Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge SILBERMAN.
The question presented in this appeal is whether states are defendant persons under the False Claims Act. Contrary to the decisions of the Second and Eighth Circuits,
see United States ex rel. Stevens v. Vermont Agency of Natural Resources,
I.
Ronald Long was the Coordinator of Investigations and Audit for the Bureau of Proprietary School Supervision of the New York State Department of Education, the state agency that regulates proprietary schools. In 1989, he conducted an investigation of SCS Business and Technical Institute, which operates five business and technical schools in New York City, and discovered that SCS allegedly had made false and fraudulent claims to the federal government in return for federal funding for students attending SCS schools under tuition assistance programs. He also determined, according to his complaint subsequently filed in district court, that Joseph P. Frey, his supervisor at the Bureau, and other officials in the State Department of Education, knew about SCS’ fraudulent claims and conspired with SCS to conceal the fraud in order to secure further federal funding for SCS. They did so because, after a 1990 change in New York State law, the Bureau’s funding depended in substantial part on tuition assessments and fines that SCS paid to the Bureau. Long’s theory was that since the Bureau received a share of the federal funds that SCS fraudulently obtained from the United States, the Bureau had every incentive to see that fraud continue. He claims that after he reported the results of his investigation to state and federal authorities, Frey and other state officials took actions to limit and subvert his investigation.
Long was taken off the investigation and then fired in 1992, shortly after SCS settled administrative charges brought against one of SCS’ schools by the state education department. According to him, the settlement agreement, which did not benefit the United States in any way and grossly understated the extent of SCS’ fraudulent practices, was a sweetheart deal that was but another instance of the state’s conspiracy with SCS to conceal and perpetuate SCS’ fraud — a conspiracy that he alleges continued until SCS filed for bankruptcy in 1995. He alleges that after the settlement, New York ignored evidence of SCS’ continuing fraud and falsely represented to the United States that SCS’ fraud had ceased and that it was actively monitoring SCS.
*873 Long filed a complaint in the district court against Frey, other state officials, the State of New York, SCS, and various SCS officials. He brought his case as a qui tam relator under the False Claims Act, 31 U.S.C. §§ 3729 et seq. (1994), suing in the name of the United States for the benefit of the United States and himself. He contended that the state defendants violated the Act by conspiring with SCS to have false claims submitted to the United States and by causing false claims to be submitted. The state defendants were also alleged to have violated the whistle-blower provision of the Act by harassing and wrongfully discharging Long, and to have been unjustly enriched under state common law. The United States (the government) subsequently intervened in the case against the SCS defendants, but declined to intervene against the state defendants. The state defendants moved to dismiss the complaint on the grounds that states are not defendant persons under the Act and that, even if they were, the Eleventh Amendment to the United States Constitution would bar the suit. It was also asserted that Long’s suit against the state defendants was barred by the Act because the allegations of fraud had been publiely disclosed and because Long was not an “original source” of the information.
The district court denied in part the state defendants’ motion to dismiss, concluding that states are defendant persons under the Act and that the Eleventh Amendment does not bar the suit.
See United States ex rel. Long v. SCS Bus. & Technical Inst.,
II.
To persuade us to uphold the decision below, appellees Long and the government must demonstrate that the district court correctly interpreted the term “person” (liable for making a false claim) in § 3729(a) of the False Claims Act to include states.
3
In that respect, they have no little burden because the statute does not define the term “person” and, as the Supreme Court has remarked before, “in common usage, the term ‘person’ does not include the sovereign, [and] statutes employing the [word] are ordinarily construed to exclude it.”
Will v. Michigan Dep’t of State Police,
This “often-expressed understanding,”
Will,
*875
Our review of the “legislative environment,”
Evans,
Appellees nevertheless invoke the broad purposes and legislative history of the Civil War statute. We think that is not helpful because, as the Supreme Court has said, Congress’ primary concern at the time — admittedly not its exclusive one— was to put an end to “frauds perpetrated by large [military] contractors during the Civil War.”
United States v. Bornstein,
*876
That takes us to the legislative history. Appellees point us first to an
1862
House Committee Report that, in discussing various frauds committed during the Civil War, referred to certain state officials that had used war contracts for personal profit.
