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Dozens Arrested In Medicare Fraud Busts Across US

KELLI KENNEDY   07/29/09 11:31 PM ET   AP

Fbi

MIAMI — Federal authorities arrested more than 30 suspects, including doctors, and were seeking others in a major Medicare fraud bust Wednesday in New York, Louisiana, Boston and Houston, targeting scams such as "arthritis kits" – expensive braces that many patients never used.

More than 200 agents worked on the $16 million bust that included 12 search warrants at health care businesses and homes across the Houston area, where the bulk of the arrests were made.

Federal authorities say those businesses were giving patients "arthritis kits," which were nothing more than expensive orthotics that included knee and shoulder braces and heating pads. Patients told authorities they were unnecessary and many never even received them. But health care clinic owners billed between $3,000 to $4,000 for each kit.

Houston's other scam involved billing Medicare for thousands of dollars worth of liquid food like Ensure for patients who can't eat solid food. Authorities said clinic owners never distributed the food to patients. In some cases, clinic owners billed patients who were dead when they allegedly received the items.

It's the third major sweep since Attorney General Eric Holder, Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius announced in May they were adding millions of dollars and dozens of agents to combat a problem that costs the U.S. billions each year.

Using about a dozen agents in targeted cities, including Miami, the Medicare Fraud Strike Force, has recovered $371 million in false Medicare claims and charged 145 people across the country in just two months.

Two shocked female employees arriving for work Wednesday morning at Memorial Medical Supply in a strip mall in southwest Houston were met by federal agents. Authorities confiscated paperwork and a computer. Owners of the business did not respond to calls from the Associated Press.

The suspects arrested Wednesday in Houston will make court appearances Thursday morning. Suspects in Boston, New York and Louisiana were to have first appearances later Wednesday.

The first strike force started in 2007 in Miami, a city authorities say is responsible for more than $3 billion a year in Medicare fraud. Clinic owners there would bill Medicare dozens of times for the same wheelchair, while never giving the medical equipment to patients.

The problems have become more complex since then.

Officials say the suspects have moved into more sophisticated scams including home health care, physical therapy and infusion drugs. They've even started tapping into Medicaid Advantage, which allows the elderly and disabled to get benefits through private health insurers. The plans receive a government subsidy and generally offer more benefits than traditional Medicare.

Federal authorities say Miami residents are also moving on to other cities, bringing their scams with them.

Strike force teams, each led by a federal prosecutor and a handful of agents, were started in Los Angeles, Detroit, Houston in the past year.

Since 2007, strike forces in Miami, Detroit and Los Angeles have indicted more than 293 suspects and organizations that collectively have billed the Medicare program for more than $674 million.

Agencies participating in the busts Wednesday included the FBI, the HHS Office of the Inspector General, the Drug Enforcement Administration and the Texas Attorney General's Medicaid Fraud Control Unit.

Along with issuing indictments, authorities freeze bank accounts and seize everything from Rolls Royce's to million dollar homes purchased with funds stolen from Medicare.

Suspects are being charged not just with health care fraud, but all relevant conduct. That means average prison sentences 50 percent more than the overall national average sentence in federal health care fraud cases in 2008.

While authorities are gratified by the arrests, the program's purpose is more than punitive. It's also about deterrence.

Deputy Attorney General David W. Ogden says the interagency partnership is unprecedented in authorities' ability to track Medicare fraud "as it's happening, using real-time data analysis of Medicare billing records."

In the past, authorities have struggled to catch up with fast-moving crooks. By the time local authorities are alerted to potential fraud, it's already been committed.

"We are also working together across the federal government on important new innovations in the way we do business on the front end, to try and prevent crime like this from happening in the first place," said Bill Corr, Deputy Secretary of Health and Human Services.

____

Associated Press Writer Arelis Hernandez in Houston contributed to this report.

___

On the Net:

http://www.hhs.gov/stopmedicarefraud

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02:48 PM on 07/30/2009
Great Timing.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
01:41 PM on 07/30/2009
Great news. I called and reported some suspicious behavior and was treated like an idiot that should mind my own business. I said maybe I should open a medical clinic.

Start checking Hollywood/­West Hollywood Ca. next......
11:33 AM on 07/30/2009
just like in the last bull market and econ recovery, main street gets left in the cold while wall street prospers...
hat tip to... http://www­.iamned.co­m
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Epiphany2b
Always waiting for the light to dawn
07:32 PM on 07/29/2009
I hope this means they are going to start listening when patients report fraud. A number of years ago a friend was hospitaliz­ed. Being a nurse, she was puzzled when a doctor on staff that she didn't know would always stop in and say hello to her every morning. She called MediCare and told them if a certain doctor submitted a bill for her, not to pay it, and why. She was told that they didn't have time to worry about things like that.
07:04 PM on 07/29/2009
Good work AG! Whistle blowers have been trying for decades to get this kind of sweep. I guess AG's & justice have been too busy last 8 yrs mucking w/ the constituti­on to bother w/ fraud around the Medicare system. $321 Billion recovered? That's a great start. Wall Street thieves will do themselves in before the yr is out - nobody is playing but insiders running programs- saving alot of investigat­ive time & money. The evidence is already out there & has been reviewed by every flag loving American. I think WS has prepared it's own rap sheet for the next crash.
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06:56 PM on 07/29/2009
Good. A government­-run program being policed !!

