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Silver Spring woman sentenced to 10 months in prison for defrauding D.C. Medicaid program of over $100K

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[MM Curator Summary]: Susan Tingwei claimed she was providing Medicaid services while she was actually attending law school classes.

 
 

The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

She admitted to filling out false timesheets, according to authorities

 
 

A Silver Spring woman was sentenced to 10 months in prison last week after federal authorities say she defrauded Washington, D.C.’s Medicaid program out of more than $100,000.

Susan Engonwei Tingwei, 44, worked at two home health agencies in the district between 2016 and 2018, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia. Tingwei’s job was to help Medicaid beneficiaries with daily tasks such as getting in and out of bed, bathing, dressing and eating.

According to authorities, Tingwei earned a law degree from the University of Maryland in May 2017. She was admitted to the New York state bar in 2018 and the Maryland bar in 2020.

According to Tingwei’s guilty plea, she was supposed to fill out timesheets and then submit them to home health agencies, which would then bill Medicaid for her services. Tingwei told authorities that she submitted false timesheets claiming to provide services that she did not provide, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

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According to authorities, Tingwei submitted time sheets 118 times between August 2016 and May 2017 claiming that she worked as a personal care aide. However, the times listed on the timesheets were during the hours when Tingwei was scheduled to attend law school classes in Baltimore or would have been traveling to or from them.

Tingwei admitted to defrauding the D.C. Medicaid program out of $131,656, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office. She pleaded guilty in November 2021 to health care fraud. On July 14, she was sentenced to 10 months in federal prison, followed by two years of supervised release. She must also pay restitution equal to the amount of money she defrauded the Medicaid program.

Tingwei’s attorney, Jonathan Zucker, could not immediately be reached for comment Monday afternoon.

Dan Schere can be reached at daniel.schere@bethesdamagazine.com

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Clipped from: https://bethesdamagazine.com/bethesda-beat/courts/silver-spring-woman-sentenced-to-10-months-in-prison-for-defrauding-d-c-medicaid-program-of-over-100k/

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Twin Falls provider sentenced for fraud and obstruction of medicaid fraud investigation

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[MM Curator Summary]: Pat Anderson stole Idaho Medicaid bucks by filing false claims for personal care services.

 
 

The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

 
 

Public Domain Pictures

BOISE, Idaho (KIFI) – Attorney General Lawrence Wasden announced a Twin Falls woman was sentenced on Monday for provider fraud and obstruction of a Medicaid fraud investigation.

52-year-old Patricia Anderson pleaded guilty in April.

Fifth District Judge John Butler sentenced Anderson to a suspended sentence of three years with one year fixed. Anderson was then placed on supervised probation for three years, ordered to pay $2,000 in fines and serve 300 hours of community service. She has paid $1,782 in restitution.

An investigation revealed that in 2017, Anderson billed Medicaid for services she didn’t provide. Investigators determined the fraudulent billing by establishing that Anderson traveled out of state on several occasions, yet billed Medicaid for services she purported to provide a family member in Idaho during the same periods. Payments for these services were reimbursed by the Idaho Medicaid Program. Investigators also determined that during questioning, Anderson did not accurately represent the extent of her travels during the periods in question.

The case was investigated by the Medicaid Program Integrity Unit of the Idaho Department of Health and Welfare and the Attorney General’s Medicaid Fraud Control Unit. Deputy Attorney General Kenneth M. Robins prosecuted the case.

 
 

Clipped from: https://localnews8.com/news/crime-tracker/2022/07/15/twin-falls-provider-sentenced-for-fraud-and-obstruction-of-medicaid-fraud-investigation/

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NC man arrested for fraud in Columbia: SC Attorney General

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[MM Curator Summary]: Tommel Hayes stole SC Medicaid monies with a (mental health) services not provided scheme.

 
 

The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

South Carolina


White collar crime is a financially motivated crime done to obtain or avoid losing money, property, services, or to secure a personal or business advantage. Here’s the most common types. By Candi Bolden

A North Carolina man was locked up in a Richland County jail on Medicaid fraud charges, the South Carolina Attorney General’s Office said Tuesday.

