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FRAUD (VA)- Audit finds Virginia paid nearly $22 million for dead Medicaid patients

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]: Before the system was improved, VA MCOs got paid millions in monthly cap rates for people who were dead.

 
 

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.wric.com/news/virginia-news/audit-finds-virginia-paid-nearly-22-million-for-dead-medicaid-patients/

 
 

The head of Virginia’s Medicaid office wrote in a June letter that the state has worked to fix the issue and has already recouped much of the money.

RICHMOND, Va. (WRIC) – Virginia paid insurers to cover Medicaid services for patients who had already died, a nearly $22 million mistake over three years that the state is working to recover and repay.

A recent federal audit found that the Virginia Department of Medical Assistance Services, the state’s Medicaid office, accidentally paid out capitation payments – or monthly fixed payments for each enrollee – to Medicaid managed care organizations on behalf of dead patients from 2019 through 2021.

The audit from the U.S. Health and Human Services’ inspector general’s office — first reported by the Richmond Times-Dispatch — estimated that the payments totaled at least $21.8 million on behalf of just over 12,000 enrollees.

“Virginia made unallowable capitation payments on behalf of deceased enrollees because it did not have adequate controls in place to enable it to identify all deceased enrollees and properly cancel their enrollment,” the July 19 audit states.

300,000 Virginians could lose Medicaid coverage: What to know as pandemic protections end

The inspector general’s office recommended that Virginia refund the federal government’s share of the payments – $15.7 million – and recover payments mistakenly paid to insurers.

Its audit also recommended that Virginia recover payments made on behalf of dead Medicaid enrollees in 2018 and 2022, repay the federal share, implement an “additional supervisory review” and use an automated matching and eligibility process to determine enrollees.

A DMAS spokeswoman said Tuesday that the agency had no comment. But in a June 13 letter to the inspector general’s office, DMAS Director Cheryl J. Roberts laid out details about the agency’s process for identifying dead enrollees and its response to the audit’s recommendations.

DMAS gets death files from the Virginia Department of Health through a monthly data exchange, Roberts wrote, using an algorithm to cross reference Medicaid enrollees into categories of either 100% matches or possible matches.

How Virginia home caretakers could lose support for their families

“After proper notification, state staff within the Eligibility and Enrollment Services Division would manually close all 100% matches and research those enrollments with a lesser match rate,” Roberts wrote. “This process was found to be inefficient as the level of manual work would often take up to a month to complete.”

In response, Virginia implemented an automatic system in January to close the 100% matches. The new system, Roberts wrote, has helped speed up the process and reduce human error. It retroactively closes enrollments back to when the patient died, initiating Virginia’s recoupment of any payments made on behalf of dead enrollees.

Roberts wrote that, as of June 9, the payments made during the audit period of 2019 through 2021, except for nearly $96,000, have been recouped. Also, the payments made on behalf of dead enrollees in 2022 have been recouped and all but $226,023 from 2018 payments have been recovered.

DMAS will work with the Center for Medicaid and CHIP Services’ audit and review branch to repay any outstanding debt that has not been repaid already, Roberts added in her letter.

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FWA (MD)- Maryland Physician Sentenced In Felony Medicaid Fraud Investigation

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]: This guy charged Medicaid members $200/month to write illegal pain med scripts.

 
 

 
 

https://thebaynet.com/maryland-physician-sentenced-in-felony-medicaid-fraud-investigation/

 
 

 
 

BALTIMORE – Maryland Attorney General Anthony G. Brown today announced the sentencing of Vitalis Ohakwe Ojiegbe, 68, of Bowie, Maryland, who pleaded guilty to one count of Medicaid Fraud for writing prescriptions for controlled dangerous substances without a legitimate medical purpose in the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County in June. The Honorable Judge Carol Coderre sentenced Ojiegbe to a five-year suspended sentence with three years’ supervised probation. Ojiegbe was ordered to pay $16,035.11 in restitution and is also to be excluded from participating in any federally funded healthcare program.  

