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Medicare Fraud Enforcement Efforts Recovered $2.5 Billion In 2009

PETE YOST   05/13/10 06:36 PM ET   AP

Medicare Fraud
FILE - In this Wednesday, July 29, 2009 file photo, federal agents raid a medical supply store in Houston. Lured by easier money and shorter prison sentences, Mafia figures and other violent criminals are increasingly moving into Medicare fraud and spilling blood over what once a white-collar crime. (AP Photo/Pat Sullivan, file)

WASHINGTON — The government says it recovered $2.5 billion in overpayments for the Medicare trust fund last year as the Obama administration focused attention on fraud enforcement efforts in the health care industry.

Investigators have new tools this year to help crack down on health care fraud, with the Justice Department and the Health and Human Services Department working cooperatively to police companies. The newly enacted Affordable Care Act is designed to lengthen prison sentences in criminal cases and the new law provides an additional $300 million over the next 10 years for stronger enforcement. It also gives the government new authority to step up oversight of companies participating in Medicare and Medicaid.

"We're going to attack fraud at every stage of the process," Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius said Thursday at a news conference.

Attorney General Eric Holder said "as long as health care fraud pays and goes unpunished, our health care system will remain under siege."

Under the Affordable Care Act, providers could be subject to fingerprinting, site visits and criminal background checks before they begin billing Medicare and Medicaid.

To combat fraud, the act allows Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius to bar providers from joining the programs and allows her to withhold payment to Medicare or Medicaid providers if an investigation is pending.

In a report released Thursday, the Justice Department and HHS say they are putting investigative resources in areas where health care fraud is especially widespread, including south Florida; Los Angeles; Houston; Detroit; New York City's Brooklyn borough; Baton Rouge, La.; and Tampa, Fla.

The result is a rising number of criminal prosecutions and the return of more stolen money to the government. At the same time, federal investigators are blocking unscrupulous companies from getting into government health care programs in the first place.

For the fiscal year that ended last Sept. 30, the federal government won or negotiated $1.63 billion in judgments and settlements, and investigators opened 1,014 new criminal health care fraud investigations involving 1,786 defendants.

Most of those figures are up from 2008, when the government won or negotiated $1 billion in judgments and settlements, and investigators opened 957 new criminal health care fraud investigations involving 1,641 potential defendants.

In 2008, the recoveries for the Medicare Trust Fund totaled $1.9 billion.

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WASHINGTON — The government says it recovered $2.5 billion in overpayments for the Medicare trust fund last year as the Obama administration focused attention on fraud enforcement efforts in the...
WASHINGTON — The government says it recovered $2.5 billion in overpayments for the Medicare trust fund last year as the Obama administration focused attention on fraud enforcement efforts in the...
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03:54 PM on 05/13/2010
Good start and this should certainly make Republicans happy since their talking point has always been that costs could be lowered by eliminating fraud in the system.

I do have a question. When the GOVT wins the judgement do they actually collect the money from the crook? I know in many cases when they fine companies for violations they tend to forget to collect the penalty fee.
03:45 PM on 05/13/2010
2.5 billion???

Isn't the amount from legitimate claims rejected by private insurance providers estimated around 150 billion????

oh, wait...slightly off topic and sure to anger those wanting to pay the private insurance providers
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foxfury
03:24 PM on 05/13/2010
Good job guys! That's almost enough to pay for one month of war in Afghanistan. Keep up the good work!
02:37 PM on 05/13/2010
This could be a good start. There are far more rich republican doctors out there doing the same thing. The penalty must be time in a federal prison or there is no deterrent. No negotiated settlements should be allowed.
02:14 PM on 05/13/2010
A. In these cases of fraud, if the cases go to trial the defendants, if found guilty, should also be billed court costs.
B. I don't trust the government's "negotiated settlements."
Doctors routinely overbill, wiping solution on a body part and putting it down as "surgery."
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John Zorabedian
I'm a writer living in Mass.
01:41 PM on 05/13/2010
You down with OIG? Oh, that photo is hilarious. Imagine getting busted by some guy or gal wearing an Office of Inspector General tee-shirt. Humiliating.
12:57 PM on 05/13/2010
what percentage of the total does this 2.5 billion represent? Far less than 10% I'm sure.
12:14 PM on 05/13/2010
Too bad this law wasn't in place for Rick Scott when, as CEO of HCA/Columbia, he stole billions from medicare. He left HCA/Columbis with the largest fine for fraud in the history of Justice Dept fraud cases and with a million dollar salary and bonus package. Now he's running for gov of Florida. http://thinkprogress.org/2010/04/13/rick-scott-governor/

Who still believes justice is blind?
11:51 AM on 05/13/2010
This is just the kind of thing that Fox and the like will never report. And, sadly, the Democrats are too feeble to point it out themselves during campaigns. So the hypocrisy persists---that Democrats spend irresponsibly, and Republicans are somehow tougher. The only thing--the ONLY thing Republicans stand for is rich people. The social issues are just subterfuge to get ignorant people to vote for policies against their own self interest. This is just more evidence.
11:35 AM on 05/13/2010
if the government has enough money and manpower to go after Amish farmers selling raw milk then I would think it could get more "bang for the buck" going after more medical fraud.
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jeb50
Retired.
11:34 AM on 05/13/2010
We would like to see them going after SSI also. I'm on disability and had to prove through x-rays and specilists that I have inoperatable damage to my lower back. We know a guy who decided in his early 20s he didn't like having to work for a living. Went into an SSI office said he had back trouble and signed up. No physicals, no x-rays and he 's been collecting now for over 30 years.
11:32 AM on 05/13/2010
Two questions come to mind that deserve to be answered

Has fraud more than doubled since the Bush/Cheney administration? Or is this administration just doing a better job of enforcement?

Who is committing the fraud that has been found? Patients? or Medical services providers? (My guess would be the latter, follow the money)
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XLintLuvR
02:45 PM on 05/13/2010
I think that people are going to scam the system no matter what. The difference between the two admins is that one turned a blind eye to the abuses. I think they should reach back towards a year before Medicare Part D was pushed through and see if it's escalated back then. That should shut up the Repubs for a while about how this is the end of the world.
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LiberalDem
03:08 PM on 05/13/2010
You can check out www.justice.gov/opa to go to the Justice Dept.'s Office of Public Affairs where you can read press releases about notable cases, which often include Medical fraud.
11:30 AM on 05/13/2010
If they spend $300 million more over the next 10 years on enforcement and recover even just $600 million that is money very well spent (100% return on investment). Anything recovered over and above that $600 million is a bonus.
11:29 AM on 05/13/2010
shouldn't "white collar crime" carry the same penaties as other crimes?
What's the difference between being robbed with a gun and robbed with a pen or a computer?
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Carol Snow
11:23 AM on 05/13/2010
I'm so glad that this is being done.... keep searching and digging, there is more gold in these fraudulent holes. I have reported my number of agencies for Medicare fraud...