Tommel Devon Hayes was booked at the Alvin S. Glenn Detention Center Monday, S.C. Attorney General Alan Wilson said in a news release.

Following an investigation by the South Carolina Medicaid Fraud Control Unit, the 45-year-old Goldsboro, North Carolina, resident was charged with three counts of obtaining signature or property by false pretenses, value of $10,000 or more, and one count of medical assistance provider fraud, according to the release.

Hayes owned and operated Clearscreen LLC, that’s based in Columbia, the S.C. Attorney General’s Office said. The drug testing service opened in November 2015 and is at 201 Columbia Mall Blvd., which is in the Dentsville area near Two Notch Road.

Between Oct. 10, 2015, and Jan. 31, 2018, Hayes used the business at least three times to “knowingly and willfully, by false pretense or representation,” obtain more than $10,000 “to cheat and defraud” the South Carolina Department of Health and Human Services’ Medicaid Program, Wilson’s office said.

There was no word on how much money Hayes got from the S.C. Medicaid program, or what he did with the funds.

Information about how the scheme operated was not available.

Hayes was also charged with creating and submitting fraudulent documents and claims to the S.C. Medicaid program for mental health services that were not rendered to numerous Medicaid beneficiaries who lived in Greenville and Florence, according to the release.

If convicted on the felony obtaining signature or property by false pretenses charges, Hayes faces a maximum punishment of 10 years in prison on each count, according to South Carolina law. He could also be sentenced to a maximum of 3 years in prison and a $1,000 fine if he’s found guilty of the misdemeanor medical assistance provider fraud.

On Tuesday, Hayes was not listed on the jail’s inmate roster. Information about bond was not available.

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In a breaking news situation, facts can be unclear and the situation may still be developing. The State is trying to get important information to the public as quickly and accurately as possible. This story will be updated as more information becomes available, and some information in this story may change as the facts become clearer. Refresh this page later for more updated information.

This story was originally published July 19, 2022 11:32 AM.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.newsobserver.com/news/state/south-carolina/article263607313.html

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Diagnostic Laboratory to Pay $10 Million to Resolve Self-Referral and Kickback Allegations

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[MM Curator Summary]: BioReference Health used rental payments to docs as kickbacks.

 
 

The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

BOSTON — A national diagnostic laboratory company has agreed to pay $10 million to the federal government and the states of Massachusetts and Connecticut to resolve self-referral and false claims allegations raised by a whistleblower, Attorney General Maura Healey and United States Attorney Rachael Rollins announced today. Massachusetts will receive a total of $141,000 for MassHealth, the Massachusetts Medicaid program. 

According to the AG’s Office, Delaware-based BioReference Health, LLC and its corporate parent OPKO Health, Inc. (OKPO) submitted claims to Medicare, MassHealth and Connecticut Medicaid that violated state and federal anti-kickback and self-referral laws. The primary fraud allegation involved kickbacks disguised as rental payments to encourage referrals from high-volume physician groups.  

“Diagnostic medical laboratories provide important services and testing, but this company engaged in dishonest and unlawful kickbacks to doctors instead of earning their business,” said AG Healey. “Patients and insurers should be able to trust that medical diagnostic companies are following the law and engaging in fair and honest business practices.”  

“Medical decisions by doctors should be based on what is best for each patient, not a doctor’s personal financial interest,” said United States Attorney Rachael S. Rollins. “When companies violate the federal health care laws that are meant to protect patients, health care costs for hard working people increase. We will continue to find fraud and use the False Claims Act to make companies that break the law pay back the taxpayers they defrauded as well as pay a financial price for their misconduct.” 

In April 2019, a former employee of OKPO and BioReference filed a whistleblower lawsuit raising the allegations resolved by this settlement.  

This settlement is the latest development in the work of the AG’s Office to address kickbacks and false claims among Medicaid providers, particularly clinical and diagnostic laboratories. In May, the AG’s Medicaid Fraud Division secured indictments against an independent clinical laboratory in New Bedford and one of its owners who allegedly conducted an illegal kickback and Medicaid fraud scheme involving urine drug screens at sober homes. In June, an investigation by the Medicaid Fraud Division resulted in charges against three independent clinical laboratories, their owner and holding company, an additional independent clinical laboratory and its owner, two laboratory marketing companies, and a Massachusetts physician in connection with Medicaid fraud, money laundering, and kickbacks involving over $2 million in urine drug tests. 