Ojiegbe, a physician specializing in internal medicine, owned and operated Sunrise Medical Clinic, a medical practice located in the 9800 block of Greenbelt Road in Lanham, Maryland. The investigation began following a referral from the Maryland Department of Health’s Office of Controlled Substances Administration (OCSA). OCSA is the state agency responsible for enforcing the Controlled Dangerous Substances Act. Beginning in January 2013 and continuing through June 9, 2019, Ojiegbe charged his patients, many of whom were Medicaid recipients, $200.00 a month for monthly medical appointments, even though the patients could have seen a Medicaid provider free of charge. In exchange for these cash payments, Ojiegbe prescribed controlled dangerous substances, including oxycodone and alprazolam, without a legitimate medical purpose. 

This case was prosecuted by the Medicaid Fraud Control Unit of the Attorney General’s Office in cooperation with the Drug Enforcement Administration. Attorney General Brown thanked Medicaid Fraud Control Unit Assistant Attorneys General Lisa Marts and Cathy Schuster Pascale, Fraud Analysist Todd Sheffer and Investigator Michael Glenn for their work on the case.  Attorney General Brown also thanked Special Agent James Browning of the Drug Enforcement Administration.  

 
 

From <https://www.evernote.com/Home.action?_sourcePage=V22GrieyBFPiMUD9T65RG_YvRLZ-1eYO3fqfqRu0fynRL_1nukNa4gH1t86pc1SP&__fp=OUok5iAvXOM3yWPvuidLz-TPR6I9Jhx8&hpts=1691052166764&showSwitchService=true&usernameImmutable=false&login=&login=Sign+in&login=true&hptsh=f8ovqFYHmPl3J0qa6evcV020N2U%3D>

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

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FRAUD (CT)- DCJ: Former East Hartford man accused of defrauding CT Medicaid

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]: Boring counseling services-not-provided scam. You paid $102k.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.ctinsider.com/news/article/new-jersey-east-hartford-man-defrauded-medicaid-18262853.php

 
 

ROCKY HILL — A former East Hartford therapist has been arrested and charged with submitting false claims to the Connecticut Medicaid Health Insurance Program, officials say.

In a news release, the Connecticut Division of Criminal Justice said Glenroy Patterson, 46, of Jersey City, N.J., was arrested Wednesday by inspectors from the Medicaid Fraud Control Unit in the office of the chief state’s attorney. He was charged with one count of health insurance fraud and one count of first-degree larceny by defrauding a public community.

Officials said Patterson is a licensed board certified behavior analyst and the owner of Trading Spaces ABA LLC., an autism specialty group. Officials said he billed for services not rendered between March of 2020 and December 2021.

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“Evidence acquired through an investigation showed that Trading Spaces, LLC was not meeting with clients as reported, however Patterson submitted claims to the Department of Social Services for payment.”

Officials said Patterson made $102,000 from the scheme, which constitutes the larceny charge. They said claims submitted to the state Department of Social Services by Patterson contained false, incomplete, deceptive or misleading information, leading to the health insurance fraud charge.

Patterson was released on a $100,000 bond, officials said, and is scheduled to appear in Hartford Superior Court on Aug. 8. Officials said each charge carries a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison.

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FWA (MA) – MedStar Ambulance pays $2.6 million in false Medicaid billing case

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]: 2nd time in 6 years this same company has settled with the state for Medicaid fraud.

 
 

 
 

https://www.telegram.com/story/business/2023/08/01/medstar-ambulance-pays-2-6-million-in-false-medicaid-billing-case/70501515007/

 
 

 
 

Worcester Telegram & Gazette

LEOMINSTER — The state attorney general’s office announced Tuesday it has reached a $2.6 million settlement with a Leominster-based ambulance company.

MedStar Ambulance Inc., along with its parent corporation and affiliates, settled with the office of Attorney General Andrea Campbell to resolve allegations that the company submitted false claims to MassHealth, the state’s Medicaid program.

MedStar provides services to several Central and Western Massachusetts cities and towns including Worcester, Fitchburg and Leominster.

Campbell’s office contended that the company knowingly submitted false claims to MassHealth for emergency ambulance services when only a less expensive level of service was provided.

Additionally, the office alleged that MedStar did not follow MassHealth regulations because it provided non-emergency ambulance services or wheelchair van services without appropriate medical necessity documentation. Furthermore, the office alleges that MedStar submitted claims to MassHealth for services where they had not actually shown the appropriate medical necessity documentation to the authorized provider who was signing it. 