See
H.R. Rep. No. 2, 37th Cong., 2d Sess., at xxxviiixxxix (1862). But the report specifically stated that these examples of fraud were not committed
against
the United States government.
See id.
at xxxviii. So the prior report is a rather tenuous link to the Act Congress passed one year later.
But see Stevens,
Because the enacting Congress’ intent is, to be charitable, rather opaque, appel-lees turn our attention to the 1986 amendments to the False Claims Act and to a related statute also passed in 1986. The provision of the 1986 amendments that changed 31 U.S.C. § 3729(a) from imposing liability on “[a] person not a member of an armed force of the United States” to “[a]ny person” did
not,
however, substantively expand the meaning of defendant persons under the Act.
See Stevens,
Be that as it may, we are not persuaded that these added provisions can bear the weight appellees would place on them. Appellees argue that Congress’ decision to define “person” to include states in the Civil Investigative Demand section of the Act,
see
31 U.S.C. § 3733(0(4) (1994), indicates (some) Congress’ intent to include states as persons throughout the whole Act,
10
even though this provision applies only to the Civil Investigative Demand section.
See
31 U.S.C. § 3733(i) (For purposes of
this section
...) (emphasis added). Appellees question why Congress would create a discovery tool to be used to gain information possessed by states if the Act did not already authorize false claims actions against them.
See also Stevens,
Indeed, appellant and its
amici,
turning the blade, point out that the 1986 amendments, which increased liability from double to treble damages and increased the civil penalty,
see
31 U.S.C. § 3729(a), created a form of punitive damages that would be palpably inconsistent with state liability. Congress is not thought to impose punitive damages on public entities lightly. Imposition of such a penalty has been held to be inconsistent with public policy since it gives the plaintiff a windfall at the expense of the blameless or unknowing taxpayers who must foot the bill for the government’s transgressions.
See City of Newport v. Fact Concerts, Inc.,
Appellees’ last sortie into the background of the 1986 amendments uncovered a piece of legislative history that they regard as the “smoking gun.” They point to a Senate Report issued at the time Congress amended certain provisions of the Act that includes a section entitled “History of the False Claims Act and Court Interpretations.” See S. Rep. No. 345, 99th Cong., 2d Sess., at 8 (1986), reprinted in U.S.C.C.A.N. 5266, 5273. As part of what purported to be purely descriptive history, see id. (“In its present form, the False Claims Act.... ”), the Report states:
The False Claims Act reaches all parties who may submit false claims. The term “person” is used in its broad sense to include partnerships, associations, and corporations ... as well as States and political subdivisions thereof. Cf. Ohio v. Helvering,292 U.S. 360 , 370,54 S.Ct. 725 ,78 L.Ed. 1307 (1934); Georgia v. Evans,316 U.S. 159 , 161,62 S.Ct. 972 ,86 L.Ed. 1346 (1942); Monell v. Department of Social Services of the City of New York,436 U.S. 658 ,98 S.Ct. 2018 ,56 L.Ed.2d 611 (1978).
Id. (emphasis added) (footnote omitted).
According to appellees, the Report confirms that the Congress of 1863, over a hundred years before, intended to include states as defendant persons — an argument that two of our sister circuits and the district court below accepted.
See Stevens,
Nevertheless, appellees contend that we have asked the wrong question in searching the legislative materials for affirmative indications that Congress intended to
include
states as defendant persons in § 3729(a). Instead, they would have us start with the presumption that states are defendant persons and look only for some indication that Congress intended to
exclude
states. They justify this approach by arguing that states can be plaintiffs under § 3730(b)(1) (providing that “[a] person may bring a civil action for a violation of section 3729 for the person and for the United States Government”), and that the same statutory term, person, is used to describe the eligible class of plaintiffs.
14
The word person is presumed to have the same meaning in different sections of the same statute.
