Henne Air agrees to pay$ 26. 8 million to settle the case involving US go costs

According to a statement from the US Department of Justice, Hahn Air ( HR, Frankfurt International ) and its subsidiary Hahn Air USA Inc. in Minneapolis have agreed to pay USD26.8 million to settle the allegations that they knowingly violated the US False Claims Act when they allegedly omitted certain travel fees collected from passengers entering or leaving the country between 2012 and 2018. Through partnerships with a number of commercial airlines around the world, Hahn Air maintains an electronic ticketing collection that enables travel agencies to challenge tickets. It collects necessary travel expenses as part of its business, including some American traveler fees. Among the disputed fees are those for the Transportation Security Administration ( TSA ) and the Department of Agriculture ( USDA ), customs user fees and immigration user fees owed to CBP, and for passenger civil aviation security service fees. A civil complaint brought by the US District Court for the District of Columbia is settled under the “qui tam” or whistleblower” delivery of the False Claims Act, which allows private events to bring legal action on behalf of the US for bogus claims and to receive a percentage of the president’s treatment. As part of the quality, the leak may get USD4.8 million. Of the USD26.8 million Hahn Air will give, USD18.3 is national compensation. The business will be credited USD16 million towards the settlement for past payment obligations, leaving a remaining balance of USD10.7 million. As soon as Hahn Air receives the money, the leak will be reimbursed. Hahn Air has reached out to CH-aviation for opinion.