About
About GetSnitching
Plain-English reference for whistleblower reward programs and how to report fraud, wage theft, and abuse, built from official government sources.
What this is
GetSnitching is a reference site, not a law firm and not a case-intake service. It exists to answer one question as precisely as public records allow: if you report wrongdoing, what actually happens, and does a reward apply? Every program page, state page, and guide is built from statutes, regulations, and agency annual reports, with a source link on every claim.
We do not accept cases, we do not refer you to a specific attorney for a fee, and we do not rank programs or reporting channels by anything other than what the official record says.
Who runs it
GetSnitching is written and edited by Mario Bailey, whose background is in banking compliance. Read the full bio for where that angle comes from, and see the editorial policy for how pages get written, checked, and corrected.
Why it exists
Reporting channels are scattered across dozens of agencies, each with its own portal, phone line, and deadline, and reward programs like the SEC's and CFTC's whistleblower programs are routinely misunderstood, conflated with each other, or confused with programs that pay nothing at all. GetSnitching exists to put the real rules, the real numbers, and the real contact points in one place, sourced back to the government documents that establish them.
How it makes money
This site is advertising-supported. Ads never influence which programs or channels we document.
We do not accept payment to feature, omit, or rank any program, agency, or state process, and we do not run native advertising made to look like editorial content. Ads, when they run, are clearly labeled as advertisements and never appear on this page, the editorial policy, methodology, contact, privacy, or terms pages. See the privacy policy for what advertising cookies would collect once ads are live.