Campbell’s office also alleges MedStar did not follow regulations because it provided nonemergency ambulance services or wheelchair van services without appropriate medical necessity documentation, and provided MassHealth with claims for services that did not show the appropriate documentation.

In addition to paying back $2.6 million to MassHealth, MedStar has agreed to implement company-wide training and update its policy on compliance with MassHealth medical necessity requirements, according to a release from Campbell’s office.

MedStar has been in hot water for allegations of false billing before.

In 2017, a Sturbridge woman was awarded $3.56 million of a $12.7 million settlement for her role as the whistleblower who alleged that MedStar and its affiliates fraudulently billed Medicare for unqualified services.

The alleged fraud in the 2017 settlement included billing for ambulance trips that were not medically necessary and “up-coding” runs — or making them seem more serious than they actually were — to get higher payments from the government, according to the complaint.

 
 

From <https://www.evernote.com/Home.action?_sourcePage=V22GrieyBFPiMUD9T65RG_YvRLZ-1eYO3fqfqRu0fynRL_1nukNa4gH1t86pc1SP&__fp=OUok5iAvXOM3yWPvuidLz-TPR6I9Jhx8&hpts=1691052166764&showSwitchService=true&usernameImmutable=false&login=&login=Sign+in&login=true&hptsh=f8ovqFYHmPl3J0qa6evcV020N2U%3D>

 
 

 
 

 
 

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FWA (NY)- Pharmacy owner and manager accused of stealing millions from Medicaid

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]: Poveda and Burbano paid Medicaid members bribes so they could steal $2.9M of your tax dollars.

 
 

 
 

Clipped from: https://brooklyneagle.com/articles/2023/07/12/pharmacy-owner-and-manager-accused-of-stealing-millions-from-medicaid/

 
 

Attorney General Letitia James announced on Tuesday the indictment, arrest, and arraignment of Juan Poveda, the owner, and Javier Burbano, the manager, of a Queens-based pharmacy for allegedly partaking in a scheme that saw millions stolen from Medicaid.

Poveda, 32, and Burbano, 32, who both run Santiago Pharmacy under CSE Drug Corp., are accused of paying kickbacks to Medicaid recipients for filling their HIV prescriptions at their pharmacy. They also allegedly submitted fraudulent claims for HIV drugs like Biktarvy, which were either illicitly acquired or never actually purchased.

In addition to Grand Larceny in the First Degree and Health Care Fraud in the Second Degree, the defendants face charges for allegedly paying unlawful kickbacks to Medicaid beneficiaries, a violation of New York Social Services Law. The charges brought against them include Money Laundering in the First Degree and in the Second Degree for purportedly conducting financial transactions intended to disguise the illegally procured funds.

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According to the Attorney General’s Office, search warrants were executed at Corona Chemist Pharmacy in Corona and Mi Botica Pharmacy in Flushing, Queens as part of the ongoing investigation. If convicted, the accused face a maximum of 25 years in prison for class B felonies like Grand Larceny and Money Laundering in the First Degree, and up to 15 years for class C felonies like Health Care Fraud in the Second Degree.

Attorney General James expressed her disappointment in the situation, stating, “We trust pharmacies to attend to the needs and welfare of their patients, not to take advantage of our most vulnerable neighbors to line their own pockets. Stealing from Medicaid is a reprehensible crime, and New Yorkers can count on my office to hold these bad actors accountable.”

Allegedly, the defendants paid cash kickbacks to Medicaid recipients to incentivize them to fill their HIV prescriptions at Santiago Pharmacy, subsequently billing Medicaid and receiving millions of dollars for those prescriptions. The court papers claim that Poveda and Burbano stole more than $2.9 million from Amida Care, a Medicaid-funded managed care organization, by billing for drugs that were either not legally obtained or never existed. The fraudulent funds were then supposedly concealed by routing the criminal proceeds through pass-through bank accounts without any apparent business operations.

It is essential to note that the charges filed in this case are accusations. The defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.

The Attorney General thanked the New York State Department of Health, the Office of the Medicaid Inspector General, and the United States Department of Health and Human Services Office of the Inspector General for their assistance in this investigation. She also acknowledged the cooperation of Medicaid MCOs Amida Care and VNS Choice, pharmacy benefit managers Express Scripts and Med Impact, pharmacy services administrative organization AlignRx, and pharmaceutical wholesaler AmerisourceBergen.

