from the FRBs and that, through the
    Fed’s emergency lending facilities, “the United States provided significant
    funding . . . to the Defendants, amounting to at least tens of billions of dollars.”
    Joint App’x at 137 (Compl. ¶ 241).
    Defendants moved to dismiss, and on July 24, 2015 the district court issued
    an opinion granting that motion, holding that relators’ complaint failed to allege
    false claims under the FCA. See United States ex rel. Kraus v. Wells Fargo & Co., 
    117 F. Supp. 3d 215
    , 228 (E.D.N.Y. 2015) (“Bishop I”). Relators appealed, and we
    affirmed. See Bishop v. Wells Fargo & Co., 
    823 F.3d 35
    , 39 (2d Cir. 2016) (“Bishop
    II”). Relators petitioned for certiorari and, the Supreme Court vacated our
    decision in Bishop II and remanded the case for further consideration in light of
    its opinion in Universal Health Serv., Inc. v. United States ex rel. Escobar, 
    136 S. Ct. 4Kraus
    had been a Vice President at WCM until his termination in
    September 2006. Bishop was a salesperson at WSI until his termination in May
    2006. Each alleges that his termination was due to raising issues with his
    superiors about his employer’s predatory or potentially illegal business practices.
    11
    1989 (2016). Thereafter, we vacated the district court’s judgment and remanded
    the case “for the district court to determine, in the first instance, whether the
    relators have adequately alleged the materiality of the defendants’ alleged
    misrepresentations.” See Bishop v. Wells Fargo & Co., 
    870 F.3d 104
    , 107 (2d Cir.
    2017) (“Bishop III”) (per curiam).
    On remand, relators obtained leave to amend, and defendants once again
    moved to dismiss. On May 10, 2018, the district court granted that motion,
    holding that loan requests made to FRBs are not “claims” within the meaning of
    the FCA because (1) FRBs are neither part of the government, nor agents of the
    government, and (2) the United States does not “provide[] . . . the money . . .
    requested or demanded” by banks that borrow from the Fed’s emergency
    lending facilities. Bishop IV, 
    2018 WL 2172662
    , at *2. Relators timely appealed.
    DISCUSSION
    We review the district court’s grant of defendants’ Rule 12(b)(6) motion to
    dismiss de novo, “accepting all factual claims in the complaint as true and
    drawing all reasonable inferences in the plaintiff’s favor.” O’Donnell v. AXA
    Equitable Life Ins. Co., 
    887 F.3d 124
    , 128 (2d Cir. 2018).
    12
    I.       Statutory Framework
    The FCA was “originally adopted following a series of sensational
    congressional investigations into the sale of provisions and munitions to the War
    Department” during the Civil War. United States v. McNinch, 
    356 U.S. 595
    , 599
    (1958). “Testimony before the Congress [at that time] painted a sordid picture of
    how the United States,” during a national emergency, “had been billed for
    nonexistent or worthless goods, charged exorbitant prices for goods delivered,
    and generally robbed in purchasing the necessities of war.” 
    Id. The Act
    was
    passed in sum and substance “to stop this plundering of the public treasury.” 
    Id. As relevant
    here, the FCA imposes liability on any person who either
    “knowingly presents . . . a false or fraudulent claim for payment or approval,” 31
    U.S.C. § 3729(a)(1)(A), or “knowingly makes . . . a false record or statement
    material to a false or fraudulent claim,” 
    id. at §
    3729(a)(1)(B); see also Kellogg
    Brown & Root Servs., Inc. v. United States ex rel. Carter, 
    135 S. Ct. 1970
    , 1973 (2015).5
    The term “‘claim”
    Relators bring their case under both an “implied certification” theory (to
    5
    the extent that the banks fraudulently represented their eligibility for the loans
    13
    means any request or demand, whether under a contract
    or otherwise, for money or property and whether or not
    the United States has title to the money or property,
    that—
    (i) is presented to an officer, employee, or agent of
    the United States; or
    (ii) is made to a contractor, grantee, or other
    recipient, if the money or property is to be spent or
    used on the Government’s behalf or to advance a
    Government program or interest, and if the United
    States Government—
    (I) provides or has provided any portion of
    the money or property requested or
    demanded; or
    (II) will reimburse such contractor, grantee,
    or other recipient for any portion of the
    money or property which is requested or
    demanded.
    31 U.S.C. § 3729(b)(2)(A) (emphasis added).6
    by concealing that they were not in sound financial condition) and an “express
    certification” theory (to the extent the banks made explicit certifications that they
    were in compliance with Section 9.1(b) of the Fed’s Operating Circular 10).
    Although defendants challenged relators’ ability to state a claim under these
    theories, the district court dismissed the case without reaching these issues.
    Accordingly, the adequacy of relators’ pleadings in this respect is not before the
    Court on appeal.
    6This definition is as‐revised under the Fraud Enforcement and Recovery
    Act (“FERA”), Pub. L. No. 111‐21, passed in May 2009 to “improve the
    enforcement of mortgage fraud” as well as to address frauds related to the
    14
    II.      Requests made to FRBs for loans from the Fed’s emergency lending
    facilities are “claim[s]” within the meaning of the False Claims Act
    The text of the FCA is capacious. Fraudulent claims are actionable not only
    when they are presented to an “officer” or “employee” of the United States, but
    also when they are presented either to “an agent of the United States” or to a
    “contractor, grantee, or other recipient” so long as (as to the contractors,
    grantees, or other recipients) a portion of the money is “provided” (or
    “reimburse[d]”) by the United States and used to advance its interests. 31 U.S.C.
