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View Full Version : Medicare fraud: Feds charge 90-plus people for $260 million in false claims



Teh One Who Knocks
05-14-2014, 10:43 AM
By Warren Richey - Christian Science Monitor


More than 90 individuals were charged on Tuesday in a nationwide crackdown against what investigators said was massive fraud in federally administered health-care programs.

The defendants were charged with submitting more than $260 million in fraudulent claims to the Medicare system. They included 27 medical professionals, including 16 physicians, who prosecutors say breached the public trust in pursuit of easy money.

The arrests took place in Miami; Tampa, Fla.; New York; Detroit; Houston; and Los Angeles.

“The fraud was rampant, it was brazen, and it permeated every part of the Medicare system,” Acting Assistant Attorney General David O’Neil said in announcing the enforcement operation.

“The crimes charged represent the face of health care fraud today – doctors billing for services that were never rendered, supply companies providing motorized wheelchairs that were never needed, recruiters paying kickbacks to get Medicare billing numbers of patients,” Mr. O’Neil said in a statement.

The investigation was undertaken by the Justice Department’s Medicare Strike Force, which since organizing in 2007 has charged 1,900 defendants in cases involving $6 billion in medical services fraud.

The enforcement action was praised by both Attorney General Eric Holder and Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius.

Mr. Holder called the operation “another important step forward in our ongoing fight to safeguard taxpayer resources and to ensure the integrity of essential health care programs.”

Secretary Sebelius noted that the Affordable Care Act, the health-care reform law, grants federal agents greater authority to suspend Medicare payments when fraud is suspected.

“Today we’re sending a strong, clear message to anyone seeking to defraud Medicare: You will get caught and you will pay the price,” she said.

Health-care fraud has long been perceived among criminals as low-hanging fruit offering millions of dollars in illicit profits with little chance of being caught. With the continued ramping up of Obamacare and the influx of ever-greater amounts of federal money into the health-care system, strict enforcement will become increasingly important.

Among the six cities featured in the crackdown, Miami had, by far, the largest group of defendants. Federal agents charged 50 individuals on Monday and Tuesday for their alleged involvement in false billings totaling $65 million.

In one $23 million scheme in south Florida, two defendants allegedly obtained Medicare beneficiary information from a pharmacy owner and used the information to bill the government for drugs that were never dispensed. Kickbacks were laundered through shell companies to conceal the arrangement, prosecutors said.

In Houston, five local physicians are among 11 being prosecuted. The doctors were charged with conspiring to bill Medicare for home health services that were unnecessary and sometimes never provided, according to the government.

Eight individuals were charged in Los Angeles in connection with $32 million in fraudulent billings. The largest fraud was allegedly undertaken by a doctor who submitted $24 million in false claims, including for 1,000 motorized wheelchairs.

The seven charged in Detroit allegedly submitted $30 million in false claims involving home health care, psychotherapy, and infusion therapy, according to the Justice Department.

In Tampa, seven were charged with billing for services and tests that were never provided. In one $12 million scheme, the defendants allegedly used information of Medicare beneficiaries in Miami-Dade County to bill for services allegedly rendered in Tampa – 280 miles northwest of Miami.

In Brooklyn, federal prosecutors indicted a local surgeon for billing the government $85 million for surgeries that never took place. Also in Brooklyn, six others – including a physician – were charged with submitting $14.4 million for medically unnecessary vitamin infusions, diagnostic tests, and physical and occupational therapy.

In addition to charging the alleged fraudsters, federal agents have also sought to locate and seize illicit assets, including bank accounts, jewelry, and expensive cars.

FBD
05-14-2014, 12:16 PM
hey, when its the norm...it must be government designed

Teh One Who Knocks
05-14-2014, 12:20 PM
I seem to remember Deep always saying that the amount of fraud in government programs like this was negligible :wha:

FBD
05-14-2014, 12:30 PM
:lol: yeah, unfortunately Deep took the Democrats at their word all the time. sorry brah, that just makes you a dupe!

perrhaps
05-14-2014, 01:08 PM
“The crimes charged represent the face of health care fraud today – doctors billing for services that were never rendered, supply companies providing motorized wheelchairs that were never needed, recruiters paying kickbacks to get Medicare billing numbers of patients,” Mr. O’Neil said in a statement.




.

Eight individuals were charged in Los Angeles in connection with $32 million in fraudulent billings. The largest fraud was allegedly undertaken by a doctor who submitted $24 million in false claims, including for 1,000 motorized wheelchairs.



"Go, go, go (to hell) in your Hoveround!"

PorkChopSandwiches
05-14-2014, 03:42 PM
I seem to remember Deep always saying that the amount of fraud in government programs like this was negligible :wha:

Yeah, I always argued with him that is you fixed ALL the leaks it would be substantial. To say 260,000,000 is a drop in the bucket, dont worry about it, and then do that at every turn :roll:

Acid Trip
05-14-2014, 03:44 PM
Yeah, I always argued with him that is you fixed ALL the leaks it would be substantial. To say 260,000,000 is a drop in the bucket, dont worry about it, and then do that at every turn :roll:

Except we hear about these Medicare scam rings every few months. Add them all up and that "drop in the bucket" becomes a tsunami.

FBD
05-14-2014, 03:48 PM
there should also be no such thing as SSDI

DemonGeminiX
05-14-2014, 04:08 PM
there should also be no such thing as SSDI

:-s

Explain?

Acid Trip
05-14-2014, 04:09 PM
there should also be no such thing as SSDI

Social Security Disability Insurance?

FBD
05-14-2014, 04:20 PM
well we're on about fraud...medicare, SS, tons of fraud in all that shit (yeah it was a little ot)

DemonGeminiX
05-14-2014, 05:12 PM
Social Security Disability Insurance?