This ongoing investigation involves a team of investigators and prosecutors led by Attorney General Thomas O’Hanlon. The Office of the Medicaid Fraud Control Unit, which oversees this case, is funded with a federal grant from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and supplemented by New York State. The office regularly recovers more in law enforcement actions than it receives in state funding.

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FWA (MD) -Owner of Health Care Company Pleads Guilty to Federal Charge for Conspiracy to Commit Health Care 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]: Kabiwa et al paid Medicaid members and providers bribes so they could steal $3.3M of your tax dollars.

 
 

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.justice.gov/usao-md/pr/owner-health-care-company-pleads-guilty-federal-charge-conspiracy-commit-health-care

Baltimore, Maryland – Mboutchock Kabiwa a/k/a Eugenie Bakari or Eugenie Kabiwa, age 45, of Silver Spring, Maryland, pleaded guilty yesterday to conspiracy to commit health care fraud in connection with a scheme to pay bribes and kickbacks to Medicaid beneficiaries to induce the beneficiaries to visit her company Holy Health Care Services, LLC (“Holy Health”), a mental health services provider with locations in Washington, D.C.

The guilty plea was announced by United States Attorney for the District of Maryland Erek L. Barron; Acting Special Agent in Charge of the FBI Washington Field Office’s Criminal and Cyber Division, Emily Odom; Special Agent in Charge Maureen Dixon, Office of Investigations, Office of Inspector General of the Department of Health and Human Services (“HHS OIG”); and Daniel W. Lucas, Inspector General for the District of Columbia.

According to her plea agreement, Kabiwa and a co-conspirator owned and operated Holy Health.  Holy Health entered into Medicaid Provider Agreements with the District of Columbia’s Department of Health Care Finance (“DHCF”), to provide healthcare services to D.C. Medicaid recipients.  Holy Health was certified by the District of Columbia’s Department of Behavioral Health (“DBH”) to provide mental health services as a freestanding clinic and as a Mental Health and Rehabilitation Services (“MHRS”) provider.  As a certified MHRS provider, Holy Health had authority to provide and bill for a variety of mental health services including “community support” – a service for which community support workers (“CSWs”) provide rehabilitative and educational support to mental health patients both in clinical settings and in the community.  Holy Health documented the services provided to patients utilizing an electronic healthcare system called the Integrated Care Management System (“ICAMS”), then submitted invoices for those services to DHCF, which processed the invoices and paid Holy Health.  

As detailed in the plea agreement, Kabiwa and her co-conspirators paid bribes and kickbacks to Medicaid beneficiaries to induce the beneficiaries to visit Holy Health, and paid bribes and kickbacks to others in exchange for referring Medicaid beneficiaries to Holy Health for mental health services.  The co-conspirators caused Medicaid beneficiaries to be transported, often by van, to Holy Health’s North Capitol location.  Medicaid beneficiaries who visited Holy Health were required to sign in and received a cash bribe – generally $5 or $10 – in exchange for visiting Holy Health.  To conceal the nature of these payments, Kabiwa directed Holy Health employees to falsely describe these payments as a transportation stipend, even when Holy Health transported the beneficiaries or when beneficiaries were not incurring transportation expenses.  At other times during the conspiracy, Kabiwa and her co-conspirators attempted to conceal the illegal bribe payments to beneficiaries as payments from the Agatha Foundation, a nonprofit that Kabiwa founded.  Kabiwa provided front-desk employees of Holy Health with sign-in sheets containing Agatha Foundation letterhead to create the false appearance that Agatha was making the payments.  Kabiwa admitted that she and a co-conspirator provided funds to Holy Health employees to fund the kickback and bribe payments. 

According to the plea agreement, Kabiwa and her co-conspirators caused claims to be submitted by Holy Health to Medicaid for services, including community support services, purportedly provided to Medicaid beneficiaries procured through bribes and kickbacks.  Medicaid would not have paid the claims had it known they were procured through bribes and kickbacks.  Kabiwa also became aware that co-conspirators entered false notes into ICAMS for CSW services that were not rendered and were not provided as billed to Medicaid, but took no action to stop or correct the fraudulent claims.  Based on the amount that Medicaid paid to Holy Health for community support services that were not delivered or procured through bribes and kickbacks, the actual loss to Medicaid was at least approximately $3,343,781.

