Portis, Horn among 10 former NFL
players facing U.S. fraud charges
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[December 13, 2019]
By Sarah N. Lynch and Andy Sullivan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Federal
authorities on Thursday charged 10 former National Football League
players with allegedly defrauding a healthcare program of more than
$3.4 million by filing false claims for hyperbaric oxygen chambers
and other expensive medical equipment.
Former Washington Redskins running back Clinton Portis, 38, and
former Redskins cornerback Carlos Rogers, 38, were among those
charged by the U.S. Justice Department.
U.S. authorities also said they plan to file charges against Joe
Horn, 47, who at one point held the New Orleans Saints' record for
touchdown catches.
Portis, Rogers and at least one other defendant, former safety
Ceandris "C.C." Brown, filed for bankruptcy after their playing
careers, court records show.
Portis, Brown and Horn also have sued the NFL, claiming the league
failed to warn them they risked brain damage.
Brian Benczkowski, head of the Justice Department's criminal
division, said the former players filed false claims for expensive
equipment like oxygen chambers, cryotherapy machines, and
electromagnetic therapy devices designed to be used on horses.
Those devices, which typically cost up to $50,000, were actually
never purchased, he said.
Ringleaders of the scheme took kickbacks or bribes of up to $10,000
from other former players to help carry it out, Benczkowski said.
"By defrauding the plan and treating it like their own personal ATM
machine, sadly, the defendants placed the plan's tax-exempt status
at risk," he said at a news conference.
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Washington Redskins Clinton Portis celebrates his second touchdown
in the second quarter against the Houston Texans during their NFL
football game in Landover, Maryland September 19, 2010.
REUTERS/Molly Riley/File Photo
A NFL spokesman did not immediately respond to a request for
comment. The NFL Players' Association declined to comment.
Researchers say former football players have an increased risk of
heart disease and other health problems, related to the grueling
physical contact inherent in the sport and the weight they gain to
play it.
The NFL reached a settlement in 2017 to help cover medical costs for
former players who suffer from neurological problems believed to be
caused by concussions sustained during their careers.
The alleged scheme targeted the Gene Upshaw NFL Player Health
Reimbursement Account Plan, which was set up in 2006 to help retired
players cover medical expenses and currently has about $800 million
in assets. No current NFL players are believed to be involved in the
scheme, Benczkowski said.
Rogers, Brown and two other players - Robert McCune and John Eubanks
- were arrested on Thursday morning, officials said. The other six
defendants surrendered voluntarily.
(Reporting by Sarah N. Lynch and Andy Sullivan in Washington;
Aditional reporting by Frank Pingue in Toronto and Amy Tennery in
New York; Editing by Bill Berkrot, Matthew Lewis and Jonathan Oatis)
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