Posted on

FWA (PA)- Former Philly city worker found guilty of Medicaid fraud

 
 

 
 

MM Curator summary

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.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: Cornelius Edwards stole some of your tax dollars using bogus BH provider claims, we just don’t know how much yet.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.inquirer.com/news/philly-medicaid-fraud-cornelius-edwards-20230427.html

Cornelius Edwards submitted fraudulent timesheets while working as a mental health professional for children with behavioral and mental health challenges.

 
 

File photo.Read moreDreamstime / MCT

A Philadelphia jury has convicted a former city worker of Medicaid fraud for falsely billing for services he did not provide as a mental health professional treating children, Pennsylvania Attorney General Michelle Henry announced Thursday.

Cornelius Edwards, 45, of Philadelphia, was found guilty on Monday of Medicaid fraud, theft by deception, and tampering with public records. Edwards is scheduled to be sentenced on June 26 by Common Pleas Court Judge Nicholas Kamau.

Edwards was released on his own recognizance after his 2019 arrest. A lawyer representing Edwards could not be reached for comment Thursday night.

Henry said in a news release that Edwards repeatedly submitted fraudulent time sheets while working as a mental health professional for children with behavioral and mental health challenges.

Between April 2014 and April 2018, Edwards was working for multiple community behavioral health providers as a licensed behavioral specialist consultant, a mobile therapist, and a lead clinician, Henry said.

He also was employed by the city Parks and Recreation Department during that time frame.

Henry said Edwards billed for individual services for more than one child at a time; individual services to children at their homes when he was providing school-based services; and therapy services for times while he was working for Parks and Recreation.

Henry did not provide a total dollar amount for how much Edwards stole.

“Maintaining mental health and wellness continues to be a challenge for young people. Instead of being part of the solution, Edwards abused this trust and defrauded the system for his own gain,” Henry said in a statement.

“This conduct was very obviously fraudulent and downright theft, and my office will not allow any individual to unlawfully abuse programs designed to help residents of the commonwealth,” Henry said.

Posted on

FWA (PA)- Case Update: Bradford County Nurse Practitioner Sentenced to 10 Years of Probation for $450K in Prescription Fraud

 
 

MM Curator summary

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.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: Stefanie King stole $450k of your tax dollars using a bogus billing scam involving prescriptions that did not happen under the proper physician supervision.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.attorneygeneral.gov/taking-action/case-update-bradford-county-nurse-practitioner-sentenced-to-10-years-of-probation-for-450k-in-prescription-fraud/

HARRISBURG – Attorney General Michelle Henry announced today that a Bradford County nurse practitioner was sentenced to ten years of restrictive probation after pleading guilty last month to prescribing medications without a collaborating doctor and false billing.

Stefanie King, 46, of Ulster, Pa., will serve ten years of probation, with the first six months on home confinement with an electronic monitor, and pay nearly $450,000 restitution.

King was sentenced Monday in Bradford County Court after pleading guilty last month to several felonies. Some of the criminal conduct happened while she was engaged in an inappropriate relationship with a patient.

King previously surrendered her Certified Registered Nurse Practitioner’s license.

“The defendant abused her position of trust by engaging in conduct that served herself and violated a system meant to assist our most vulnerable residents,” said AG Henry. “My office is committed to holding accountable those who put patients at risk and compromise our health care programs.”

The investigation found that King falsely billed in excess of $300,000 to private insurers, as well as $100,000 to the Commonwealth, for services below acceptable medical treatment standards. Additionally, she wrote over 3,750 prescriptions to patients while not meeting the requirements to prescribe under Pennsylvania law.

King entered into a sexual relationship with a patient beginning in November 2016 at her Athens practice and billed a private insurer for time they spent together not related to medical care. King later entered into a second relationship with a different patient and continued to prescribe controlled substances to him, despite discontinuing medical care after the relationship began.

Under Pennsylvania law, nurse practitioners are required to enter into collaborative agreements with Pennsylvania licensed physicians in order to perform medical diagnoses and to prescribe controlled substances. Investigators also found that King misled past physician collaborators and renewed previous agreements without their knowledge.

