Accused ringleader in NBA health care fraud pleads guilty
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[August 27, 2022]
By Jonathan Stempel
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The accused ringleader
of a scheme involving at least 19 former National Basketball Association
players to defraud a league health plan into paying millions of dollars
for bogus medical procedures pleaded guilty on Friday over his
involvement.
Terrence Williams, who played for the New Jersey Nets and three other
teams from 2009 to 2013, entered his plea to conspiracy and identity
theft charges before U.S. District Judge Valerie Caproni in Manhattan.
The 35-year-old Seattle resident also agreed to pay $2.5 million in
restitution to the NBA plan and forfeit $653,673 to the United States.
Lawyers for Williams did not immediately respond to requests for
comment.
Prosecutors said Williams recruited players to submit false invoices for
medical and dental work that was never performed, in exchange for at
least $300,000 of kickbacks.
Examples included invoices allegedly showing former Boston Celtics
players Tony Allen and Glen Davis receiving crowns on the same six teeth
on the same day, and Davis receiving crowns on eight teeth in Beverly
Hills although he was in Nevada.
Williams was also accused of impersonating others, including a health
plan manager who questioned a reimbursement in order to "frighten" a
player who had not paid a kickback.
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Terrence Williams (R) of the New Jersey
Nets goes to the basket against Brad Miller of the Houston Rockets
during the NBA China Games series at the Guangzhou International
Sports Arena in Guangzhou, Guangdong province October 16, 2010.
REUTERS/Joe Tan/
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Prosecutors said at least $5 million of false claims were submitted,
with the defendants receiving $2.5 million in fraudulent proceeds.
At least 24 people including a dentist, a doctor and a chiropractor
have been charged, with six pleading guilty. Allen and Davis have
pleaded not guilty.
Williams could face 10 to 12 years in prison, including a mandatory
two years for identity theft, under recommended federal guidelines
at his Jan. 25, 2023, scheduled sentencing.
He was jailed in May, after prosecutors said he threatened a witness
through text messages.
The defendants who have pleaded guilty also include former players
Chris Douglas-Roberts, Jamario Moon, Eddie Robinson and Anthony
Wroten, as well as Patrick Khaziran, a Los Angeles chiropractor
known as "Dr. Pat."
Douglas-Roberts was the player Williams allegedly tried to
"frighten."
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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