This matter was handled by Managing Attorney Ian Marinoff of the AG’s Medicaid Fraud Division in close partnership with the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Massachusetts. The Office of Inspector General for the United States Department of Health and Human Services, FBI Boston Division, and the Defense Criminal Investigative Service, the law enforcement arm of the Department of Defense Office of Inspector General, also assisted in this case. 

The AG’s Medicaid Fraud Division receives 75 percent of its funding from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services under a grant award. The remaining 25 percent is funded by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. 

 Clipped from: https://www.mass.gov/news/diagnostic-laboratory-to-pay-10-million-to-resolve-self-referral-and-kickback-allegations

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Ossipee Woman Pleads Guilty to Theft of Medicaid Funds

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[MM Curator Summary]: Erin submitted bogus NEMT mileage claims and stole $5k from NH Medicaid.

 
 

The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

Concord, NH – Attorney General John M. Formella announces that Erin M. Longo, age 44, of Center Ossipee, New Hampshire, pleaded guilty and was sentenced on Friday, July 8, 2022 in the Merrimack County Superior Court to theft of New Hampshire Medicaid funds.

Between August 22, 2019 and February 28, 2020, Ms. Longo presented falsified mileage reimbursement claims forms to New Hampshire Medicaid’s non-emergency medical transportation broker in order to receive mileage reimbursement for traveling to medical appointments in Concord that did not exist.

Ms. Longo pleaded guilty to class A misdemeanor Theft by Deception and was sentenced to serve twelve months in the Merrimack County House of Corrections, with all but four days suspended for three years. She has been ordered to pay $4,898.04 in restitution and to perform 50 hours of community service.

Senior Assistant Attorney General Thomas T. Worboys and Attorney Andrew T. Yourell of the Attorney General’s Medicaid Fraud Control Unit prosecuted this case. Financial Analyst/Investigator Timothy E. Brackett and Investigator John M. Lannon, also of the Attorney General’s Medicaid Fraud Control Unit, investigated the matter based on a referral from Well Sense Health Plan’s Special Investigations Unit.

The Medicaid Fraud Control Unit investigates and prosecutes fraud by healthcare providers who treat Medicaid beneficiaries. Healthcare providers include, but are not limited to, hospitals, nursing homes, doctors, dentists, pharmacies, ambulance companies, and anyone else who is paid for providing healthcare services to Medicaid beneficiaries. If you would like to report a case of provider fraud, please contact the Medicaid Fraud Control Unit at (603) 271-1246.

The Medicaid Fraud Control Unit of the New Hampshire Department of Justice receives 75 percent of its funding from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services under a grant award totaling $910,048 for Federal fiscal year (FY) 2022. The State of New Hampshire funds the remaining 25 percent, totaling $303,346 for FY 2022.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.doj.nh.gov/news/2022/20220708-longo-guilty-medicaid-theft.htm

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Medicaid fraud case continues

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[MM Curator Summary]: Latisha and hubby stole $14M from NC Medicaid and now the court is trying to get it back using a 25% garnishment of earnings- so she’ll have to earn $52M in order for the state to get its money back. Might be hard to do while in prison.

 
 

The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

By LANCE MARTIN

rrspin.com

The United States Court for the Eastern District of North Carolina is continuing garnishment proceedings in the case of a woman who bilked the North Carolina Medicaid system out of millions of dollars through sham home health care operations in Ahoskie and Roanoke Rapids.

Navy Federal Credit Union in Vienna, Virginia, is listed in the court documents as the garnishee in the case of Latisha Reese Harron.

The document explains a judgment was entered against Harron upon her sentencing last year in the amount of $13,397,221.64. There remains a balance of $13,397,046.64, the document says.

“You are required by law to begin withholding any property in which the defendant has a substantial non-exempt interest or for which you may become indebted to the defendant as of the date you were served with this writ,” the document says.