    § 3729(b)(2)(A). This language reflects a broad legislative purpose that is most
    faithfully effectuated by recognizing that the FCA applies, in some cases, to
    functional instrumentalities of the government and to agents pursuing its ends.
    As the Supreme Court has confirmed, “the objective of Congress was broadly to
    protect the funds and property of the Government from fraudulent claims,
    Federal assistance programs implemented in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis.
    Although relators’ allegations involve claims made before FERA went into effect,
    the district court found that the definitional changes were not relevant, neither
    party argued otherwise, and the case was decided under the current definition.
    To the extent defendants now raise arguments about the proper interpretation of
    the prior version of the statute, we need not decide if those arguments are
    waived because they are moot given our analysis below.
    15
    regardless of the particular form, or function, of the government instrumentality
    upon which such claims were made.” Rainwater v. United States, 
    356 U.S. 590
    , 592
    (1958) (emphasis added).
    However, the FCA was not “designed to reach every kind of fraud
    practiced on the Government.” 
    McNinch, 356 U.S. at 599
    . For example, the Act
    does not reach frauds directed at private entities that only incidentally lead to
    payments with money provided by the government. See Allison Engine Co. v.
    United States ex rel. Sanders, 
    553 U.S. 662
    , 672 (2008) (“Recognizing a cause of
    action under the FCA for fraud directed at private entities would threaten to
    transform the FCA into an all‐purpose antifraud statute.”).
    The overarching question in this case, therefore, is whether a fraudulent
    loan request made to one of the FRBs is an effort to defraud a private entity or an
    effort to defraud the United States. See 
    id. at 672
    (explaining that “it must be
    shown that the conspirators intended ‘to defraud the Government’”). The
    specific questions are whether (1) FRB personnel are “officer[s]” or “employee[s]
    . . . of the United States” within the meaning of § 3729(b)(2)(A)(i); (2) the FRBs, in
    operating the Fed’s emergency lending facilities, are “agent[s] of the United
    16
    States” within the meaning of § 3729(b)(2)(A)(i); or (3) fraudulent loan requests
    knowingly presented to one or more of the FRBs are “claim[s]” under the FCA
    because the “money . . . requested” is “provided” by the United States within the
    meaning of § 3729(b)(2)(A)(ii). We address each question in turn.
    A. FRB personnel are not “officer[s]” or “employee[s] . . . of the United
    States” within the meaning of § 3729(b)(2)(A)(i)
    First, we conclude that FRB personnel are not “officer[s]” or “employee[s] .
    . . of the United States” within the meaning of § 3729(b)(2)(A)(i). The relevant
    question is not whether the FRBs functionally exercise governmental powers; the
    question instead is whether FRB personnel qualify as “officer[s]” or
    “employee[s]” of the United States under the FRA. See Lebron v. Nat’l R.R.
    Passenger Corp., 
    513 U.S. 374
    , 392 (1995) (recognizing Congress’s power to
    determine which entities are to be considered governmental for various statutory
    purposes); First Nat’l City Bank v. Banco Para el Comercio Exterior de Cuba, 
    462 U.S. 611
    , 626–27 (1983) (“[G]overnment instrumentalities [such as central banks]
    17
    established as juridical entities distinct and independent from their sovereign
    should normally be treated as such.”).7
    Here, Congress has gone out of its way to formally separate the FRBs from
    the government. The FRBs are not part of any executive department or agency.
    See U.S. Shipping Bd. Emergency Fleet Corp. v. W. Union Tel. Co., 
    275 U.S. 415
    , 425‐
    26 (1928) (“Instrumentalities like . . . the federal reserve banks . . . are not
    departments of the Government”); Scott v. Fed. Reserve Bank of Kan. City, 
    406 F.3d 532
    , 536 (8th Cir. 2005). Nor do they have the authority to promulgate
    regulations with the force and effect of law. See 
    Scott, 406 F.3d at 536
    ; 12 US.C. §
    248(k). Instead, they are corporations, 12 U.S.C. § 341 (“a Federal reserve bank
    7 Courts need not engage in a functional analysis, see, e.g., Rainwater, 
    356 U.S. 590
    ; McNinch, 
    356 U.S. 595
    , where Congress’s intent is clear on the face of
    the statute, see, e.g., United States ex rel. Totten v. Bombardier Corp., 
    380 F.3d 488
    ,
    492 (D.C. Cir. 2004) (examining Amtrak’s enabling statute and concluding that
    Amtrak personnel are not officers or employees of the United States for purposes
    of the FCA); United States ex rel. Adams v. Aurora Loan Servs., Inc., 
    813 F.3d 1259
    ,
    1260‐61 (9th Cir. 2016) (examining the relevant statute and concluding that
    claims submitted to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are not presented to officers or
    employees of the United States); cf. Lamie v. U.S. Trustee, 
    540 U.S. 526
    , 534 (2004)
    (“[W]hen the statuteʹs language is plain, the sole function of the courts—at least
    where the disposition required by the text is not absurd—is to enforce it
    according to its terms.”).
    18
    [is] a body corporate”), that operate “under the supervision and control of a
    board of directors,” which “shall perform the duties usually appertaining to the
    office of directors of banking associations.” 12 U.S.C. § 301; see also 12 U.S.C. §§
    302–305.