In all, King pleaded guilty to one felony count of violating the Controlled Substance Act- Obtained by Subterfuge; one felony count of Medicaid Fraud; one felony count of Insurance Fraud; and one felony count of violating the Controlled Substance Act- Delivery by Practitioner. She has agreed not to practice as a nurse for the duration of her sentence and voluntarily surrendered her license to practice as a Certified Registered Nurse Practitioner. She will pay restitution of $348,760 to Highmark and $100,425 to Community Care Behavioral Health Organization.

This case was prosecuted by Senior Deputy Attorney General Mark Bellavia and Senior Deputy Attorney General Christopher R. Sherwood.

The Pennsylvania Medicaid Fraud Control Unit receives 75 percent of its funding from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services under a grant award totaling $9,781,180 for Federal fiscal year (FY) 2023. The remaining 25 percent, totaling $3,260,392 for FY 2023, is funded by Pennsylvania.

# # #

Posted on

FWA (NC)- Greensboro clinic owner indicted in 4.7M fraud scheme

 
 

MM Curator summary

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.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: Aljihad Shabazz stole $4.7M of your tax dollars by stealing Medicaid member info to submit bogus claims for “community outreach programs” and other services that were never provided.

 
 

Clipped from: https://greensboro.com/community/rockingham_now/news/greensboro-clinic-owner-indicted-medicaid-fraud/article_d3b671a0-e7fa-11ed-987e-9ff1bbe1a5c2.html

 
 

AnnetteAyres

A Kernersville man who owns a Greensboro health care clinic was indicted for his alleged involvement in defrauding the North Carolina Medicaid Program of more than $4.7 million, according to Dena J. King, U.S. Attorney for the Western District of North Carolina.

The 10-count indictment charges Aljihad Shabazz, 44, with health care-fraud conspiracy, health care fraud, money-laundering conspiracy, and money laundering.

The federal indictment alleges that Shabazz owned and operated Reign & Inspirations, LLC (R&I), a Greensboro clinic that purportedly provided outpatient behavioral services in Greensboro and surrounding areas.

A summons has been issued and Shabazz will make an initial appearance in federal court. The health care fraud conspiracy and health care fraud offenses carry a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison per count. The money-laundering conspiracy and money laundering offenses carry a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison per count, according to information provided by the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

Shabazz could not be immediately reached Friday afternoon for comment. When someone answered a call placed to the publicly-listed phone number of the clinic, they said it was the “wrong number” for Shabazz.

According to allegations contained in the indictment, Shabazz allegedly conspired with other people between 2017 and 2020 to carry out an extensive health care fraud scheme involving the submissions of fake reimbursement claims to Medicaid, for services that were never provided to Medicaid beneficiaries.

Shabazz allegedly obtained the personal identifying information (PII) of Medicaid beneficiaries through community outreach programs, including football and mentoring programs, and misused the beneficiaries’ PII to create and submit hundreds of fraudulent reimbursement claims and to receive payment for services that were never in fact provided by R&I.

Shabazz and his co-conspirators allegedly used the beneficiaries’ PII to submit more than 1,500 fraudulent reimbursement claims to Medicaid, some of which claimed that R&I provided services that exceeded 24 hours in a single day.

The indictment also alleges that the reimbursement payments made by Medicaid were deposited in bank accounts under Shabazz’s control. Shabazz used a portion of the fraudulent proceeds to pay kickbacks to his co-conspirators and to cover personal expenses, including to pay for personal travel, luxury items, and timeshares, and to make cash withdrawals, among other things.

Posted on

FWA (NY)- Berks personal care agency accused of getting $488,000 in Medicaid-billing scheme

 
 

MM Curator summary

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.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: Mata stole $488k with bogus home care claims.

 
 

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.readingeagle.com/2023/04/06/berks-personal-care-agency-accused-of-getting-488000-in-medicaid-billing-scheme/

Part of Our Family Home Care Agency is charged with claiming reimbursement for services that were never performed.

 
 

Berks personal care agency accused of getting $488,000 in Medicaid-billing scheme

State authorities have accused the owner of a Berks County company that provides nursing-home-level care to people in their residences of claiming nearly a half-million dollars in Medicaid reimbursement for services that were never performed.