Under terms of the writ, the bank is required to withhold 25 percent of the defendant’s earnings which remain after all deductions required by law have been withheld. That also includes 100 percent of any other money which is owed to Harron as well as any and all accounts in which she is a primary party or has signature authority.

The writ spells out the garnishment should include any accounts containing a positive cash value — even any IRAs or 401(k) plans which don’t exceed the outstanding balance of the debt.

The credit union’s response was filed Tuesday, July 5.

Harron has requested a hearing on the matter.

In May of last year, Harron was sentenced to 170 months on charges of conspiracy to commit healthcare fraud and wire fraud, aggravated identity theft, and conspiracy to commit money laundering. She is currently serving her time at Federal Medical Center Carswell located in Fort Worth.

In September of last year Mrs. Harron’s husband, Timothy Mark Harron, was sentenced to 144 months in federal prison and ordered to pay $4,321,590.39 in restitution to the North Carolina Medicaid Program. He is serving his time at Federal Medical Center Devens which is located in Ayer, Massachusetts.

Mrs. Harron created, and was operating, Agape Healthcare Systems, an alleged Medicaid home health provider, in Roanoke Rapids.

They also operated Assured Healthcare Systems in Ahoskie.

Along with the $13,396,921, court documents reflect that other forfeitable items included a British Aerospace Bae 125-800A aircraft, a 2017 Aston Martin DB 11 sports car; a 2016 Ford F-150 Supercrew pickup; real property held in the name of Assured Healthcare Systems in Hertford County, real property located in Charles County, Maryland, as well as various other items of designer jewelry and luxury items seized from the couple’s penthouse condominium in Las Vegas.

(Lance Martin is the Editor and Publisher of www.rrspin.com. Permission was granted to publish this story.)

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.roanoke-chowannewsherald.com/2022/07/12/medicaid-fraud-case-continues/

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Maryland Man Charged With Defrauding Medicaid in Scheme Involving Personal Care Services

 
 

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[MM Curator Summary]: Joe Tamjong stole $733,405 by submitting fake claims, including multiple times he was out of the country.

 
 

The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

 
 

Defendant Accused of Submitting Over $700,000 in Fraudulent Claims

            WASHINGTON – Joseph Tamjong, 50, of Lanham, Maryland, was arrested today after being charged in federal court with defrauding the D.C. Medicaid program out of hundreds of thousands of dollars. 

            The announcement was made by U.S. Attorney Matthew M. Graves, Wayne A. Jacobs, Special Agent in Charge of the FBI Washington Field Office’s Criminal Division, Maureen R. Dixon, Special Agent in Charge of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Inspector General for the region that includes Washington, D.C., and Daniel W. Lucas, Inspector General for the District of Columbia.

            Tamjong was charged in a criminal complaint with health care fraud and health care false statements. He is to make his initial appearance later today in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia.

            According to charging documents, between approximately December 2014 and the present, Tamjong has been employed as personal care aide and/or a participant-directed worker to provide personal care aide services to District of Columbia residents who need assistance performing activities of daily living, such as getting in and out of bed, bathing, dressing, and eating. Tamjong is alleged to have submitted false timesheets claiming that he provided such services when in fact he did not, including when he was traveling outside the United States on eight different trips. Charging documents allege that between December 2014 and February 2022, Medicaid issued payments totaling approximately $733,405 for personal care aide services that Tamjong purportedly provided as a personal care aide or participant-directed worker.

            A complaint is merely an allegation, and all defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law.

            Today’s arrest marks a continued effort by the FBI, the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Inspector General, the District of Columbia’s Office of the Inspector General’s Medicaid Fraud Control Unit, and the U.S. Attorney’s Office to investigate and prosecute individuals who defraud the D.C. Medicaid program.  Since August 2018, 11 former personal care aides have pleaded guilty to defrauding Medicaid in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia. Six of those aides were sentenced to 13 months in prison; a seventh was sentenced to serve 15 months. An eleventh, Susan Tingwei—a licensed attorney—is scheduled to be sentenced on July 11, 2022.

            The government urges the public to provide tips and assistance to stop health care fraud. If you have information about individuals committing health care fraud, please call the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Inspector General hotline at (800) HHSTIPS [(800) 447-8477] or the D.C. Office of the Inspector General at (800) 724-TIPS [(800) 274-8477].

