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Brittany McCoskey, Rose Cancer Center Manager, Pleads Guilty In Health Care Fraud Case

By HOLBROOK MOHR 05/22/12 03:45 PM ET AP

Rose Cancer Center
Dr. Meera Sachdeva, founder of the Rose Cancer Clinic, was indicted with Brittany McCoskey and Monica Weeks on charges related to alleged health care fraud committed when they watered down chemotherapy drugs and overbilled Medicare, Medicaid and other health insurance companies for the medication.

JACKSON, Miss. -- An ex-office manager has pleaded guilty in what prosecutors say was a multimillion dollar health care fraud in which a cancer clinic gave patients diluted chemotherapy drugs and used old syringes on multiple people.

Dr. Meera Sachdeva, Brittany McCoskey and Monica Weeks were indicted last August on charges including conspiracy and witness tampering related to the activities of Rose Cancer Center in Summit.

Filings in U.S. District Court in Jackson show that McCoskey pleaded guilty on Thursday to one count of giving false statements related to health care matters. The charge is related to billings to Medicaid and Medicare that claim a physician was present during certain procedures.

Sachdeva established the clinic in south Mississippi in 2005. Authorities say workers watered down drugs and billed Medicaid, Medicare and insurance companies for more chemotherapy drugs than patients received. The clinic billed Medicaid and Medicare for about $15.1 million during the alleged scheme.

The Mississippi Health Department closed the clinic last year because of "unsafe infection control practices" after 11 patients were hospitalized with the same bacterial infection. The scare led officials to test nearly 300 cancer patients for infections such as HIV. The department has said none of the patients tested had blood-borne viral infections related to the clinic's care.

However, a civil lawsuit claims at least one patient died about the time the clinic was shut down from HIV he contracted there.

McCoskey's sentencing is set for Aug. 6. Her lawyer, George Lucas, had no comment on Tuesday.

The other defendants have pleaded not guilty and await trial.

Sachdeva has been held without bond since August because authorities consider her a flight risk. She is a naturalized U.S. citizen from India. Prosecutors said she often traveled overseas and has considerable assets, including bank accounts, in her native country, despite the seizure of about $6 million.

Weeks is free on bond. Prosecutors say she did billing for the clinic.

Their trial had been set for May 2, but was postponed. No new trial date has been entered in court records.

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JACKSON, Miss. -- An ex-office manager has pleaded guilty in what prosecutors say was a multimillion dollar health care fraud in which a cancer clinic gave patients diluted chemotherapy drugs and used...
JACKSON, Miss. -- An ex-office manager has pleaded guilty in what prosecutors say was a multimillion dollar health care fraud in which a cancer clinic gave patients diluted chemotherapy drugs and used...
Filed by Hilary Tuttle  | 
 
 
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03:51 AM on 02/25/2013
I still remember being referred to her, being told she was the best in the area, her face when she gave me "THE NEWS" . I have thought many times of what would be real appropriate punishment and realize there is none, BUTt it has stopped them from harming even more people
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Amanda Matthews
07:35 AM on 05/25/2012
Oh geeze. This is absolutely horrific. This is also attempted murder in some form. These disgusting specimens were cheating cancer patients out of their meds and collecting for it And one person is already dead from what they did.

Depraved indifference maybe??
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Lady Gato
Knee deep in Hippie
10:52 PM on 05/24/2012
This is way beyond giving false medical statements!!!! This is criminal- it seems to me it is attempted murder at least. And, since apparently at least one person did die from HIV contracted there, there's a murder count. Take every dime she has for restitution to patients and throw her in prison for life!
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sacmom3
ENOUGH! Remember the children of Sandy Hook
01:21 AM on 05/25/2012
Harsh, but I'm with you 100%.
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Lady Gato
Knee deep in Hippie
09:55 AM on 05/25/2012
Thanx. It probably is harsh, but I work with cancer patients, and love them. It's so hard for them to go through chemo- and to have someone take advantage like this for money---oh it makes me furious.
JackVandusen
Switched to coffee
06:23 PM on 05/24/2012
And she looks like such a sweet lady, too.