    This separation from general government dates to the founding of the Fed
    in 1913 when Congress, following other major advanced economies, see, e.g.,
    Cong. Rec. 6569 (April 29, 1935), decided to leave governance of money and
    credit, at least in part, in private hands, see H.R. Rep. No. 69 (“House Report”), at
    18 (1913) (describing the Fed’s structure as consisting of “a combination of public
    and private characteristics”); Melcher v. Fed. Open Mkt. Comm., 
    644 F. Supp. 510
    ,
    521 (D.D.C. 1986), aff’d, 
    836 F.2d 561
    (D.C. Cir. 1987) (“Ever since the birth of this
    nation, the regulation of the nation’s monetary systems has been governed by a
    subtle and conscious balance of public and private elements.”); Fasano v. Fed.
    Reserve Bank of N.Y., 
    457 F.3d 274
    , 277 (3d Cir. 2006) (FRBs are formed as private
    corporations “[t]o aid in achieving Congress’s goal of insulating them from
    political pressure”). As the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond (“FRBR”) and the
    Federal Reserve Bank of New York (“FRBNY”) explain, the legislative history of
    19
    the FRA suggests that Congress intended the FRBs to “serve the interests of, but
    stand apart from, the sovereign.” Brief of Amici Curiae Federal Reserve Bank of
    New York and Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond (“FRB Amici”) at 9.
    Although, in the intervening decades, Congress has transferred functional
    ownership and control of the FRBs to the Treasury and to the Board, see, e.g., The
    Banking Act of 1935, Pub. L. No. 305 (1935)8; the Federal Reserve Reform Act of
    8 Cong. Rec. 13706 (statement of Rep. Steagall) (August 19, 1935) (“we have
    written into [the Banking Act of 1935] the principle that the Government, the
    sovereign people of the United States, shall have control of the Board that
    dictates the vast powers of the Federal Reserve System”); 
    id. (explaining that
    the
    Act “represent[s] a great reform [and] . . . plan for the exercise of the sovereign
    power of the Government to control the Nation’s credit and monetary policy”);
    Cong. Rec. 6569 (House, April 29, 1935) (statement of Rep. Hollister) (explaining
    that “Title II gives first to the [Board] greater control over the management of
    various [FRBs] than it has had in the past. It gives to the Executive somewhat
    greater control over the [Board] itself than the Executive has had in the past. It
    gives to the Board much greater powers over the operation of Federal Reserve
    banks and over the whole credit system of the country than the board has had in
    the past . . . when you take the cumulative combination of four or five different
    steps and read them as a whole, you will realize very clearly how much greater
    Executive control will be placed over the credit resources of the country”).
    20
    1977, Pub. L. 95–188,9 the Monetary Control Act of 1980, Pub. L. 96‐221,10
    Congress has carefully retained the formal separation of the FRBs from the
    executive branch. Indeed, as amici point out, see FRB Amici at 10, Congress has
    considered the status of the FRBs on multiple occasions and decided not to
    convert them formally into government agencies, see, e.g., Hearings Before
    Subcomm. No. 3 of the Comm. on Banking & Currency on H.R. 8516 & H.R.
    8627, 86th Cong. 1–6 (1960) (bills’ text); 
    id. at 6–7
    (description). Hence, we agree
    with defendants that fraudulent loan requests made to the FRBs do not qualify as
    claims under the first clause of § 3729(b)(2)(A)(i).
    9  The Federal Reserve Reform Act, among other things, codified the dual
    mandate, see 12 U.S.C. § 225a, and criminalized conflicts of interest at the FRBs,
    see 18 U.S.C. 208(a), subjecting FRB directors, officers, and employees to the same
    provisions governing the “[a]ctivities of officers and employees [of the United
    States] in claims against, and other matters affecting, the Government,” 18 U.S.C.
    § 205.
    10The Monetary Control Act, among other things, required the Board to
    annually reduce the FRB operating budgets in line with the amount of services
    the FRBs provided to member banks and governmental entities and to transfer
    the savings to the United States Treasury. See 12 U.S.C. 248a(d).
    21
    B. FRBs extend emergency loans as “agents of the United States” within
    the meaning of § 3729(b)(2)(A)(i)
    The alleged fraudulent loan applications are nonetheless “claims” under
    the FCA if the FRBs act as “agents of the United States” under § 3729(b)(2)(A)(i)
    when operating the Fed’s emergency lending facilities. We conclude that they do
    on a narrow reading where we confine ourselves only to the circumstances at
    hand, which require us to determine the meaning of the FCA in the context of
    extending emergency credit.
    Agency is a legal concept that requires: (1) manifestation by the principal
    that the agent shall act for him; (2) the agent’s acceptance of the undertaking; and
    (3) the understanding of the parties that the principal is to be in control of the
    undertaking. See Cleveland v. Caplaw Enters., 
    448 F.3d 518
    , 522 (2d Cir. 2006).
    Here, all three elements are met: the United States created the FRBs to act
    on its behalf in extending emergency credit to banks; the FRBs extend such
    credit; and the FRBs do so in compliance with the strictures enacted by Congress
    and the regulations promulgated by the Board, an independent agency within
    the executive branch. Although the Board’s ability to micromanage the extension
    of credit by the FRBs is limited to review and oversight, this is by design and
    22
    consistent with agency principles. See Restatement (Third) of Agency § 2.02
    (2006). The United States’ overall control is undisputed. Congress can, among
    other things, amend the FRA to adjust or revoke the ability of the FRBs to operate
    the Fed’s facilities. See 12 U.S.C. § 347b(a) (providing that “[a]ny Federal Reserve
    bank, under rules and regulations prescribed by the Board of Governors of the
    Federal Reserve System, may make advances to any member bank” on notes
    “secured to the satisfaction of such Federal Reserve bank”). And the Board can
    promulgate new rules governing the extension of credit. See id.; see also 12 C.F.R.