Based on a recommendation from a state grand jury, Gavin Mata and his company, Part of Our Family Home Care Agency, 20 N. Front St., Bally, were charged this week with Medicaid fraud, theft by deception and tampering with records, state Attorney General Michelle Henry announced Wednesday.

Mata, 36, of Bronx, N.Y., is also charged with perjury and four counts of identity theft.

Between January 2020 and April 2022, the Medical Assistance program paid Part of Our Family $488,349 for services that were never performed, investigators said.

Some of the reported clients had never signed up for or received care from Part of Our Family, and agency employees were not aware Mata had reported these services, investigators said.

“Medicaid is a lifeline to essential services for low-income Pennsylvanians, and this agency exploited the system to defraud and steal for personal interests,” Henry said. “Criminals who defraud Medicaid are targeting our most vulnerable Pennsylvanians, who trust their caregivers to look out for them, and all hard-working Pennsylvania taxpayers.”

Mata remained free to await a hearing following arraignment Tuesday before Senior District Judge Gloria W. Stitzel in Boyertown.

Mata did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

According to investigators:

Mata applied to the state Department of Human Service in August 2019 as president and sole owner of Part of Our Family to enroll as a provider of personal assistance services to Medical Assistance recipients who meet the criteria.

Mata began billing for those services purportedly provided by his employees.

About a year later, the state attorney general’s Medicaid Fraud Control Section received a referral from one of the managed care organizations that is contracted by the state to establish a provider network for Medical Assistance recipients.

It was reported at that time that there were complaints that Part of Our Family billed for services that were not provided to two recipients. The managed care agency found it suspicious that all the work shifts for which Part of Our Family claimed to have rendered to those clients had been manually entered into the electronic verification exchange rather than entered by the workers.

Through the electronic exchange, personal care workers are able to clock in and clock out and get paid by their employees. This is usually done via a mobile app or through a telephone call-in system.

The exchange used by Part of Our Family allows personal assistance workers and administrators to log hours that are ultimately billed to the approved managed care organization.

Because the shifts for services were entered by administrative staff of Part of Our Family and not directly by the workers, the managed care agency requested time sheets substantiating that the billed hours were provided to the Medical Assistance recipients.

In response, Part of Our Family provided computer-generated time sheets that contained only manager’s signatures. They lacked signatures of the client and the worker.

It was determined that part of Our Family was paid a total of $8,615 for services that were not provided to those two recipients.

As part of the grand jury’s investigation, subpoenas were served on Part of Our Family directing the agency to provide Medical Assistance recipient files along with time sheets and payroll information, employee files and related documents.

Part of Our Family provided only minimal information, with many of the files consisting of a calendar printout of the hours that were submitted through the electronic exchange.

In addition, the number of employee files provided by the agency was less than the number of employees listed on the agency’s payroll and/or listed as having worked for Part of Our Family under the exchange. Most of the files lacked basic information such as employee applications, clearances and tax information.

Special Agent Nicole Tomlinson interviewed numerous Medical Assistance recipients whom Part of Our Family claimed to have served.

Some of those Medical Assistance recipients said they declined Part of Our Family’s offer via telephone conversation to provide service and were surprised to see documentation that Part of Our Family had billed for services rendered to them.

Tomlinson also tracked down some former workers, two of whom testified before the grand jury. One of the workers was shown documents that Part of Our Family had showing her working at two recipients’ homes at the same time. The worker testified that she may not recall exactly which client she worked for on a given date but confirmed she could not have been in two places at once.

Records revealed that Part of Our Family billed for the rendering of 3,900 hours of personal services under her name but only paid her for 3,442 hours through payroll.

In all, officials documented that Part of Our Family received over $488,349 from Medical Assistance for nonexistent services.

Posted on

FWA(AR)- An Arkansas psychiatrist held patients against their will and fraudulently billed Medicaid to the point it skewed the state’s data, investigators say

 
 

MM Curator summary

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.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: “Dr” Hyatt held patients against their will, charged the highest rate to Medicaid for it, and did nothing for the patients he had committed while under his care.