            This case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Kondi Kleinman, with assistance from Paralegal Specialist Michon Tart.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.justice.gov/usao-dc/pr/maryland-man-charged-defrauding-medicaid-scheme-involving-personal-care-services

 
 

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States should protect caregivers’ Medicaid funds from union skims

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[MM Curator Summary]: Biden recently re-instated the union graft practiced that Trump reversed that Obama strengthened.

 
 

The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

 
 

Associated Press/Elise Amendola

In this March 5, 2018 photo, Wil Darcangelo helps his 22-year-old adopted daughter, Lavender, who is blind and autistic, leave their home in Fitchburg, Mass. He is among Americans who care for family members in their homes full time.

Robert and Patricia Haynes live in Mich. and provide full-time care for their adult children, Kevin and Melissa, who suffer from severe cases of cerebral palsy. Until 2014, they were forced to give a portion of their Medicaid reimbursements to the Service Employees International Union (SEIU), a scheme propagated by unions such as SEIU and the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) that is commonly known as to as “dues skimming.” 

Yet, while a number of states including Michigan have taken action to prohibit the dues skim, a May rule by the federal Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) reversed a Trump administration effort to stop the skim nationally. A separate 9th Circuit decision last week also continues to allow unions to trap home care providers into paying them.

The Hayneses, like other caregivers across the country, are eligible for Medicaid reimbursement from the state for the care they provide to their disabled children. However, over a decade ago, unions worked with state policymakers in about a dozen states to permit the siphoning of union dues from Medicaid money the Hayneses received. Without their permission or intent, the state reclassified the Hayneses as “public employees” at the behest of SEIU — and they had to pay their dues.

Many members of the “home care workforce” are relatives or friends providing care to sick family members or loved ones in need.

It took years to end the dues skim in Michigan, including administrative action by former Gov. Rick Snyder, legislative reform, lawsuits and the defeat of a ballot measure backed by the unions in a last-ditch effort to keep the dues skim alive. After the SEIU took $34 million from providers like the Hayneses, this unfair policy finally ended.

But caregivers in states such as Illinois, Oregon and Washington had to wait until 2014 before unions could stop forcing them to pay fees to take care of their loved ones. In a landmark case, Harris v. Quinn, the U.S. Supreme Court said unions could not force Pamela Harris — an Illinois mom caring for her son Joshua, who needed constant care for developmental disabilities — to pay union fees.

But that same year, HHS under President Obama adopted a federal rule to explicitly allow Medicaid funds to be diverted to unions. While providers did not need to pay, unions could still trap them into paying. By 2017, the Freedom Foundation estimated that unions were skimming an estimated $150 million each year, affecting 358,000 caregivers’ Medicaid funds.

The reason was that, after Harris v. Quinn, at least 11 states allowed dues skimming and unions were able to make providers pay dues by establishing arbitrary opt-out windows that limited when caregivers could leave and stop paying union fees. Cindy Ochoa, who was taking care of her disabled son, Adam, even experienced the union’s forgery of dues authorization signatures to keep the payments flowing.

Then, in 2019, the Trump administration reversed the rule, prohibiting unions from taking Medicaid payments from providers. Now, President Biden’s commitment to being the “most pro-union president ever” is coming to fruition: the new rule from HHS once again gives federal blessing to dues skimming.  

A debate exists over whether states or the federal government have the authority to issue policies pertaining to these Medicaid reimbursements. While Medicaid dollars are funded in part by the federal government, state governments allocate the money. Some states, such as Michigan, have banned dues skimming, but Biden’s decision means that caregivers in many states without such statutory protections may be forced to pay union fees.  

The nature of home care means that unions don’t represent these caregivers in the traditional workplace or in negotiations with an “employer.” A parent is not going to file a complaint against his or her sick child. Neither is a union going to negotiate benefits when the supposed “employer” is a sick or disabled relative.

Yet, the Biden administration’s HHS rule and the 9th Circuit decision are prioritizing the dues skim over the best interests and financial needs of caregivers and our nation’s most vulnerable patients.