    Part 201 (establishing parameters governing FRB lending). Among other things,
    under the existing statutory parameters, the Board—not the FRBs—determines
    the interest rates that the FRBs charge on their loans. See 12 U.S.C. § 357
    (providing that the rates are “subject to review and determination” by the
    Board); 12 C.F.R. § 201.4 (setting the terms governing the availability of credit).
    Indeed, the Lending Agreement (which allowed the Banks to borrow under the
    primary credit program and required the Banks to make the representations and
    warranties of the Fed’s Operating Circular No. 10) itself states explicitly that
    advances to banks from FRBs must be “in accordance with the Federal Reserve
    23
    Act and regulations promulgated thereunder by the Board of Governors of the
    Federal Reserve System.” Joint App’x at 513.
    Amici contend that the FRBs are not agents of the United States because
    the Board does not have the right to direct FRB lending decisions. See FRB Amici
    at 13 (arguing that FRBs “perform lending operations under authority granted to
    them expressly by the FRA and are not agents of any Government entity”); Brief
    Amicus Curiae of the United States and the Federal Reserve Board in Support of
    Neither Party (“United States Amici”) at 15 (arguing that “[t]he authority to
    make these loans is directly granted to the [FRBs]… and the lending activities of
    the [FRBs] do not take place on behalf of or under the delegated authority of the
    board”). Defendants advance a similar argument. See Brief and Supplemental
    Appendix for Defendants‐Appellees (“Def. Br.”) at 41 (“FRBs are not acting as
    Board delegates when operating the Programs”).
    We are unpersuaded for three reasons. First, agency law unquestionably
    permits a principal to delegate the power to act on its behalf to another party and
    to give that party some discretion. See, e.g., Restatement (Third) of Agency § 2.02
    (2006) (“If a principal states the agent’s authority in terms that contemplate that
    24
    the agent will use substantial discretion to determine the particulars, it is
    ordinarily reasonable for the agent to believe that following usage and custom
    will be acceptable to the principal.”); 
    id. (“The principal’s
    instructions . . . may [in
    some circumstances] reasonably be understood by the agent to authorize the
    agent to exercise discretion.”). Accordingly, that the law empowers the FRBs to
    decide, in their judgment, when to extend emergency loans, see generally 12
    U.S.C. § 347b(b)(4) (“A Federal Reserve bank shall have no obligation to make,
    increase, renew, or extend any advance or discount . . . to any depository
    institution.”), does not mean that the FRBs are acting on their own behalf and not
    on behalf of the United States.
    Second, the Board exercises substantial control over FRB emergency
    lending activities through its statutory authority to, among other things,
    “examine at its discretion the accounts, books, and affairs of each [FRB],” 12
    U.S.C. § 248(a)(1); “supervise and regulate . . . the issue and retirement of Federal
    Reserve notes,” 
    id. at §
    248(d); “suspend or remove any officer or director of any
    [FRB],” 
    id. at §
    248(f); require the FRBs to “writ[e] off [] doubtful or worthless
    assets” from their balance sheets, 
    id. at §
    248(g); “suspend, for the violation of
    25
    any of the [applicable FRA] provisions…the operations of any [FRB], to take
    possession thereof, [and to] administer the same,” 
    id. at §
    248(h); “exercise
    general supervision” over the FRBs, 
    id. at §
    248(j); “delegate” certain Board
    functions to the FRBs, 
    id. at §
    248(k); levy assessments upon the FRBs to pay the
    Board’s operational expenses, 
    id. at §
    243; approve the appointment of the
    president and chief executive officer of FRBs, see 
    id. at §
    341 (fifth); appoint the
    chair and deputy chair of the board of directors of the FRBs, 
    id. at §
    305; and, “in
    its discretion . . . suspend” any bank from using the “credit facilities of the
    Federal Reserve System,“ 
    id. at §
    301, i.e. the lending facilities at issue in this case.
    The Board is even empowered to refuse to provide FRBs with Federal Reserve
    notes, as discussed further herein. See 
    id. at §
    § 411‐12; 
    id. at §
    414 (providing that
    the Board “shall have the right . . . to grant in whole or in part, or to reject
    entirely the application of any Federal Reserve bank for Federal Reserve notes”).
    Third, the FCA does not require that “agents of the United States” be
    agents of a United States agency. It requires merely that the FRBs act, and be
    empowered by law to act, on behalf of the United States. While the Board’s
    formal authority to control FRB lending decisions may be constrained in certain
    26
    respects,11 there is no such constraint on the United States. Indeed, the FRBs
    extend emergency loans pursuant to a statutory delegation from Congress and
    according to the terms set forth by Congress in the FRA. Congress may revoke
    this authority at any time or change the terms of its exercise. See Am. Bank & Tr.
    Co. v. Fed. Reserve Bank of Atlanta, 
    256 U.S. 350
    , 359 (1921) (“The policy of the
    Federal Reserve Banks is governed by the policy of the United States with regard
    to them.”). Indeed, if the FRBs do not act on behalf of the United States, on whose
    behalf do they act? No party contends that FRB emergency lending is done for
    the profit of the FRBs’ nominal shareholders—the profits on FRB loans accrue
    entirely to the United States Treasury, rather than to the FRB’s member banks.