 
 

 
 

 
 

Clipped from: https://news.yahoo.com/psychiatrist-held-patients-against-inpatient-132000266.html

 
 

Arkansas state investigators believe Dr. Brian Hyatt committed Medicaid and Medicare fraud by holding psychiatry patients in a facility against their will.alkir/ Getty Images

  • A prominent Arkansas psychiatrist is under state investigation for Medicaid fraud.
  • Documents from state investigators say Dr. Brian Hyatt billed Medicaid to the greatest extent possible.
  • The documents said “at least some of the patients” were held against their will under Hyatt’s watch.

A “well-respected” Arkansas psychiatrist held patients against their will in an inpatient facility, refused to personally evaluate or check on them, and then claimed they were unstable so he could fraudulently bill Medicaid at the highest rate possible, according to documents filed earlier this year by Arkansas state investigators.

As Insider previously reported, seven former patients have sued Dr. Brian Hyatt and Northwest Medical Center, where Hyatt oversaw the behavioral-health services unit, alleging he trapped them in the facility. Three of those patients said they were not permitted to leave until sheriff’s deputies arrived with court orders to escort them out.

A search warrant affidavit the Arkansas State Attorney General’s Medicaid Fraud Control Unit filed in January documented allegations that Hyatt had fraudulently billed Medicaid, Medicare, and health insurance companies despite having “no contact with patients.” The search warrant requested Hyatt’s cellphone records between January 2019 and May 2022.

Hyatt, an attorney representing him in a separate legal matter, and his private practice didn’t respond to Insider’s requests for comment.

Hyatt’s billing practices were so extreme that they skewed the data for the entire Medicaid program in Arkansas, the affidavit said. Doctors typically bill one of three “medical codes” each day of a patient’s hospital stay: one indicating a patient is stable or improving, one indicating that a patient is responding inadequately, and one indicating a patient is unstable or has “a significant complication.”

According to the affidavit, 99.95% of the continuing hospital care claims for Medicaid patients under Hyatt’s care were billed under that third code, which bills at the highest rate.

In the affidavit’s analysis of Arkansas’ top 10 billers for subsequent hospital care, Hyatt “billed more Medicaid recipients at the highest code than any other doctor billed for all of their Medicaid patients.” The affidavit noted that billing patients at an inappropriately high rate is a type of Medicaid fraud known as “up coding.”

Northwest Health did not immediately respond to Insider’s request for comment on the Medicaid fraud investigation, but previously told Insider that Hyatt had been an independent physician contracted to oversee the hospital’s behavioral-health patients.

Hundreds of hours of footage showed no contact between Hyatt and patients, investigators said

The affidavit said Medicaid fraud investigators obtained two months’ worth of footage from inside Northwest’s behavioral health unit, and have reviewed hundreds of hours so far. The investigators said they saw no instances where Hyatt entered a patient’s room or met with a patient outside their room.

The investigators wrote that on March 15, 2022, for instance, Hyatt could be seen making his rounds while never leaving the hallway to enter a patient’s room. On that day in particular, Hyatt had 74 patients under his care and completed his rounds with an average of fewer than 20 seconds per patient, the affidavit said.

“These allegations raise numerous issues. The patients have a right to know their treating physician. If Dr. Hyatt was not their doctor, then who was?” the affidavit said. “At least some of the patients on the unit were being held against their will and only a physician could make the decision to impose a 72 hour hold.”

Under Arkansas law, facilities like Northwest can hold patients involuntarily for up to 72 hours if they’re deemed to be a danger to themselves or others, so long as they are evaluated by a physician within the first 24 hours. Facilities must obtain a court order to hold patients beyond 72 hours.

According to the seven lawsuits former patients filed, Hyatt had no legal authority to detain them in the facility against their will, even in cases when an involuntary 72-hour hold was implemented, since Hyatt or any other doctors never evaluated them.

Northwest Health “abruptly terminated” Hyatt’s contract last May, according to the affidavit.

“We take very seriously our responsibility to provide a safe environment of care for our patients and for our team members,” Northwest told Insider in a statement. “Last spring, we undertook a number of actions to ensure our patients’ safety, including hiring new providers responsible for the clinical care of our behavioral health patients in early May 2022.”

Read the original article on Insider

Posted on

FWA (TX)- Paxton’s Office Investigates and Successfully Prosecutes Woman Who Attempted to Defraud Medicaid of Over $615,000

 
 

MM Curator summary

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.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: Kay used her ex-hubbys provider ID and info on Medicaid kids who came into the pediatrician’s office. She got away with it for 5 years.