See, e.g., Commissioner v. Lundy,
The consistent meaning canon is brandished as if the question whether states could be
qui tam
relators were a statutory given. But it is not. We recognize that other courts have
assumed
that states can be
qui tam
relators,
see, e.g., United States ex rel. Woodard v. Country View Care Ctr., Inc.,
The more obvious reading of § 3732(b), however, is that it authorizes permissive intervention by states for recovery of state funds (creating what is in effect an exception to § 3730(b)(5)’s apparent general bar on intervention by all other parties except for the United States). See Boese, supra, at 4-13 (explaining that § 3732(b) “does not require the state to be a relator for jurisdiction to exist,” noting the possibility that it permits intervention by states, but making no reference to § 3730(b)(5)). Or Congress might even have meant § 3732(b) to provide supplemental jurisdiction for a non-state relator to join a federal false claim action with an action to recover state funds under a state qui tam statute, which several states have enacted. See, e.g., Cal. Gov’t Code § 12650 et seq. (West 1998); Fla. Stat Ann. § 68.081-092 (West 1998).
In any event, the argument that states are relators under § 3730(b)(1) is rather strained. To the extent it relies on the Senate Report author’s knowledge of one suit by a state relator, it is no more persuasive than the analogous argument based on the Report’s “recognition” of pri- or suits against state defendants. The argument, moreover, depends on the proposition that § 3730(b)(5) prevents all parties, except for the United States, from intervening in another relator’s
qui tam
action. Yet it is not at all clear that this provision precludes all forms of party join-der, which would effectively limit
qui tam
actions to single relators.
See United States ex rel. Precision Co. v. Koch Indus., Inc.,
It should be apparent, then, that whether states can be qui tam relators presents an extraordinarily difficult question of statutory interpretation in its own right. Although appellees do not acknowledge it, their argument would require us to puzzle through that question — not squarely presented to us — in order to resolve the actual question before us (itself no easy one) in their favor. The consistent meaning canon does not have much usefulness if in order to apply it a court has to struggle that hard to determine the second meaning, against which the first is to be compared. Given the uncertainty governing the question whether states can be relators, we think the proper course is to *881 decide only the issue before us. 15
III.
Appellees have not persuasively demonstrated a congressional intent to include states as defendant persons under the False Claims Act. That being so, the default rule would seem to dictate that they are not. We hesitate in resting solely on this ground, however, since the Supreme Court has never explained just how much of a showing suffices to overcome the presumption against interpreting persons to include states, and indeed on occasion has employed the rule in a somewhat diluted fashion.
See, e.g., Sims v. United States,
A.
Were we to agree with appellees that states can be defendants under the False Claims Act, we would be obliged to decide whether, as appellant New York contends, the Eleventh Amendment bars a
qui tam
suit by a private relator against a state in federal court. The Amendment states that “[t]he Judicial Power of the United States shall not be construed to extend to any suit in law or equity, commenced or prosecuted against one of the
*882
United States by Citizens of another State, or by Citizens or Subjects of any Foreign State.” U.S. Const, amend. XI. Although it has been read to bar suits by plaintiffs not identified in the text of the amendment itself, such as citizens of the state being sued,
see Hans v. Louisiana,
We think our sister circuits have paid insufficient attention to the Supreme Court’s decision in
Blatchford v. Native Village of Noatak,
We doubt ... that that sovereign exemption can be delegated-even if one limits the permissibility of delegation ... to persons on whose behalf the United States itself might sue. The consent, “inherent in the convention, ” to suit by the United States — at the instance and under the control of responsible federal officers — is not consent to suit by anyone whom the United States might select) and even consent to suit by the United States for a particular persons’s benefit is not consent to suit by that person himself.
Id. at 785 (emphasis added).
It seems to us that permitting a
qui tam
relator to sue a state in federal court based on the government’s exemption from the Eleventh Amendment bar involves just the kind of delegation that
Blatchford
so plainly questioned.
See Rodgers,
Whatever the ultimate resolution of the question, we think it presents a serious constitutional issue. It is quite a stretch to claim that such a delegation was part of the inherent constitutional design, or that the permanence of the union somehow depends on giving the United States broad latitude to permit private parties to sue the states in the federal courts on the United States’ behalf.