Finally, Kabiwa admitted that she fraudulently obtained an Economic Injury Disaster Loan (“EIDL”) of $150,000 for Holy Health.  The EIDL program was part of the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act (“CARES Act”) and was intended to help small businesses meet necessary financial obligations that could have been met had the COVID-19 pandemic not occurred.  After a $1,000 handling charge, EIDL loan proceeds of $149,900 were transferred into a Holy Health bank account on May 26, 2020.  Within a few days, Kabiwa
transferred $120,000 of the EIDL proceeds from the Holy Health bank account to her personal bank account.  Kabiwa
used the EIDL funds for personal purposes including to purchase two vehicles—one of which was a Porsche Cayenne.  Kabiwa
titled both vehicles in the name of her non-profit, the Agatha Foundation.  Kabiwa also transferred more than $40,000 in EIDL funds overseas, including $37,821 to Cameroon, even though Holy Health had no operations outside of the United States. 

Kabiwa faces a maximum sentence of 10 years in federal prison for the health care fraud conspiracy.  As part of her plea agreement, Kabiwa will be required to forfeit and pay restitution in the full amount of the loss, which the parties agree is at least $3,493,681.  U.S. District Judge Paula Xinis has scheduled sentencing for November 21, 2023 at 10:00 a.m.

The District of Maryland Strike Force is one of three strike forces established throughout the United States by the U.S. Department of Justice to investigate and prosecute COVID-19 fraud, including fraud relating to the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (“CARES”) Act.  The CARES Act was designed to provide emergency financial assistance to Americans suffering the economic effects caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.  The strike forces focus on large-scale, multi-state pandemic relief fraud perpetrated by criminal organizations and transnational actors.  The strike forces are interagency law enforcement efforts, using prosecutor-led and data analyst-driven teams designed to identify and bring to justice those who stole pandemic relief funds. 

For more information on the Department’s response to the pandemic, please visit https://www.justice.gov/coronavirus.  Anyone with information about allegations of attempted fraud involving COVID-19 can report it by calling the Department of Justice’s National Center for Disaster Fraud (NCDF) Hotline at 866-720-5721 or via the NCDF Web Complaint Form at: https://www.justice.gov/disaster-fraud/ncdf-disaster-complaint-form.

United States Attorney Erek L. Barron commended the FBI, the HHS OIG, and the District of Columbia Office of Inspector General’s Medicaid Fraud Control Unit for their work in the investigation.  Mr. Barron thanked Assistant U.S. Attorneys Jessica C. Collins, Christopher M. Sarma, and Megan S. McKoy, who are prosecuting the case.

For more information on the Maryland U.S. Attorney’s Office, its priorities, and resources available to help the community, please visit www.justice.gov/usao/md.

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FWA (VA)- Chester woman sentenced by DOJ for Medicaid, healthcare 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]: Sharon Johnson operated a fraudulent group home, stole resident pension funds and billed for deceased residents for 8 months before reporting them dead. You paid for every penny of this with your W-2s.

 
 

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.wric.com/news/local-news/chesterfield-county/chester-woman-sentenced-for-medicaid-healthcare-fraud/

 
 

A photo of a Medicaid form. (Photo: MGN)

CHESTERFIELD COUNTY, Va. — A Chester woman was sentenced on Thursday, July 7 for several charges relating to healthcare fraud.

58-year-old Sharon Johnson has been sentenced to 51 months in prison for the conspiracy to commit healthcare fraud, healthcare fraud and wire fraud, according to the the U.S. Department of Justice .

These charges center around Johnson’s owning and operating of an unlicensed group home under “Sharon Y. Johnson & Associates” (SYJA) for seven years.

This organization claimed to provide personal and home healthcare services, allowing those on Medicaid to remain in-home rather than enter a nursing or group home. All of these services were paid for by the individuals’ Medicaid eligibility.

The unlicensed facility was located within her own home in Chester — a three bedroom home that the DOJ reports regularly housed up to a half-dozen residents.