As Michigan has done, states must act now and not wait for the federal government or the courts to rule justly. State policymakers owe it to caregivers like Robert and Patricia Haynes, Pamela Harris, and Cindy Ochoa to pass laws prohibiting the dues skim from Medicaid payments, ensuring that these caregivers have maximum support and flexibility to provide for those they love.

Lindsay B. Killen is vice president for strategy and communications at the Mackinac Center for Public Policy, a research and educational institute in Midland, Mich. Follow her on Twitter @LindsayBKillen.

F. Vincent Vernuccio is a senior fellow with Mackinac Center’s Workers for Opportunity project and president of the Institute for the American Worker. Follow him on Twitter @vinnievernuccio.

 
 

Clipped from: https://thehill.com/opinion/finance/3535007-states-should-protect-caregivers-medicaid-funds-from-union-skims/

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Fraud- Three More Defendants Sentenced for Their Roles in Wide-Ranging Medicaid Fraud Conspiracy

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[MM Curator Summary]: The $400k+ fraud involved multiple companies and members taking money for use of their IDs to steal from PA Medicaid.

 
 

The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

PITTSBURGH, Pa. – Two residents of Pittsburgh and a resident of Georgia were sentenced in federal court for conspiracy to defraud the Pennsylvania Medicaid program and related offenses, United States Attorney Cindy K. Chung announced today.

During sentencing hearings on June 28 and June 29, 2022, United States District Judge Cathy Bissoon sentenced Tiffhany Covington, 45, of Pittsburgh, to fifteen months’ imprisonment; Luis Columbie-Abrew, 36, of East Point, Georgia, to three years’ probation, including twelve months of home confinement; and Julie Wilson, 51, of Pittsburgh, to three years’ probation, including six months of home confinement. Covington, Columbie-Abrew, and Wilson were also ordered to pay restitution to the Pennsylvania Medicaid program totaling $245,376.26, $164,799.48, and $2,083.36, respectively. All three defendants previously pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit health care fraud. Columbie-Abrew and Wilson also pleaded guilty to health care fraud, with Columbie-Abrew pleading guilty to an additional charge of aggravated identity theft.

During their plea hearings, each defendant admitted that they were employees of one or more of four related entities operating in the home health care industry—Moriarty Consultants, Inc. (MCI), Activity Daily Living Services, Inc. (ADL), Coordination Care, Inc. (CCI), and Everyday People Staffing, Inc. (EPS). MCI, ADL, and CCI were approved under the Pennsylvania Medicaid program to offer certain services to qualifying Medicaid recipients (“consumers”), including personal assistance services (PAS), service coordination, and non-medical transportation, among other services. Between 2011 and 2017, the defendants admitted that they participated in a wide-ranging conspiracy to defraud the Pennsylvania Medicaid program for the purpose of obtaining millions of dollars in illegal Medicaid payments through the submission of fraudulent claims for services that were never provided to the consumers identified on the claims or for which there was insufficient or fabricated documentation to support the claims. The Court was further advised that the defendants conspired with, among others, Arlinda Moriarty, the owner of MCI, ADL, and EPS; Daynelle Dickens, the owner of CCI and Arlinda Moriarty’s sister; various office workers at the companies, including Tamika Adams, Tony Brown, Terra Dean, Larita Walls, Keith Scoggins, and Tia Collins; and caregivers (“attendants”) at MCI, including Tionne Street and Autumn Brown. To date, each of these co-conspirators have also pleaded guilty for their roles in the conspiracy.

As part of the conspiracy, the defendants each admitted that co-conspirators fabricated timesheets to reflect the provision of in-home PAS care they provided to consumers but that, in fact, never occurred. In addition, certain co-conspirators, including Covington and Columbie-Abrew, stopped using their own names as the attendant on timesheets and instead used the names of “ghost” attendants, some of whom permitted their names to be used in exchange for a kickback of resulting fraudulent salary payments. The defendants also admitted that certain co-conspirators submitted false timesheets for PAS care they never provided during times when they were actually working at other jobs or living out of the area. In some cases, as the defendants acknowledged, Medicaid claims were submitted for PAS care that purportedly occurred while consumers were hospitalized, incarcerated, or deceased, and in other instances, co-conspirators paid kickbacks to consumers in exchange for the consumers’ agreement to participate in the submission of fraudulent timesheets in support of Medicaid claims. Indeed, Columbie-Abrew specifically admitted causing the submission of hundreds of thousands of dollars of Medicaid claims for purported care of consumers who lived in the Pittsburgh area, despite the fact that he—as the purported attendant—lived several states away in Georgia.