Compare United States v. Texas,
Long and the government would avoid the
Blatchford
delegation difficulty by asserting that in
qui tarn
suits the United States is the real party in interest; a
qui tarn
suit is therefore essentially a suit by and for the United States.
See, e.g., Stevens,
Accordingly, we do not think the relator’s technical status as a “real party in interest” is inconsistent with the conclusion of our sister circuits that the United States is a “real party in interest” as well.
See, e.g., Stevens,
Nor do we think, as appellees suggest, that the government’s control over a relator’s suit alters the result. We acknowledge that the government takes the greater share of any recovery, see 31 U.S.C. § 3730(d)(1),(2), and that the statute gives *885 the United States considerable control over the relator’s suit, see, e.g., id. at § 3730(b)(2)(providing that the government can intervene in the suit as of right within sixty days after receiving the relator’s complaint, evidence, and information); id. at § 3730(b)(1) (relator cannot dismiss his own suit without written consent of the court and the Attorney General); id. at § 3730(c)(3)-(4) (even if the government does not intervene, it may monitor the proceedings and stay discovery in certain situations); id. at 3730(c)(3) (government can intervene at any time upon a showing of good cause); id. § at 3730(c)(2)(A) (government may dismiss the suit after notice to the relator and a hearing); id. at § 3730(c)(2)(B) (government may settle the suit with the defendant over the relator’s objection if the court approves after a hearing). 18 Still, we simply do not see how the government’s potential exercise of its power renders the relator any less a party. Whatever the degree of control the United States exercises, we think it is telling that, although there are some intimations to that effect, no court has actually held that the relator is not a party to the qui tam suit merely because of the United States’ potential ability to control the prosecution of the suit.
The relator appears to remain a party whether or not the United States intervenes. In either situation, the relator’s rights must be protected under the statute.
See
31 U.S.C. § 3730(c)(3) (providing that the court may permit the United States to intervene for good cause but must not “limit[ ] the status and rights of the person initiating the action”);
id.
at § 3730(c)(1) (providing that the relator “shall have the right to continue as a party to the action,” subject to certain limitations, even after the United States intervenes). This is important because the Eleventh Amendment must be satisfied for every claim in the suit,
see Pennhurst State Sch. & Hosp. v. Halderman,
It has also been contended that, despite the clear statutory language giving rela-
*886
tors a cause of action and treating them as parties vested with rights and protections, relators should be seen instead as self-appointed government counsel.
See Stevens,
B.
Although, as we have indicated, we have profound doubts that the Eleventh Amendment permits this lawsuit against New York even if Congress implicitly authorized relators to bring suits against the states, we do not rest our decision on an interpretation of the Constitution. Instead, bearing in mind that we must decide this difficult constitutional issue only if the term person in the Act is interpreted as including states, and that it seems quite dubious that Congress intended that result, the appropriate course seems to us to interpret “person” as not including states.
The venerable doctrine of construing statutes in such a way as to avoid serious constitutional questions has two important prerequisites. First, the “statute must be genuinely susceptible to two constructions,” and this determination must be made “after, and not before, [the statute’s] complexities are unraveled.”
Almendarez-Torres,
*887 It is obvious from what we have said already that these requirements are satisfied in this case. As we have just explained at length, the Eleventh Amendment question is, at bare minimum, a serious one. It could not be suggested, moreover, that we are distorting the language of the statute in order to avoid a constitutional question. The more obvious reading is to exclude states from “person.” The more difficult task is to demonstrate that the inclusion of states as defendant persons is a fair reading of the statute. There can be no objection to avoiding a constitutional question that is implicated only by a rather strained reading of the statute.
We think it relevant—if not decisive—to observe that the avoidance canon coincides in this case with two additional related canons of construction that impose upon Congress an obligation of specificity. When “Congress intends to alter the ‘usual constitutional balance between the States and the Federal Government,’ ” federal courts insist that Congress “make its intention to do so ‘unmistakably clear in the language of the statute.’ ”
Will,
Appellees contend that there is no justification for applying this clear statement rule of
Will
or
Gregory
because treating states as defendant persons would not actually alter the constitutional balance of powers between the federal and state governments. Such an alteration occurs, for example, when Congress seeks to remove the states’ sovereign immunity in their own courts, as in
Will,
We are unpersuaded by various crabbed analyses of the Court’s “clear statement” jurisprudence that we have seen. To characterize the relevant state function at issue, as the Second Circuit did, as
fraudulent conduct, see, e.g., Stevens,
The Supreme Court has applied
Gregory
as we do, focusing on the state functions necessarily affected by operation of the statute, and not exclusively on the actual conduct proscribed by Congress.