    See 
    Starr, 742 F.3d at 40
    (“[The FRBs] are not operated for the profit of
    11 Amici and defendants point out that we concluded in a Freedom of
    Information Act case that “the lending activities of the Federal Reserve Banks do
    not take place ‘on behalf of’ or under the ‘delegated authority’ of the Board.” Fox
    News Network, LLC v. Bd. of Governors of the Fed. Reserve Sys., 
    601 F.3d 158
    , 161 (2d
    Cir. 2010). But the FRBs need not be acting on behalf of the Board to be agents of
    the United States. Nor does Fox News involve the concept of “agency” under the
    FCA. Rather, its focus is the Fed’s administrative structure for document control
    purposes – quite a different context from that presented here.
    27
    shareholders; rather, they were created and are operated in furtherance of the
    national fiscal policy.”).
    Amici concede that the FRBs are, as they put it, “federal instrumentalities.”
    United States Amici at 7. And they concede that FRBs are not merely standalone
    instrumentalities; they are part of a system created by Congress and subject to
    the Board’s general supervisory authority. See McKinley v. Bd. of Governors of Fed.
    Reserve Sys., 
    647 F.3d 331
    , 332 (D.C. Cir. 2011); 12 U.S.C. § 341. As amici put it, the
    FRBs are
    components of the Federal Reserve System [that] operate in the public
    interest, and, specifically, in furtherance of [the] system’s functions of
    conducting the nation’s monetary policy, promoting the stability of the
    financial system, promoting the soundness of individual financial
    institutions, fostering payment and settlement system safety, and
    promoting consumer protection and community development.
    United States Amici at 6. Further, as amici explain, “[o]ne [of the] function[s of
    the FRBs] . . . is to serve as backup lenders for banks and other depository
    institutions in their regions.” 
    Id. at 7;
    FRB Amici at 5 (“The [FRBs] are federal
    instrumentalities—corporations chartered pursuant to the FRA to perform the
    central bank’s operational responsibilities.”); 
    id. at 7
    (“Congress established
    Federal Reserve Banks for public purposes to be the operating arm of the nation’s
    28
    central bank, in accordance with the statutory mission set out in the FRA.”); see
    also 
    Starr, 742 F.3d at 40
    ; 
    Fasano, 457 F.3d at 281
    n.6 (collecting cases).
    Moreover, given the purpose of the FCA, we see no reason to depart from
    the plain meaning of the phrase “agent of the United States” here. One need only
    put the instant allegations into context to see why. As discussed further herein,
    this case involves the creation and lending of tens of billions of dollars. In the
    best of times, few if any entities can borrow such sums even with advance notice
    and planning. Yet defendants were able to secure these amounts on short notice
    during a period when private financing markets were all‐but‐frozen. Defendants’
    alleged underpayment of interest reduced FRB earnings, which dollar for dollar
    reduced the sums the FRBs transferred to the Treasury. Fraud during a national
    emergency against entities established by the government to address that
    emergency by lending or spending billions of dollars is precisely the sort of fraud
    that Congress meant to deter when it enacted the FCA.
    Our conclusion that the FRBs act as “agents of the United States” within
    the meaning of the FCA when extending emergency credit, does not bear on the
    question of whether the FRBs may or may not be agents in other contexts, nor do
    29
    we conclude that the FRBs are agents within the FCA in any other context. We
    hold only that, in this limited context, the FRBs qualify as “agents of the United
    States” within the meaning of § 3729(b)(2)(A)(i) of the FCA.12
    C. The United States “provides” the money requested by borrowers
    seeking loans from the Fed’s emergency lending facilities within the
    meaning of § 3729(b)(2)(A)(ii)
    We also conclude that the alleged fraudulent loan applications are
    “claims” under the FCA because the United States “provides” the money
    12  We see no tension between our conclusion that the FRBs act as agents of
    the United States when extending emergency loans and the fact that the FRA
    expressly designates the FRBs as “fiscal agents” with respect to certain matters
    (that do not include extending emergency loans). See 12 U.S.C. §§ 391‐395.
    Congress specified the fiscal agency relationship for the purpose of putting the
    FRBs under the direction of the Treasury Department in certain limited
    circumstances, not to preclude an agency relationship between the United States
    and the FRBs in other contexts. See, e.g., 12 U.S.C. § 391 (instructing the FRBs to
    take various actions “upon the direction of the Secretary of the Treasury” and
    stating that “when required by the Secretary of the Treasury, [the FRBs] shall act
    as fiscal agents of the United States”). The text of the FCA does not require that
    claims be submitted to agents of the Treasury Department; it refers instead to
    “agents of the United States.” Nor does our conclusion that the FRBs are “agents
    of the United States” within the meaning of subsection (ii) make them “agencies”
    of the United States, as defendants seem to suggest. See Def. Br. at 41. Our
    holding is limited to the False Claims Act and to the circumstances presented in
    this case.
    30
    “requested” by borrowers from the Fed’s emergency lending facilities within the
    meaning of § 3729(b)(2)(A)(ii) and the money requested is to be spent to advance
    a Government program or interest.