The defendants also admitted that Arlinda Moriarty directed co-conspirators, including Covington, to bill the maximum allowable PAS and service coordination hours for consumers to maximize profits and to ensure that the state did not require MCI, ADL, and CCI to forfeit underutilized consumer hours. To that end, Wilson acknowledged that, at Moriarty’s behest, she collected information about consumers who had “unused” PAS care hours—that is, hours of authorized PAS care that had not been performed and, as a result, had not been billed to Pennsylvania Medicaid. In response, Wilson would provide lists of such consumers and their “unused” hours to Moriarty and Dickens. Moriarty, in turn, would direct Wilson to submit false claims, in bulk, for some or all of the “unused” hours—without the relevant consumers’ knowledge or consent. Wilson further admitted that she would then send Moriarty a list of the “unused” hours Wilson had billed and that required the creation of back-dated timesheets to document the purported care. Rampant document fabrication also occurred during the course of state audits of the Moriarty-related entities.

Assistant United States Attorney Eric G. Olshan and Special Assistant United States Attorney Edward Song are prosecuting this case on behalf of the government. The Federal Bureau of
Investigation, Pennsylvania Office of the Attorney General – Medicaid Fraud Control Unit, Internal Revenue Service – Criminal Investigation, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services – Office of Inspector General, and United States Postal Inspection Service conducted the investigation of the defendants.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.justice.gov/usao-wdpa/pr/three-more-defendants-sentenced-their-roles-wide-ranging-medicaid-fraud-conspiracy

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Kentucky Psychiatrist Sentenced for Health Care Fraud Related to Referrals for Drug Testing at Greensburg Lab

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[MM Curator Summary]: Varanise Booker admitted to a kickback scam that netted her a little over $24k.

 
 

The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

PITTSBURGH – A resident of Louisville, Kentucky, was sentenced in federal court yesterday for one count of health care fraud, United States Attorney Cindy K. Chung announced.

United States District Judge David S. Cercone sentenced Varanise C. Booker, 67, to 36 months of probation and ordered that she pay restitution totaling $24,217.26 to the Kentucky Medicaid program.

During the defendant’s plea hearing on October 5, 2021, Booker admitted that she was a licensed psychiatrist who operated a medical practice, Family and Children Behavioral Health Services, in Louisville, Kentucky. Between approximately October 2011 and August 2013, the defendant further admitted that she referred patients for drug testing and related services performed by Universal Oral Fluid Labs (“UOFL”), a clinical drug testing and drug screening laboratory located in Greensburg, Pennsylvania. The court was further advised that the defendant engaged in health care fraud by causing UOFL to bill the Kentucky Medicaid program for testing based on referrals that were outside the ordinary course of professional practice and not for a legitimate medical purpose. Specifically, the defendant acknowledged that she did not document a legitimate justification for ordering certain drug tests and services, failed to document the results of certain drug tests and services performed by UOFL in her medical files, and failed to address the results of certain drug tests and services in the treatment of her patients. The defendant further admitted that she caused UOFL to pay her a certain portion of the reimbursements the laboratory received from Kentucky Medicaid in connection with her referral of unlawful drug tests and related services. As a result, the defendant caused losses to Kentucky Medicaid in excess of $20,000.

Assistant United States Attorney Eric G. Olshan prosecuted this case on behalf of the government.

The Federal Bureau of Investigation, Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General, Internal Revenue Service – Criminal Investigation, and Pennsylvania Office of Attorney General Medicaid Fraud Control Section conducted the investigation that led to the prosecution of Booker.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.justice.gov/usao-wdpa/pr/kentucky-psychiatrist-sentenced-health-care-fraud-related-referrals-drug-testing