Case Explained:This article breaks down the legal background, charges, and implications of Case Explained: Andrew Miller Recognized in Legal 500 2026 Washington DC White Collar Crime Guide – Legal Perspective
DALLAS, February 26, 2026–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Today, the nationally recognized law firm Baron & Budd is pleased to announce that Shareholder Andrew Miller has been ranked in the 2026 edition of the Legal 500 Washington DC White Collar Crime Guide as part of the publication’s inaugural U.S. Elite City series.
For his selection, Legal 500 relied on its Elite City methodology, which assessed Miller in relation to the U.S. legal market, review of leading practitioners in the White-Collar Crime jurisdiction, publicly available information, and qualitative insight gathered through ongoing engagement across Legal 500 practice areas. In the end, Miller demonstrated technically excellent work from a partner-led firm that has delivered consistently strong outcomes.
“I am honored to be recognized in the inaugural edition of the Legal 500’s Washington, D.C. White Collar Crime Guide,” said Miller. “This distinction reflects the firm’s dedication and rigor we bring to every matter and our continued commitment to achieving strong results for our clients.”
As a Shareholder of Baron & Budd’s Whistleblower practice, Miller focuses on bringing fraud and abuse litigation throughout the United States under statutes such as the federal False Claims Act, state False Claims Acts, the Anti-Kickback Statute and the Stark Law. He also represents clients with claims filed with the Whistleblower Offices of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Internal Revenue Service.
Miller has represented whistleblowers in several historic False Claims Act cases, including a $48.5 million settlement against TriMark USA, LLC which was, at the time, the largest amount ever recovered in the history of False Claims Act litigation involving allegations of small business fraud. According to the case, TriMark, the nation’s largest restaurant supply company, illegally obtained government contracts set aside for small businesses owned by service-disabled veterans. TriMark was accused of using multiple small businesses in an illegal pass-through scheme whereby the small businesses won these set aside contracts with TriMark’s assistance and then passed through the work to TriMark, which was able to collect tens of millions of dollars meant for the small businesses.
Miller also secured a $2.5 million customs fraud settlement with ADCO Industries, Xiamen Atlantis MFC Co., Raymond E. Davis, and Calvin Chang. Miller represented the whistleblowers who uncovered a double-invoicing scheme between ADCO, a seller of commercial products like shelves, dollies, and safety cutters, and their Chinese supplier, Xiamen. The settlement was the largest customs fraud case in which the government intervened that involved a scheme to avoid payment of tariffs enacted during the first Trump administration.