    Subsection (ii) defines “claim,” even more broadly than subsection (i), to
    encompass demands or requests made to a “contractor, grantee, or other
    recipient,” if two conditions apply: first, “if the money or property is to be spent
    or used on the Government’s behalf or to advance a Government program or
    interest,” and second, if the United States Government “provides or has
    provided any portion of the money or property requested or demanded,” or
    “will reimburse [the recipient of the demand] for any portion of the money or
    property which is requested or demanded. . . .” 31 U.S.C. § 3729(b)(2)(A)(ii)(I)(ii).
    Amici argue that the Fed’s emergency lending facilities do not qualify as money
    requested or demanded by the U.S. because the FRBs are not funded by the
    United States Treasury. Defendants make a similar point. See Brief and
    Supplemental Appendix for Defendants‐Appellees (“Def. Br.”) at 29 (“Courts
    have consistently looked to the involvement of government funds in determining
    whether a claim has been made.”); 
    id. at 51
    (“No U.S. Treasury funds were used
    31
    to supply any part of the Advances nor were the FRBs reimbursed for Advances
    by the U.S. Treasury.”); see also 
    id. at 49
    (“The Advances are also not claims
    because they are not made with or reimbursed by U.S. Treasury funds.”).
    But the FCA nowhere limits liability to requests involving “Treasury
    Funds.” FRB Amici at 14. The text of the FCA is deliberately broad, including
    “any request or demand . . . for money or property . . . whether or not the United
    States has title to the money or property,” as long as “the United States
    Government . . . provides or has provided any portion of the money or property
    requested or demanded.” 31 U.S.C. § 3729(b)(2)(A) (emphasis added). The statute
    makes no mention of the Treasury Department. Indeed, as the United States and
    the Board concede, the word “’provides’ is properly read to reach some
    circumstances in which the government makes money available through an
    exercise” of its legal authority outside the appropriations process. United States
    Amici at 18; United States ex rel. Heath v. Wisconsin Bell, Inc., 
    111 F. Supp. 3d 923
    ,
    926 (E.D. Wis. 2015) (“The fact that [Universal Service] Fund money does not
    pass through the Treasury does not make the government any less its source.”).
    32
    This is such a circumstance. Just as individuals and businesses maintain
    bank accounts at banks like Wachovia and Wells Fargo, banks like Wachovia and
    Wells Fargo maintain bank accounts at the FRBs. The balances in these accounts
    are called “reserves.”13 Banks like Wachovia and Wells Fargo are required by
    Congress and by the Board to maintain certain minimum amounts of reserves in
    their accounts. See 12 U.S.C. § 461 (establishing “reserve requirements”). Reserve
    requirements may also be satisfied with cash (i.e., Federal Reserve notes), which
    is functionally equivalent to reserve balances; reserve balances and cash are the
    two components of “base money” (also called the monetary base).14 Both types of
    base money are liabilities, not assets, of the FRBs. (For ordinary private‐sector
    13 While paper currency may be held by anyone, reserve balances may be
    maintained only by banks and governmental entities. See, e.g., 12 U.S.C. § 342
    (authorizing FRBs to maintain accounts for member banks, other depository
    institutions, and the U.S. Treasury Department); 
    id. at §
    391 (authorizing FRBs to
    maintain accounts for government‐sponsored enterprises in the residential
    mortgage business); 
    id. at §
    § 1435, 1452(d), 1723a(g) (authorizing FRBs to
    maintain accounts for foreign governments, foreign banks, and central banks); 
    id. at §
    § 347d & 358 (authorizing FRBs to maintain accounts for the International
    Monetary Fund and the World Bank).
    14See Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Aggregate
    Reserves of Depository Institutions and the Monetary Base ‐ H.3, Table 2,
    available at https://www.federalreserve.gov/releases/h3/current.
    33
    banks, base money can only be an asset not a liability.) In other words, the FRBs
    are the issuers of base money. They do not lend out preexisting funds; they
    create “funds” in the most elemental sense. They perform this function on behalf
    of the United States, as federal instrumentalities. When banks request loans from
    the FRBs, the FRBs extend those loans by increasing these reserves. As FRB
    Amici explain:
    When the Fed makes a $100 million loan to [a bank], the bank is credited
    with $100 million of reserves . . . No preexisting “source” of funds exists.
    Crediting the loan amount to the borrowing bank’s reserve account creates
    new reserves, increasing the overall level of reserves in the banking system
    by exactly the amount lent.
    FRB Amici at 15‐16; see also United States Amici at 16. 15 These new reserves are
    created ex nihilo, at a keystroke. They are promises by the FRBs to pay Federal
    Reserve notes (dollar bills) to the banks on demand.16 See FRB Amici at 16.
    15 Although banks and other depository institutions can also create money
    in the form of deposits, only the Fed can issue legal tender. Banks must always
    stand ready to redeem their deposit credits in Federal Reserve notes. The Fed
    faces no such constraint. See Joseph H. Sommer, Where is a Bank Account?, 57 MD.
    L. REV. 1, 13 (1998) (“[r]edemption of currency can only compel more currency”);
    Morgan Ricks, Money as Infrastructure, 3 COLUMB. BUS. L. REV. 757, 775 (2018).
    16   Accordingly, reserves appear as liabilities on the FRBs’ balance sheets.
    34
    The FRBs’ promises to pay notes serve as money or legal tender because
    they must be accepted by the Treasury and by other banks as payment. As the
    United States explains, “the United States vested the Reserve Banks with the
    authority to make the loans at issue and to credit the Reserve Bank accounts of
    borrowing institutions, thereby increasing the overall money supply.” United
    States Amici at 17. Our Constitution bestows this power on Congress. See U.S.