 
 

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.texasattorneygeneral.gov/news/releases/paxtons-office-investigates-and-successfully-prosecutes-woman-who-attempted-defraud-medicaid-over

Attorney General Paxton’s Medicaid Fraud Control Unit secured a conviction for a woman who attempted to steal over $615,000 by submitting fraudulent reimbursement claims for services that were never provided.  

Kay Le Farmer was convicted of using the provider number of her ex-husband, a therapist and Medicaid provider, to fraudulently submit claims to Medicaid. Farmer used the provider number, as well as patient information from the pediatrician’s office where she worked, to submit Medicaid claims without her ex-husband’s knowledge. From 2013 to 2018, Farmer submitted or caused the submission of claims worth over $615,000 and admitted that she was paid more than $430,000 based on the false claims.  

The investigation was led by Captain Alexander Chancia, Lt. Scott Mitchell, and Sgt. Edward Wilkerson of Attorney General Paxton’s Medicaid Fraud Control Unit, in collaboration with the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Inspector General. The case is being prosecuted by Kathryn Olson of the Medicaid Fraud Control Unit, who serves as both a Special Assistant United States Attorney and Assistant Attorney General. 

“From start to finish in this case, my office demonstrated our commitment to rooting out those trying to steal from our Medicaid program, investigating any and all suspicious actors, and ensuring that lawless individuals are prosecuted to the full extent of the law,” said Attorney General Paxton. 

In the last fiscal year, Attorney General Paxton’s Medicaid Fraud Control Unit recovered over $236 million in taxpayer funds. If you suspect Medicaid fraud or abuse, or patient neglect, please report it by visiting the Texas Attorney General’s website

Posted on

FWA- Advanced Bionics Must Pay $12.6 Million to Settle Medicaid Fraud Allegations

MM Curator summary

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.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: Turns out if you get caught falsifying info used to get FDA approval for stuff Medicaid pays for- there just might be consequences.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.jdsupra.com/legalnews/advanced-bionics-must-pay-12-6-million-9700923/

 
 

  • Advanced Bionics Corporation—a manufacturer and distributor of cochlear implants—entered settlements with six AGs to resolve allegations that the company violated federal and state False Claims Acts by submitting fraudulent claims for reimbursement to federal healthcare programs including Medicaid.
  • According to the settlements, Advanced Bionics allegedly submitted false information to the FDA regarding testing of certain components of its cochlear device systems in order to induce the agency to approve the devices. The AGs allege that any claims submitted to states’ Medicaid programs for the cochlear implant systems were false claims, as they were based on fraudulently-obtained FDA approval.
  • Under the terms of the settlements, Advanced Bionics must pay a total of $12.6 million to the federal government and the settling states.
Posted on

FWA- If the government cut Medicare fraud, it wouldn’t have to cut Medicare

 
 

MM Curator summary

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.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: Ruh-roh. Yet another person saying the quiet part out loud.

 
 

 
 

Clipped from: https://thehill.com/opinion/finance/3910370-if-the-government-cut-medicare-fraud-it-wouldnt-have-to-cut-medicare/

 
 

iStock.

President Biden says he’s not gonna let Republicans cut the financially challenged Medicare program. “A lot of Republicans, their dream is to cut Social Security and Medicare,” Biden said in February. “Well, let me say this: If that’s your dream, I’m your nightmare.” Well, how about at least cutting Medicare fraud?

Medicare and Medicaid fraud is rampant. The National Health Care Anti-Fraud Association recently estimated Medicare and Medicaid fraud totaling about $100 billion a year. Others believe that’s a conservative estimate.

New video from CNBC’s Contessa Brewer highlights some of the problems in South Florida, which is ground zero for Medicare fraud. Brewer says the “business of stealing Medicare and Medicaid cash has never been as brazen.”

Maybe, but it’s been very brazen for decades. A young Chris Wallace, then with ABC, reported on Medicare fraud in 1994. And here’s a “60 Minutes” report from 13 years ago in which reporter Steve Kroft warns viewers that the story may raise their blood pressure. And it should.

And while those stories are about Florida, here’s a decade-old National Public Radio story about a Texas doctor indicted for $375 million in fraudulent Medicare and Medicaid billing.