According to the DOJ, Johnson would bill Medicaid for services she did not provide her patients. She would also submit documents to the Virginia Retirement System (VRS) to allow her access to their pensions.

PREVIOUS: Chester woman received Medicaid, pension payments from unlicensed group home patients in fraud scheme

Furthermore, the DOJ reports that Johnson fraudulently collected a now-deceased patient’s VRS pension payments for at least 8 months after her death before she eventually reported the death. She did this by obtaining “Medical Power of Attorney” over the resident.

Johnson pleaded guilty to these charges in December 2022, and was originally meant to be sentenced in April of this year.

More information on this case can be found on wric.com the Department of Justice’s website.

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FWA (VA)- Health Connect America Gets Fined $4.6M for Wrongful Billing of Medicaid

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]: Health Connect stole $4.6M from your W-2. They did not say thank you. But they do promise to do better. Pinky swear, even. (bogus mental health services claims in multiple states)

 
 

 
 

Clipped from: https://medcitynews.com/2023/07/mental-health-children-fined-medicaid-improper-billing/

Health Connect America, a mental health company, improperly billed Virginia Medicaid for three different behavioral health services for children, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office of Western District of Virginia.

 
 

Mental health company Health Connect America will pay more than $4.6 million “to resolve allegations that it billed Virginia Medicaid for services not provided,” the U.S. Attorney’s Office of Western District of Virginia announced Friday.

Franklin, Tennessee-based Health Connect America
offers mental and behavioral health services to youth, individuals and families. It supports patients battling grief, anger management, family issues and substance use disorder. Health Connect America currently serves patients in Alabama, Georgia, Mississippi, Tennessee and Virginia.

Health Connect America allegedly improperly billed Medicaid for three different behavioral health services for children, according to the Attorney’s Office. The first is called Therapeutic Day Treatment, which is a school-based program for kids with a variety of mental health conditions. The mental health company billed Virginia Medicaid for services to students who were absent, as well as during holidays and weather closures.

Another program it improperly billed Virginia Medicaid for is called Intensive In-home Services, a home-based mental health program for children who are “at risk of being removed from their home,” according to the Attorney’s Office. However, Health Connect America allegedly billed Virginia Medicaid for services by an employee who was engaged in a sexual relationship with a minor in Orange County, Virginia. The employee is currently serving a 10-year sentence.

Lastly, the company wrongly billed Virginia Medicaid for Behavioral Therapy Services, a specialized mental health treatment for kids with conditions like autism. Behavioral Therapy Services are required to be provided by specially-trained mental health professionals. However, Health Connect America billed for Behavioral Health Services by providers who were not “properly trained or credentialed” in Southwest Virginia.

The company also “used the name and National Provider Identifier (NPI) number of a properly-trained and credentialed mental health professional located in Northern Virginia who had never seen clients in Southwest Virginia,” the Attorney’s Office said.

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In an interview, Nathan Ray, a partner with the healthcare and life practice who oversees M&A/PE related work in that industry for West Monroe, highlighted how his firm works with companies to drive due diligence for clients, and help acquired companies address issues and differentiate during holds.

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“Health care providers have a responsibility to submit accurate and honest claims to federal health care programs to ensure that these resources are available for eligible patients,” said Maureen Dixon, special agent in charge at the Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Inspector General (HHS-OIG), in a news release. “HHS-OIG is committed to safeguarding valuable taxpayer dollars and protecting the integrity of the Medicaid program.”

Health Connect America has agreed to five years of additional oversight and compliance. Compliance measures include unannounced audits and additional reporting requirements if there are situations of theft, fraud, abuse or neglect.

Not complying could lead to “criminal prosecution and contempt of court proceedings that could result in additional monetary sanctions and injunctive relief,” the Attorney’s Office stated.

Health Connect America did not return a request for comment.

Photo credit: Waldemarus, Getty Images

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FWA (RI/NY)Nursing home chain owners charged with stealing $83M in Medicaid money

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]: “More info on the “un-named” NH owners we also saw in a NY case last week.”

 
 

 
 

Clipped from: https://pbn.com/nursing-home-chain-owners-charged-with-stealing-83m-in-medicaid-money/

 
 

CENTERS HEALTH CARE operates 47 facilities in the Northeast, including three in Rhode Island.