People like this trigger a cruel streak in me.
i caught myself fantasizing about some pretty dark retaliation.
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candlesmp
life is as good as you make it
04:19 PM on 05/24/2012
That is absolutely horrifying. I can't believe what they did to these cancer patients. Beyond awful. Risking other people's lives to line their pockets - they deserve to rot in jail for several lifetimes.
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francny
03:30 PM on 05/24/2012
This is making me ill. As a nurse who worked very hard supporting a young daughter and putting myself through school so I could realize a dream to become a nurse and help patients, to see this type of fraud and outright abuse of patients who are trying so hard to beat their cancer who are under the false impression they are getting good care, makes my heart ache for them. I have worked with cancer patients in Hospice in my career, and just finished helping care for my best friend who was diagnosed to late and she passed away. Greed is at the core of this abuse, both the patient and taxpayer being cheated and it makes people distrust health care professionals who DO deeply care about the treatment of their patients. The difficulty is knowing the difference between the cheaters and the good ones. The stealing of medicaid and medicare funds is rampant, though in my career I have not personally seen it, I did find that sometimes doctors ordered unncessary tests repeatedly because the patient had medicare or medicaid. A doctor should have to show the test is absolutely necessary to diagnose a problem before it is covered.. Problem is, medicare and medicaid pay without asking for justification.
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01:40 PM on 05/24/2012
She should spend the rest of her days in the block, the hole,
How can a person in a job to help the sick stay a live do such a terrible thing,
The power of money has know guilt.
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valeskas
catlover/book lover democrat
01:02 PM on 05/24/2012
So because of her greed, people who had a chance to survive, are probably dead now.
06:26 AM on 05/24/2012
In an age where over billing for services has become the norm, this is just plain evil. This is not a "paper crime" of simply taking what is not yours. These poor patients have suffered greatly on top of the cancer they are already dealing with. I do not know how people can live with themselves knowing what they have done. I do believe all of their assets should be seized and divided among all of the patients, money will not cure them or ease their suffering but I do not feel like someone else should benefit from their tragedy.
10:46 AM on 05/24/2012
THIS IS NOT THE "NORM". I have been in the industry for 20yrs and have never seen fraud! You should be more educated before you post.
02:04 PM on 05/24/2012
Well that's great for you to have never seen fraud but that certainly doesn't mean it isn't happening elsewhere. And since you have no idea how much I am or am not educated on the subject, you might want to consider that before telling someone else they should not post to a thread.
05:14 AM on 05/24/2012
Evil. Simply evil. They need to be charged with something more than fraud. By diluting the chemo and using unclean syringes they committed assault and battery on their patients. One could even argue attempted murder. They need to be placed in a dark hole and never be released.
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Stephen Thorpe
Every breath you take - I'll take one too!
07:08 PM on 05/23/2012
At everyturn another example of the absolute souless society we have now. We've gone backwards as a culture.
06:29 PM on 05/23/2012
Similar event happened in Vegas a few years back when we were living there.A doctor had a very successful Gastro-Intestinal Clinic which in reality was a money making mill and infection hot bed.They would scope patients (colonoscopy) in 2-3 minutes( missing many colon cancers),re-use equipment that had not been cleaned,re-use vials and syringes. They committed fraud by billing medicare/medicaid and insurance for time they did not spend doing procedures.It was horrible.Many people got Hepatitis C. Some patients died of colon cancer because it was undetected when they had one of their "lightning fast" colonoscopies.The nurses that worked there were threatened if they did not do as the good doctor said.Many prosecutions and many licenses to practice were lost.The doctor responsible for all this had a stroke and the case against him had been grinding slowly through the system because his attorney's had him declared unable to defend himself because of the stroke.Finally he has been indicted in Federal Court also and declared competent to stand trial. Here is an interesting link :http://lawmedconsultant.com/nevada-hepatitis-c-propofol-contamination-page
03:28 PM on 05/23/2012
This isn't fraud. It's attempted murder. Once fraud has been established, they should be charged with 1st degree murder, if anyone at the clinic died.
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Susan Hoban Torres
welcome to my nightmare
10:37 AM on 05/23/2012
Greed has no boundaries
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smokeedaclown
Legalize it,tax it,regulate it
10:08 AM on 05/23/2012
speechless