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 The court said Pratt and Whitney violated the False Claims Act by fraudulently asserting that prices it submitted were substantiated by the most recent data and also fraudulently saying it applied a predicted rate of inflation. United Technologies said that what the government paid is what it should have paid, Rose said. The company proposed that historical prices, comparable sales, independent price appraisals and market prices establish fair market value, he said. But those factors come from data that are older and more out of date than what the U.S. uses to calculate damages, the judge said. United Technologies shares fell 40 cents to $95.77 in afternoon trading.
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