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Page 27 of 79

July 15, 2019

Millcreek Community Hospital has agreed to pay $2.4 million and enter into a Corporate Integrity Agreement requiring five years of monitoring to resolve allegations of violating the False Claims Act.  For a period of four years, the Pennsylvania-based hospital’s inpatient rehabilitation unit allegedly admitted ineligible patients, then failed to document in medical records that such services were medically necessary and reasonable. USAO WDPA

July 10, 2019

Rural Metro of Southern Ohio, Inc. has agreed to pay $275,116 to resolve allegations of submitting, or causing the submission of, false claims to Medicare.  In a qui tam suit brought by Nicholas Ratterman, a former employee, Rural Metro was alleged to have billed Medicare for medically unnecessary overnight hospital discharge ambulance transports between 2013 to 2017.  As part of the settlement, Ratterman will receive about $44,000.  USAO EDKY

July 9, 2019

Two chiropractors who owned the Kansas City Health and Wellness Clinic have agreed to pay $350,000 to settle False Claims allegations.  Brothers Ryan Schell and Tyler Schell allegedly billed Medicare for medically unnecessary, unprovided, or uncovered treatments of peripheral neuropathy, which causes loss of sensation and/or burning sensations in the hands and feet.  USAO KS

July 8, 2019

Anthony Camillo, the owner of Illinois-based Allegiance Medical Laboratory and AMS Medical Laboratory, has been sentenced to 2.5 years in prison and ordered to pay $3.5 million in restitution for defrauding Medicare and Medicaid.  According to the DOJ, Camillo paid Missouri-based marketers between $150-$200 for urine and saliva samples sent to his labs.  His conduct incentivized other fraudulent conduct, including medically unnecessary testing of disabled and elderly patients living in residential care facilities, and the use of doctors’ names on test orders without the doctors’ knowledge.  USAO EDMO

July 2, 2019

For allegedly violating the False Claims Act, mental health nonprofit Wisconsin Community Services, Inc. (WCS) has agreed to pay $537,904 to the United States and the State of Wisconsin.  WCS voluntarily disclosed that one of its pharmacists had billed Medicare and Medicaid for brand name medications over several years, even though generic medications had been dispensed.  USAO EDWI

June 27, 2019

Following a whistleblower suit, Fusion Physical Therapy and Sports Wellness, P.C., and its founder and CEO, Carolyn Sue Mazur, have agreed to pay $37,500 to settle charges of billing Medicare for physical therapy services performed by uncredentialed personnel.  In addition the monetary penalty, Fusion and Mazur have also admitted to the misconduct.  USAO SDNY

June 27, 2019

Anne Arundel Medical Center (AAMC) has settled with the United States for alleged submissions of false claims to Medicare, TRICARE, and the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program.  In a whistleblower suit by former AAMC employee Barbara McHenry, the Maryland-based hospital was accused of billing for medically unnecessary Evaluation and Management (E/M) services from 2010 to 2013, and doubled billing for E/M services from 2014 to 2017 despite a 2014 update from CMS.  As part of the settlement, AAMC will pay $3 million and comply with a five-year Corporate Integrity Agreement, and McHenry will receive $473,100.  USAO MD

June 26, 2019

The Trustees of the University of Pennsylvania Health System have agreed to pay $275,000 to settle allegations of submitting false claims to Medicaid in violation of the False Claims Act.  During a seven month period in 2017, the health system’s Lancaster General Hospital allegedly billed Medicaid for interpretations of obstetric ultrasounds despite its physicians failing to complete those reports in a timely manner.  In about 10% of the cases, the reports were not completed until more than 90 days after the ultrasound was performed, rendering them useless.  USAO EDPA

June 20, 2019

Hart to Heart Ambulance Services, d/b/a Hart to Heart Transportation Services, has agreed to pay $1.25 million to settle allegations that it defrauded Medicare by submitting claims for medically unnecessary services, violating the False Claims Act.  Allegations were first brought to the government’s attention by former employee, Bryan Arvey, who alleged that from 2010 to 2017, Hart to Heart management pressured employees to falsify claims for non-emergency ambulance transports, such as hospital discharges.  For aiding in the recovery of public funds, Arvey will receive a share of $251,000.  USAO MD

June 11, 2019

Two additional co-defendants in a recently reported home health fraud case have been sentenced to 6-10 years in prison and ordered to pay over $4.3 million each for their involvement.  Angela Avetisyan and Ashot Minasyan, the co-owners and operators of Fifth Avenue Home Health, paid kickbacks to Marina Merino and other patient recruiters to bring Medicare patients to a clinic owned by Robert Glazer.  In exchange, they received referrals from Glazer’s clinic for home health services that were allegedly medically unnecessary.  DOJ; USAO CDCA
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