    Const. art. I, § 8, cl. 5 (“The Congress shall have Power . . . To coin Money,
    regulate the Value thereof . . .”); see also Knox v. Lee, 
    79 U.S. 457
    , 565‐66 (1871)
    (explaining that it “is undoubtedly the public law of this country” that Congress
    determines the standard of money and what instruments may pass as legal
    tender).17 Had Congress not delegated this power to the Fed, the FRBs would be
    See FRB Amici at 16 (“For example, when a Federal Reserve Bank extends credit
    through the Discount Window, the Federal Reserve Bank records an asset — a
    loan — in the amount of the loan (which equals the amount of reserves created),
    and a corresponding liability — the reserves credited to the borrowing bank’s
    reserve account.”).
    17Knox v. Lee traces the state’s prerogative back to The Case of Mixed Money,
    Davies Rep. 48 (1605), reprinted in 2 Cobbett’s State Trials 113, 118 (1809) (“the
    king by his prerogative may make money of what matter and form he pleaseth,
    and establish the standard of it, so may he change his money in substance and
    35
    unable to extend the loans at issue in this case. And we see no reason why
    Congress’s decision to separate the FRBs from the Board and the Board from the
    Treasury Department should alter our conclusion that the United States is the
    source of the purchasing power conferred on the banks when they borrow from
    the Fed’s emergency lending facilities.
    The loans in this case are also money provided by the United States in a
    further sense. The Board puts Federal reserve notes into circulation by supplying
    them to the FRBs, which are the actual direct issuers. See 12 U.S.C. §§ 411‐12.18
    impression, and enhance or debase the value of it, or entirely decry and annul
    it”); 
    id. at 116(“no
    other person” may make money “without special license or
    commandment of the king”).
    18 Federal law recognizes two types of legal tender in the United States:
    “United States coins” and “Federal reserve notes.” 31 U.S.C. § 5103; see also 12
    U.S.C. § 411. The Treasury Department physically creates both. See 31 U.S.C. §
    304; 
    id. at §
    5114; 
    id. at §
    303, 12 U.S.C. § 418. However, while the Treasury
    Department determines the supply of United States coins, 31 U.S.C. § 5111(a)(1)
    (“The Secretary of the Treasury . . . shall mint and issue coins. . . in amounts the
    Secretary decides are necessary to meet the needs of the United States”), the
    Board controls the supply of notes, 12 U.S.C. § 411 (“Federal reserve notes, to be
    issued at the discretion of the Board . . . are hereby authorized”); 
    id. at §
    419. The
    Fed puts these notes into circulation by providing them to the FRBs which
    ultimately exchange them for financial assets held by the private sector. For
    example, the FRBs promise to pay notes to private banks in order to purchase
    from them debt securities of the United States issued by the Treasury
    36
    Thus, when banks like Wachovia and Wells Fargo withdraw the proceeds of
    loans requested from (and extended by) the FRBs, the banks quite literally
    receive money “provided” by the Board, i.e. money made available and/or
    supplied by the United States. See Provide, MERRIAM‐WEBSTER (11th ed. 2003)
    (defining “provide” as “to supply or make available”). The Board, like the U.S.
    Mint, is an agency of the United States. That the Board, unlike the Mint, is not
    also a bureau of the Treasury Department is of no legal significance here.
    The Board’s argument that the FCA does not apply in the circumstances
    presented here because the government does not exercise “substantial control
    over the collection and disbursement of the funds [involved]” (i.e., because the
    FRBs determine whether to exercise the lending authority in any specific case), is
    unpersuasive. United States Amici at 18. The FCA statutory text covers not only
    money that the government specifically allocates, but also money “reimburse[d]”
    to the government when “requested or demanded” from the recipient. 31 U.S.C.
    Department. These private banks then withdraw notes when they need physical
    currency. And, as relevant here, the FRBs are authorized to lend these notes to
    private banks when certain further requirements are met. See 
    id. at §
    § 341 et seq.
    37
    § 3729(b)(2)(A)(ii)(II). By definition, a reimbursement procedure gives control (at
    least to some extent) to the recipient rather than the government.
    Further, we are not moved, as the district court was, by the fact that
    private banks serve as the FRBs’ nominal shareholders. See 12 U.S.C. § 282; Joint
    App’x at 1179‐80. Today, the United States, not the nominal shareholders, are the