One reason criminals can steal so much is Medicare and Medicaid spend so much.

Total Medicare spending in 2022 was $982 billion, with $755 billion of that total coming from the federal government and $227 billion in premiums paid by Medicare beneficiaries to the government. Medicaid, which is a federal/state health insurance program for low-income families, spent $864 billion in 2022.

The federal government estimates that 7.5 percent of spending on traditional Medicare in 2022 was for “improper payments,” which includes both fraud and errors in billing.

For Medicaid, it was 15.6 percent.

What all the imprisoned criminals interviewed in these stories agree on is that defrauding Medicare and Medicaid is easy. Criminals open a small office because Medicare requires that vendors have an address. They put in a desk and chair, though there is seldom anyone actually in the office. Then they buy a list of stolen Medicare beneficiaries’ information and start billing the government.

The biggest scams often involve what’s known as durable medical equipment (DME), which includes a range of items such as wheelchairs, prosthetic limbs and oxygen-related equipment.

Note that this isn’t a rap on federal law enforcement trying to catch the fraudsters. They are doing their best, though they are understaffed and underfunded. And they do catch some of the criminals, as the news stories demonstrate.

Centers for Medicare and Medicaid officials boast that they have been reducing improper payments and fraud, and kudos to them for that. But no one really knows how much Medicare and Medicaid fraud there is, because many fraudsters may never be caught.

The best way to identify the criminals may be when they start getting really greedy. Here’s a good example from a series on Medicaid fraud that appeared in the New York Times in 2005. “It has drawn dentists like Dr. Dolly Rosen, who within 12 months somehow built the state’s biggest Medicaid dental practice out of a Brooklyn storefront, where she claimed to have performed as many as 991 procedures a day in 2003.”

Had Dr. Rosen kept her billings to, oh, say, 500 procedures a day, she might have stayed under the government’s radar. That’s a joke, but you get the point.

One Medicaid official in the Times story estimated that perhaps 40 percent of New York City’s Medicaid spending was fraudulent. 

Texas had its own Medicaid dental fraud. Several Texas dentists were charged and convicted of scamming the system of millions of dollars by putting braces on children who didn’t need them. As the Dallas ABC affiliate, WFAA, reported, “Medicaid records showed Texas spent $184 million on Medicaid orthodontics in 2010 — nine times more than California, which spent $19.5 million.”

It was WFAA that discovered and exposed the fraud, not federal or state officials.

The point is that if the federal government were better at preventing Medicare and Medicaid fraud, the programs could save perhaps $100 billion a year or more. While that wouldn’t solve Medicare’s long-term financial challenges, it would certainly help delay the day of reckoning.

No private sector company could survive with that much fraud. Credit card companies, and even private health insurers, have much lower fraud rates.

While no one defends the fraud, many politicians and bureaucrats don’t seem that interested in trying to fix it. Indeed, when Republican state legislators propose verifying state Medicaid rolls to ensure recipients are qualified, Democrats usually push back.

What’s clear is that there is a way to cut Medicare without hurting Medicare patients, and that’s to cut the fraud. But it’s much less work, and perhaps more politically rewarding, to just attack political opponents.

Merrill Matthews is a resident scholar with the Institute for Policy Innovation in Dallas, Texas. Follow him on Twitter @MerrillMatthews.

Posted on

FWA (NY)- Schenectady ambulette service pays $800K over Medicaid fraud

 
 

MM Curator summary

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.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: Ismat Farhan stole $862,000 from you via your W-2 using a services not provided scam for his ambulance company. He did not say thank you.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.timesunion.com/news/article/schenectady-ambulette-service-pays-800k-medicaid-17849729.php

Ismat Farhan, owner of USA Medical Transport, will pay $862,500 to the New York State Medicaid Program, according to the settlement.

 
 

SCHENECTADY — New York Attorney General Letitia James on Monday announced a settlement with the owner of a Schenectady-based medical transport company that was found to have billed Medicaid at least $400,000 for transportation services that were not provided.

Investigators determined that Ismat Farhan, through his company USA Medical Transport, submitted more than 2,500 false claims where either the transportation services never happened, did not occur as described or lacked the required documentation, according to the settlement agreement.