PROVIDENCE – The owners of a Centers Health Care were charged on Wednesday in a massive fraud scheme that allegedly siphoned off $83 million of Medicaid money for personal gain. 

The multistate chain operates 47 facilities throughout the Northeast, with three in Rhode Island, the Bannister Center for Rehabilitation and Health Care in Providence, the Kingston Center in West Kingston and the Oak Hill Center in Pawtucket

The diversion of funds resulted in “significant resident neglect, harm, and humiliation” at three of the chain’s homes in and around New York City and another near Buffalo, said New York State’s Attorney General Letitia James in a statement. 

The chain’s Rhode Island facilities were not named in the filing. Brian Hodge, a spokesperson for R.I. Attorney General Peter F. Neronha, said his office was reviewing the allegations. Joseph Wendelken, spokesperson for the R.I. Department of Health, said “we are aware of that lawsuit in New York.”

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The complaint involving the company’s New York facilities claims the owners operated the nursing homes with insufficient staffing in order to increase their own profits. Attorney James said residents were “forced to sit for hours in their own urine and feces, suffered from severe dehydration, malnutrition, and increased risk of death, developed infections and sepsis from untreated bed sores and inconsistent wound care, sustained life-changing injuries from falls, and died.” 

Centers Health Care spokesperson, Jeff Jacomowitz, emailed PBN a statement refuting the allegations. He emphasized that the charges pertain only to New York.

“Centers Health Care prides itself on its commitment to patient care. Centers denies the New York Attorney General’s allegations wholeheartedly and attempted to resolve this matter out of court,” Jacomowitz wrote. “We will fight these spurious claims with the facts on our side. Beyond that, Centers Health Care will not comment on ongoing litigation.”

The lawsuit followed an investigation by Attorney General’s Medicaid Fraud Control Unit. The MFCU alleged that nursing home co-owners Kenneth Rozenberg and Daryl Hagler turned the four homes into “money making machines” by using an elaborate network of related companies and collusive, fraudulent transactions, to divert the $83 million from its intended use of providing sufficient staffing and required resident care.

Investigations into other nursing homes and facilities throughout New York state are ongoing.

To stop further harm and suffering, James said she would seek to prohibit the four New York nursing homes from admitting new residents until staffing meets appropriate standards.

Nursing home staffing has become an industry-wide problem across the county. Under Rhode Island state law nursing homes can be fined for not meeting minimum staffing requirements. 

The Nursing Home Staffing and Quality Care Act was signed into law by Gov. Daniel J. McKee in May 2021. RIDOH has not enforced the act due to a nationwide shortage of nurses and the homes’ inability to find qualified nurses and aides who will work for wages that are less than those at hospitals. RIDOH found that 55 nursing homes in the Ocean State would have faced a combined $11 million in fines for understaffing during the second quarter of 2022 if it had enforced the act.

(CORRECTS last name spellings of Attorney General Peter F. Neronha and Joseph Wendelken in 4th paragraph.)

Contact PBN staff writer Sam Wood at Wood@PBN.com


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FWA (MI)- Medicaid Fraud Investigation Turns Up Two in Michigan City

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]: Providers stealing pills paid for by Medicaid. For those that need to hear it- this is wrong.

 
 

Clipped from: https://hometownnewsnow.com/local-news/696067

 
 

(Michigan City, IN) – Two La Porte County healthcare workers are facing charges of Medicaid fraud by allegedly stealing controlled substances.

 
 

The office of State Attorney General Todd Rokita has announced a total of eight cases of medical fraud statewide involving licensed healthcare professionals. Two of them locally are being assisted by the La Porte County Prosecutor’s Office.

 
 

50-year-old Traci Lindfors of Michigan City is accused of withholding, for her own use, medications from residents at the healthcare facility where she worked. She faces 3 Level-6 Felonies.

 
 

57-year-old Victoria Lee Bell is accused of stealing medication as a nurse at Life Care in Michigan City. Records show that Bell’s nursing license was suspended in 2018 as an investigation of her suspicious activity was launched. She now faces two Level-6 Felony charges.

 
 

Both cases are in La Porte Superior Court 4. They are part of a statewide crackdown on Medicaid fraud.