Authorities arrest 243
people in $712 million Medicare fraud
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[June 19, 2015]
By Megan Cassella
(Reuters) - The U.S. Department of Justice
said on Thursday that 243 people have been arrested across the country,
charged with submitting fake billing for Medicare, a government
healthcare program, that totaled $712 million.
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Attorney General Loretta Lynch described the arrests as the largest
criminal health care fraud takedown in the history of the Justice
Department.
Those arrested included 46 doctors, nurses and other licensed
medical professionals. The charges are based on a variety of alleged
fraud schemes, the government said, including submitting claims to
Medicare and Medicaid, the healthcare program for low-income
individuals, for treatments that were medically unnecessary and
often never provided.
The nationwide sweep, led by the Medicare Fraud Strike Force and the
U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, involved about 900
law enforcement officials. It's the largest both in terms of the
number of those charged and the amount of money lost.
Many of the arrests were in Florida, long an epicenter of Medicare
fraud. In Miami, 73 defendants were charged with offenses involving
approximately $263 million in false billings.
One mental health facility there billed close to $64 million for
psychotherapy sessions that were nothing more than moving patients
to different locations, Lynch said in a press conference.
Other cities involved include Houston, Dallas and McAllen, Texas;
Los Angeles; Detroit; Tampa; Brooklyn, New York; and New Orleans.
One case in Michigan involved a doctor who prescribed unnecessary
narcotics in exchange for patients' identification information,
which was used to generate false billings. Patients then became
deeply addicted to the prescription narcotics and were bound to the
scheme as long as they wanted to keep their access to the drugs.
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"In the days ahead, the Department of Justice will continue our
focus on preventing wrongdoing and prosecuting those whose criminal
activity drives up medical costs and jeopardizes a system that our
citizens trust with their lives," Lynch said.
Since 2007, as part of increased efforts to tackle Medicare fraud,
federal authorities have charged nearly 2,100 people with falsely
billing the Medicare program more than $6.5 billion, according to
the Justice Dept. Thursday's arrests bring that total to over 2,300
people who have billed over $7 billion.
(Reporting by Megan Cassella in Washington; Editing by Jeffrey
Benkoe and Chris Reese)
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