“Medicaid is meant to help support the medical needs of vulnerable New Yorkers, not to pad a company’s profits,” James said in a statement. “Farhan and USA Medical Transport took advantage of their patients and taxpayers by billing Medicaid for thousands of services that were never provided.”

BEST OFFER OF THE YEAR: 6 Months of Access for Only 99¢!

6 MONTHS FOR 99¢

Act Now

Farhan will pay $862,500 to the state’s Medicaid program, according to the settlement.  

Under state and federal false claims law, state authorities can fine Medicaid providers up to three times the amount they can prove was fraudulently billed. It’s common for the state to settle with the provider for double the amount, according to the attorney general’s office.

USA Medical Transport is still providing services. An attorney for Farhan declined to comment on the settlement. The agreement requires 25 percent of the company’s Medicaid reimbursements to be held back to satisfy the settlement.

Medicaid recipients are eligible to receive transportation to and from appointments with health care providers. Medicaid reimburses enrolled transportation companies for these services. To operate as a Medicaid transportation provider, a transportation company must certify that it will follow the Medicaid program’s rules and regulations, including submitting claims only for services that took place and maintaining thorough records documenting those claims.

State investigators found that between June 2015 and February 2020, Farhan submitted fraudulent claims to Medicaid, including for rides that were not provided, mileage amounts significantly greater than the ride, single rides that should have been bundled as a group ride, and tolls that did not occur.

The company also reported rides by drivers with suspended licenses, including Farhan.

The investigation was conducted by the Albany Regional Office of the Attorney General’s Medicaid Fraud Control Unit. The unit seeks to identify Medicaid fraud and protect nursing home residents from abuse and neglect. Anyone with information about Medicaid fraud or about an incident of abuse or neglect of a nursing home resident can file a confidential complaint online or call the MFCU hotline at 800-771-7755. 

Posted on

FWA- Northern District of Ohio | Jury Convicts Pair of Fraud and Health Care Fraud in Toledo

MM Curator summary

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.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Jenkins stole an undetermined amount from you via your W-2, using a scam they perpetrated on Medicaid dementia patients. They did not say thank you.

 
 

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.justice.gov/usao-ndoh/pr/jury-convicts-pair-fraud-and-health-care-fraud-toledo

TOLEDO, Ohio – First Assistant United States Attorney Michelle M. Baeppler announced that a federal jury convicted Dr. Oliver Jenkins, age 60, and Sherry-Ann Jenkins, age 58, of Jessup, Georgia, of conspiracy, mail fraud, wire fraud, and health care fraud on Friday, March 17, in Toledo, Ohio following a two- week trial before Judge Jack Zouhary.

According to court documents and evidence presented at trial, Dr. Oliver Jenkins, who was an Ear, Nose, and Throat M.D. at the Toledo Clinic, and his wife, Sherry-Ann Jenkins, who had a Ph.D. but was not licensed to practice medicine in Ohio, started a new business called the “The Toledo Clinic Cognitive Center.” The Jenkinses represented to the Toledo Clinic that patients suspected of cognitive disorders, particularly dementia and Alzheimer’s Disease, could come to the Cognitive Center for neurocognitive testing, diagnosis, treatment, and referrals, and that Sherry-Ann Jenkins would administer the neurocognitive testing under the supervision of Dr. Oliver Jenkins. The Jenkinses represented that Dr. Oliver Jenkins would make a diagnosis, and provide medical treatment, or a referral. Instead, the Jenkinses engaged in a scheme to defraud. Dr. Oliver Jenkins never saw or treated patients at the Cognitive Center. Sherry-Ann Jenkins ordered PET scans of patients’ brains, interpreted the scans, diagnosed patients, including a college-aged student, with Alzheimer’s Disease, Dementia, or other impairments, recommended patients take coconut oil to improve memory, and instructed certain patients to see her every 3-6 weeks for the rest of their lives. The Jenkinses billed Cognitive Center patients and health care benefits programs using Dr. Oliver Jenkins’ billing number.

This case was investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation in Toledo, Ohio, the United States Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Inspector General in Cleveland, Ohio, the Ohio Attorney General’s Medicaid Fraud Control Unit, and the Ohio State Medical Board. The case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Brian McDonough and Robert Melching.