See Gregory,
Appellees similarly give an overly restrictive reading of
Will.
It is true that the Court in
Will
pointed to the states’ sovereign immunity in their own courts as a supporting reason for concluding that Congress did not intend to make states persons under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
See Will,
Whether or not
Will
or
Gregory
can be taken as far as we have suggested,
22
there is a second related clear statement canon that bears on our case. In cases involving congressional abrogation of a state’s Eleventh Amendment immunity, the applicability of the clear statement rule is well-established and the uncertainties in defining the scope of the
Will
and
Gregory
versions of that rule disappear.
See Dellmuth v. Muth,
Appellees’ argument against using the Eleventh Amendment’s clear statement rule follows from their prior conclusion that the Eleventh Amendment does not apply to this case. Appellees therefore assume that states are persons for the purpose of rejecting New York’s Eleventh Amendment defense, and then proceed to reject the Eleventh Amendment’s clear statement rule when actually interpreting the statute previously assumed to include states—sort of a divide and conquer strategy. The statutory construction issue is, however, inextricably linked with the jurisdictional one, which is precisely why we decline to assume that states are persons in order to conduct an Eleventh Amendment inquiry that could be avoided if the assumption were not made in the first place. We think the correct resolution is to read the Act in such a way that avoids the serious constitutional question whether *890 the Eleventh Amendment bars qui tam suits against the state in federal court. In so doing, we rely on the constitutional avoidance canon buttressed by the family of “clear statement” rules applicable when Congress attempts to legislate in the way that appellees contend it has legislated. 23
In the end it comes to this: if we must decide whether states constitutionally can be defendants in federal court under the Act, Congress must make its intent clear. The decision of the district court is therefore reversed.
So ordered.
Notes
. The district court granted the motion to dismiss Long's whistleblower and unjust enrichment claims, the former because the Eleventh Amendment bars private suits brought against the state (although it does not bar Long's claim for prospective relief against Frey, a state official), and the latter because Long has no standing to assert the government’s claim of unjust enrichment under state common law.
See Long,
. The district court also concluded that Long’s suit was not barred by the public disclosure and original source provisions of the Act.
See Long,
. The statute provides, in relevant part:
(a) Liability for certain acts. Any person who—
(2) knowingly makes, uses, or causes to be made or used, a false record or statement to get a false or fraudulent claim paid or approved by the Government;
(3) conspires to defraud the Government by getting a false claim allowed or paid ... is liable to the United States Government ....
31 U.S.C. § 3729 (1994).
. As appellees observe, the Eighth Circuit rejected application of this rule in interpreting the False Claims Act on the ground that the presumption of sovereign exclusion applies only to the enacting sovereign.
See Zissler,
. In reaching this conclusion, the district court was guided by its assumption that the "clear statement” rule of
Will,
.The Second Circuit explained this problem away by reasoning that the Congress’ undeniable intent to include military contractors in the Act refuted any attempt to read "persons not in the military” as impliedly referring only to natural, as opposed to corporate, persons.
See Stevens,
. Of course, Stevens, not Graber, is Second Circuit law.
. In
Zissler,
. The Eighth Circuit thought that this amendment more broadly "evidenced consideration of whom to hold liable” under the amended Act.
Zissler,
. The CID section permits the government to conduct discovery of persons who "may be in possession, custody, or control of any documentary material or information relevant to a false claims investigation.” 31 U.S.C. § 3733(a)(1).
. It is unclear what appellees think they add by pointing to a 1981 General Accounting Office Report that documented recent instances of stale officials defrauding the United States government — of which the Senate apparently was aware when amending the statute in 1986.