Yes, that's what SSDI stands for.


well we're on about fraud...medicare, SS, tons of fraud in all that shit (yeah it was a little ot)

You didn't explain why SSDI shouldn't exist (and it should for good reason... more below).

Sure there's fraud everywhere, but that doesn't mean legitimate public programs shouldn't exist. It just means there needs to be better methods used by better people employed to determine eligibility for these programs. It needs to be less redtape and more on site determination using common sense and validated proof. We need to follow up on the people awarded these benefits to ensure they're not misusing it... like they do with the EBT cards in Colorado.

SSDI is for people who have paid a substantial amount into Social Security throughout their working lives, have become legitimately disabled before retirement age in such a way so that they can no longer work and require the assistance. They've earned it. Now I'm sure that there are people that defraud SSDI, but that doesn't mean it shouldn't exist for the people it was designed for and need it.

Just because there's fraud in public assistance doesn't mean p.a. shouldn't exist. It just means we need to tighten the leash on it.

FBD
05-14-2014, 06:29 PM
I dont need to get into the area of just where in the constitution does the federal government have this power, do I? :razz: The mechanism of SSDI is for the states to cover since they actually might have the legal authority to do such a thing...

So...no, SSDI is not a legitimate public program. And neither is Social Security, for that matter. You kinda have to have some constitutional backing for such things, ya know, if they are to be legal and constitutional and all that. Just because our federal government ignores these things doesnt mean it changes the meaning of what words mean.

Go look up the numbers of how bloated SSDI has become since the recession - it is becoming people's go-to when their unemployment runs out. It has always been abused, but now its gone turbo.

Teh One Who Knocks
05-14-2014, 06:37 PM
I dont need to get into the area of just where in the constitution does the federal government have this power, do I? :razz: The mechanism of SSDI is for the states to cover since they actually might have the legal authority to do such a thing...

So...no, SSDI is not a legitimate public program. And neither is Social Security, for that matter. You kinda have to have some constitutional backing for such things, ya know, if they are to be legal and constitutional and all that. Just because our federal government ignores these things doesnt mean it changes the meaning of what words mean.

Go look up the numbers of how bloated SSDI has become since the recession - it is becoming people's go-to when their unemployment runs out. It has always been abused, but now its gone turbo.

:-s

You do realize that the SSA act is law and was upheld as Constitutional by the SCOTUS, right? The federal government is well within its powers to enact and collect taxes, which is what the SS deduction in every working person's paycheck is.

FBD
05-14-2014, 06:50 PM
:haha: he said scotus

SS is a fraud perpetrated on the people. An unconstitutional one, at that.

Go look, go look, go look in there....in that constitution....tell me where such powers are given.

Look long and hard, because you're not going to find it in there. (Do we need to start on about the 16th being entirely incompatible with the 10th?)

Since when does SCOTUS, the president, or congress really fkn uphold the constitution? SCOTUS just fugging rewrote obamacare too, does that mean now that there's precedent, we can have justices write law?

Sorry but the supreme court is a joke and we've all been shown the fuggin shit show for what it is. They will uphold anything the money tells them to uphold.

DemonGeminiX
05-14-2014, 08:12 PM
It's not unconstitutional, FBD. This isn't Obamacare we're talking about. The Social Security Act was enacted in 1935 to ensure that the elderly of the nation had what they needed to survive into their increasing lifespans. Congress has the constitutional power to levy taxes, and SS is a tax, a tax that should be returned to you in your twilight years. A lot of people pay into it, and a lot of people who have paid into it depend on it.

And SSDI is a legitimate program. Bang your drum all you want. You're wrong.

FBD
05-14-2014, 08:45 PM
:shrug: If you guys dont want to read the constitution I can't make you. When the government does things not in accordance with what is written and gives you some bullshit explanation for why they think they should be able to do it, and you lap it up like kittens at a bowl of milk...am I really going to change your mind?

SS is a tax, you say? Go dig a little deeper on definitions of things. Just because it is collected in the same pickpocket manner as "income" "taxes"??? (yes the people that say the 16th is constitutional want to say this definition fits the bill, but anyone who does their homework knows better.)


You may hear the drum being banged, but you dont see it with those wool blankets pulled over your eyes. I dont care when SS when conjured up or what they used as their justification for doing something the government had no authority to do - just because those things happened does not all of a sudden make them constitutional!!!

And just because people have been sold a bill of goods that all this money they've paid out over the years, they are entitled to it and rely on it - no, they are not entitled to it. Like Deep used to say, Congress can change all that with the swipe of a pen and there aint shit anyone can say about it! They already spent that money anyway! What's left when TSHTF is going to be about as valuable as that IOU for the lambo in dumb and dumber!

:facepalm:

I can tell it to you straight up like it is all day, but if that fantasy you were taught in school is still burned into your mind, you are simply going to be inclined to believe what has been the status quo your whole life.

No wonder you guys arent pissed at all this government bullshit going on, its teh kool-aid.

Me, I dont care how much recent history has set precedent for illegal government activity - the founding documents still exist, and they still are the law of the land which all other laws must follow. Medicare is every bit as unconstitutional as social security, every bit as unconstitutional as NSA spying. Just because some politician wrote a law and gave some twisted reasoning, just because the SCOTUS was bribed into signing it (in whatever fashion they receive their bribes) does not make it constitutional. Period, end of story, and how in the hell do you think you get around that other than ignoring the constitution?

"no way man, these programs do good" doesnt cut it.

Lambchop
05-14-2014, 09:21 PM
I agree with you all because I love you all but we as servants to our masters have been denied the fruits of society through the systematic abuse and fraud at the top.

I wanted to sound dramatic but basically we have all been screwed over