    economic owners of the FRBs. Among other things, Congress has provided that
    the net earnings of the FRBs be “recorded as revenue by the Department of the
    Treasury,” FRB Amici at 17, and the FRBs are required to remit all their excess
    earnings to the United States Treasury, see 
    id. at 18
    (“Between 2007 and 2011—
    when the loans here were extended—the Board of Governors required Federal
    Reserve Banks to transfer excess earnings to the United States Treasury.”).19
    Thus, the “capital” contributions made by member banks function as debt
    interests owned by the member banks, not equity interests. See FRB Amici at 8
    (“Commercial banks acquire Federal Reserve Bank stock not for ownership or
    control, but because it is a condition of membership in the Federal Reserve
    19   Congress codified this requirement in 2015. See 12 U.S.C. § 289(a)(3)(B).
    38
    System. See 12 U.S.C §§ 282, 321.”); 
    id. (“The stockholders
    of Federal Reserve
    Banks receive semiannual, statutorily capped dividends on their holdings, see 12
    U.S.C. § 289, but do not possess a residual equity interest in Federal Reserve
    Banks’ assets, see 12 U.S.C. § 290”); Jesse H. Choper, John C. Coffee, Jr., & Ronald
    J. Gilson, CASES AND MATERIALS ON CORPORATIONS 33 (1995) (“[Shareholders] are
    the ‘residual claimants,’ who bring to the firm their special ability at risk‐
    bearing.”).20 And, as the United States explains, “in the event that a[n] [FRB] is
    liquidated, any value remaining (after debts are paid and certain required
    payments are made) . . . become[s] the property of the United States.” United
    States Amici at 6 (citing 12 U.S.C. § 290). Accordingly, a bank’s failure to pay the
    applicable amount of interest on a loan from an FRB injures the public fisc, not
    20Member banks also lack most of the control rights associated with
    ownership. Although member banks are authorized to vote for six of each
    Reserve Bank’s nine directors (the Class A and B directors), 12 U.S.C. § 304, they
    are permitted to serve only as Class A directors, 
    id. § 303,
    Class B directors must
    “represent the public” not the member banks, id § 302, and the Board of
    Governors alone is empowered to appoint the chair and deputy chair of the FRB
    boards. Further, the chair and deputy chair must be Board‐appointed Class C
    directors, and only Class B and C directors—with the approval of the Board—are
    permitted to select FRB Presidents.
    39
    the FRBs’ nominal shareholders; money created for the Term Auction Facility or
    the Discount Window is as much a product of the “public fisc” as money that is
    distributed by the Treasury Department.21
    We are similarly unpersuaded by defendants’ argument, seconded by
    amici, that 12 U.S.C. § 244 forecloses FCA liability. Section 244 provides that
    “funds derived” by the Board through assessments on the FRBs “shall not be
    construed to be Government funds or appropriated moneys.” 12 U.S.C. § 244.
    But this provision governs the Board, not the FRBs—it states that the Board’s
    funding (i.e., for its budget and expenses), which it receives from the FRBs, shall
    not be treated as appropriated money. It says nothing about the FCA at all, let
    alone whether the government “provides” within the meaning of the FCA the
    money requested or demanded by borrowers from the Fed’s emergency lending
    facilities. Moreover, section 244 is plainly concerned with insulating the Board
    from statutory restrictions governing appropriations, not from insulating those
    21Defendants contend that “[c]ourts applying the FCA have consistently
    required . . . economic loss to . . . the United States for a claim to exist.” Def. Br. at
    49. As explained above, accepting the complaint’s allegations as true, the
    economic loss to the United States here is apparent.
    40
    who defraud the FRBs from the remedies imposed by the FCA. See 
    id. (providing that
    the Board’s “expenses shall be governed solely by the provisions of this Act,
    specific amendments thereof, and rules and regulations of the Board not
    inconsistent therewith”).
    Nor is it clear why Congress would wish to exclude the FRBs from the
    protections of the FCA. It seems highly implausible that Congress would intend
    the FCA to cover claims made to private contractors where the money is “to
    advance a Government program or interest” and where the government
    provides or reimburses the money, but not to cover claims made to
    governmental instrumentalities operating under direct supervision of a
    government agency where the disbursement itself is part of a government
    program and where the money is created ex nihilo pursuant to congressional
    authority. Relators allege, inter alia, that “Wachovia . . . committed fraud against
    the United States to secure critical lifelines to keep it afloat, materially and
    overtly lying to [the FRBs] just to save its skin from an imminent insolvency that
    was brought about by its own criminal recklessness.” Joint App’x at 59 (Compl. ¶
    69). If true, the FCA is able to remedy this fraud. Accordingly, we disagree with
    41
    the district court that fraudulent loan requests made to the FRBs do not qualify
    as claims under § 3729(b)(2)(A)(ii)(I).22
    CONCLUSION
    “Few issues in the history of this nation have been as thoroughly
    considered and debated as central banking and the regulation of the money
    supply.” 
    Melcher, 644 F. Supp. at 524
    . “The current system . . . represents an
    exquisitely balanced approach to an extremely difficult problem.” 
    Id. Our decision
    today considers that balance only in the narrow context of the FCA and
    our analysis may not be relevant to questions involving the status of the FRBs in
    22 The district court concluded that relators’ case could not proceed under
    subsection (ii) because “Relators would have to allege that the Government
    either provided [a] portion of the money loaned to defendants, or reimbursed
    FRBs for making the loans.” According to the district court, “[t]hey can do
    neither.” Bishop IV, 
    2018 WL 2172662
    , at *9. Defendants reiterate this point on
    appeal. Def. Br. at 51 (“Appellants never allege in the Complaint, nor do they
    argue in their Brief, that Government money was used to fund the Advances or
    to fund FRBs generally.”). But relators do allege that the government provided
    the money. See Joint App’x at 137 (Compl. ¶ 241) (“the United States provided
    significant funding…to the Defendants, amounting to at least tens of billions of
    dollars”); see also 
    id. at 26
    (Compl. ¶ 1) (alleging that defendants perpetrated
    [fraud] “on…the [FRBNY], the [FRBR] and/or one or more other [FRBs]. . .
    agencies of the United States, agents, fiscal agents and/or depositories of the
    United States and recipients of monies spent on the United States’ behalf and to
    advance U.S. government . . . programs or interests”).
    42
    other contexts. Because we conclude that, for the reasons stated above, in the
    context of the Fed’s emergency lending facilities the FCA applies to this alleged
    fraud involving the FRBs, the judgment of the district court is VACATED, and
    the case is REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    43