See
S. Rep No. 345, 99th Cong., 2d Sess., at 2 & n.l (1986),
reprinted in
U.S.C.C.A.N. at 5266, 5267 (citing GAO Report to Congress, Fraud in Government Programs: How Extensive Is It? How Can It Be Controlled? (1981)). Not only is evidence of an intent 1o impose liability on state officials (which itself would be a tenuous inference from this report) distinct from an intent to impose liability on the stales themselves,
see Will,
. The Report's resort to these inapposite cases is unsurprising since, at the time of the 1986 amendments, only one decision involved a
qui tam
suit against the state, and that decision held that states were not persons under the Act.
See United States ex rel. Weinberger v. Florida,
. The Eighth Circuit thought that 1986 amendments to § 3729(a) warranted giving the 1986 Report greater interpretive weight, even on the assumption that the Report’s understanding of the pre-1986 caselaw was incorrect.
See Zissler,
.Although New York seemed insistent that it can have it both ways — that it can be a plaintiff but not a defendant — the states, appearing as
amici,
seemed quite prepared to abandon any claim that they could sue as plaintiffs; the threat of being a
qui tam
defendant apparently "concentrated their minds.”
*881
ing that 1918 amendment to the criminal provisions of the False Claims Act was at most "merely an expression of how the 1918 Congress interpreted a statute passed by another Congress more than a half century before” and had “very little, if any, significance” in interpreting the original Act’s civil provisions). Although the Supreme Court occasionally says that "[subsequent legislation which declares the intent of an earlier law is entitled to great weight in statutory construction,”
Loving v. United States,
. Even assuming
arguendo
that states can be relators, we doubt that the consistent meaning canon is appropriately applied in this case. The canon itself has an important exception “[wjhere the subject-matter to which the words refer is not the same in the several places where they are used.”
Atlantic Cleaners & Dyers, Inc. v. United States,
It might be argued that the 1986 amendments merely clarified that Congress has intended states to be relators since 1863, and that the consistent meaning canon really applies to the 1863 Congress alone. But this theory would require us, quite illogically, to interpret the 1986 legislative action as a declaration of what a Congress over a century earlier intended. The action of the 1986 Congress tells us, at most, what the 1986 Congress thought about states as
qui tam
relators (and as we noted above, it does not tell us very much); it does not purport to tell us, nor could it, what the 1863 Congress intended.
See Rainwater v. United States,
. The district court concluded that Long's claim under the whistle-blower provision of the False Claims Act, 31 U.S.C. § 3730(h), was barred by the Eleventh Amendment because, unlike a
qui tam
suit under § 3730(b) brought in the name of the United States, a claim under § 3730(h) is a true "private right of action.”
Long,
. One of the principal concerns motivating the Eleventh Amendment inquiry into whether the state is the '-'real party in interest” defendant (or in other words that the actual defendant is an "arm of the state”) is that an individual plaintiff's recovery will be paid out of the state treasury.
See Regents of the University of California v. Doe,
. There are, however, substantial restrictions on the United States’ power incorporated within these provisions.
See Stevens,
. Of course, if the government actually hired a lawyer to bring its own cause of action, the Blatchford delegation problem would not arise. But as we have explained at length, that is not what the False Claims Act does.
. Indeed, in
Will
itself the Eleventh Amendment was not a concern because the question whether states were persons under § 1983 arose in the context of a state court case, and the Eleventh Amendment does not apply in state courts.
See Will,
. It could be argued, we suppose, that because False Claims Act liability is only triggered when the state requests money from the federal government, it brings any interference with its essential functions on itself. But we do not see any basis in
Gregory
for eliminating the need for a clear statement simply because the liability imposed is conditioned on a voluntary act by the state. The clear statement rule of
Pennhurst State School and Hospital v. Halderman,
. The government would have us instead limit the Court’s clear statement rules because of the significant reliance interests created by Congress' and the federal agencies’ assumption that states, to whom they entrusted large sums of money, are covered by the Act. For the proposition that reliance interests can trump clear statement rules, the government relies on
Hilton v. South Carolina Public Railways Comm’n,
. New York would also have us apply the clear statement rule of
Pennhurst,