Unlike any private Insurance companies abuses ..........­...
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elbzee
push, pull, our get outta the way
08:05 AM on 07/30/2009
ABSOEFFINL­UTELY!!!!!­!!!!!
05:40 PM on 07/29/2009
Outstandin­g job. This is what needs to happen instead of bleating about fraud, waste, and abuse yet doing nothing to stop it like GOP.
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04:25 PM on 07/29/2009
What's new? Drs, Hosptials, nursing homes, home health, insurance and drug companies have been absolutely rheeming Medicare since day 1.
That's why we had to go to managed care in the first place. It was a greed fest in the 80s.
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JFaye
My micro-bio is not empty. Thank you.
04:21 PM on 07/29/2009
It appears the 'scapel" then Candidate Obama spoke of to weed out waste and fraud is at work. Thanks for not throwing out the baby with the water, President Obama and AG Holder. Medicare is a good program and helps millions of our elderly and disabled.

Hopefully, these thieves will receive maximum sentences for stealing from all taxpayers. Unfortunat­ely, they will continue as a financial burden to taxpayers as we now must provide free room and board in gated communitie­s.
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OlderBudWeiser
Retired RN in Ca.
05:24 PM on 07/29/2009
And....Gov­ernment single payer health care. No premium or deductable either.
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04:09 PM on 07/29/2009
No wonder this story is not leading the news, nor the faces of these folks who are arrested; it just doesn't fit the reality which the corporatio­ns want distribute­d.
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04:27 PM on 07/29/2009
Senator Bill Frist family owned Columbia, the greed, fraud and abuse king of the 90s! They got busted so much for that stuff they changed their name to "HealthOne­" and are still going strong. I bet HealthOne has paid a hellofa lot of $$$$$$ to these Congresspe­ople to keep things the gravy train they are now.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hollyhund
Don't judge all Texans by the ones you see on TV
03:52 PM on 07/29/2009
Thank you Attorney General Eric Holder and Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius !! We need to have a raid like this every week! This will allow enough money to offset the subsidy needed for the poor under a public option.
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Nutcase
Of, By and For - Elsewhere known as Psycho MD
03:28 PM on 07/29/2009
They will likely do less time than a homeless person stealing a couple of packs of bologna from a convenienc­e store.
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04:28 PM on 07/29/2009
and a lot more time than Libby, Bush and Cheney
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1murillo
Can't be neutral on a moving train - Zinn
03:20 PM on 07/29/2009
It's good that healthcare scams are being attacked and arrests made when necessary. It's also good that such investigat­ions are reported when appropriat­e.
Think about those wheel chairs sold on late night commercial tv, "We'll charge Medicare! You don't have to pay anything!" BS, we pay later if not now.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Peacein09
03:16 PM on 07/29/2009
This operation should get a laugh from everyone who lost their pension money on Wall St. So these guys -- small fry really -- get charged with fraud for a $3000 arthritis kit while the big wigs on Wall St. get trillions to reimburse them for their fraud losses. Please someone explain. Why go after a a few stealing pennies but reward big thefts with a bailout?
03:17 PM on 07/29/2009
false choice. we should go after both.
03:11 PM on 07/29/2009
why don't we put out a bounty on people who scam disability insurance? basically turn someone in with video tape proof and if proves to be true, you get $500 bucks.
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Epiphany2b
Always waiting for the light to dawn
07:36 PM on 07/29/2009
I hope they get rock solid proof, though. My man is on disability for MS. To someone who doesn't know him, he seems to be in perfect health. People even question his handicappe­d tag. They don't know that he is exhausted by even the simplest effort.

Your suggestion is a perfect way to set people spying on each other.
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elbzee
push, pull, our get outta the way
08:13 AM on 07/30/2009
You're absolutely right Epiphany2b­! There have been too many innocent people languishin­g at Gitmo whose neighbors/­acquaintan­ces turned them in for a bounty. A very bad idea.

From personal experience­, there are waaay too many people who COULD work but milk the disability system dry. Believe me, I know quite a few personally­. It's very, very frustratin­g. With that said, however, the vast majority are legit and highly necessary. It's a fine line to walk.