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Page 54 of 71

March 3, 2017

Rex Duruji, an unlicensed medical professional posing as a physician, was convicted for his participation in a $1.3 million Medicare fraud scheme.  The evidence presented at trial showed that Duruji posed as a physician to induce Medicare beneficiaries to sign up for fraudulent home-health services with Koby Home Health that were not actually provided and paid illegal cash kickbacks to the beneficiaries for those claims. DOJ

March 2, 2017

Detroit-area physician Aaron Goldfein pleaded guilty for his role in a $5.4 million Medicare fraud scheme involving phony physician visits and drug prescriptions.  As part of his plea, Goldfein admitted to being part of a scheme in which his co-conspirators would hold themselves out as licensed physicians and purport to perform physician home visits and other services for Medicare beneficiaries, although these co-conspirators were not licensed to practice medicine in Michigan.  Goldfein would then bill Medicare through Tri-City Medical Center as if he himself had completed these visits.  Goldfein also admitted to being part of a scheme in which he received kickbacks in exchange for writing home health prescriptions. DOJ

March 2, 2017

New York announced the sentencing of two pharmacy owners, a supervising pharmacist and ten corporations for defrauding several government-funded healthcare programs, including Medicaid and Medicare. An investigation revealed that on at least eight separate occasions between November 2013 and February 2014, the defendants paid patients hundreds of dollars in cash to forgo their prescription medications, the vast majority of which were to treat HIV. The defendants then submitted false claims to Medicare, Medicaid and Medicaid-managed care organizations and were reimbursed for distributing the medications, despite the fact that they were never dispensed to patients. Tarek Elsayed, 50, of Elmhurst Queens, the co-owner of 184th Street Pharmacy in the Bronx, was sentenced in Bronx County Supreme Court by the Honorable Stephen Barrett to one to three years in state prison. Previously, in August of 2016, Ahmed Hamed, 39, of Elmhurst Queens, the second co-owner of 184th Street Pharmacy, was sentenced to two to six years in state prison. In October of 2016, Mohamed Hassan Ahmed, 38, of Bayside, the supervising pharmacist at 184th Street Pharmacy, was sentenced to one to three years in state prison and was required to surrender his license to practice pharmacy. Collectively, the three defendants stole over $10 million from government-funded health care programs. In addition, the Attorney General’s Medicaid Fraud Control Unit (MFCU) reached a $4.1 million civil settlement agreement with defendant Elsayed and a $3.8 million civil settlement agreement with defendant Hamed. NY

February 24, 2017

Raciel Leon, manager of Mercy Home Care Inc. and a billing employee for D&D&D Home Health Care Inc., two Miami-area home health agencies, was sentenced to a 126 month prison term for his role in a $2.5 million Medicare fraud scheme.  The evidence at trial showed that Leon and his co-conspirators used the companies to submit false claims to Medicare based on services not medically necessary, not actually provided, and for patients procured through the payment of illegal kickbacks to doctors and patient recruiters.  DOJ

February 16, 2017

New Jersey doctor Kenneth D. Nahmu, his wife Ann Walsh and their oncology practice agreed to pay $1.7 million to resolve allegations they violated the False Claims Act by billing Medicare for illegally importing and using unapproved chemotherapy drugs from foreign distributors.  DOJ (DNJ)

February 10, 2017

Dr. Paul B. Tartell, an ENT physician practicing in Plantation, Florida and his practice Paul B. Tartell, M.D., P.L., have agreed to pay $750,000 to resolve allegations that he violated the False Claims Act by billing for surgical endoscopies with debridement and laryngeal stroboscopies that were not provided or not medically necessary.  The allegations originated in a whistleblower lawsuit filed under the qui tam provisions of the False Claims Act by Theodore Duay, a former patient of Dr. Tartell.  Mr. Duay will receive a whistleblower award of $135,000 from the proceeds of the government's recovery.  DOJ (SDFL)

February 9, 2017

University Behavioral Health of El Paso agreed to pay $860,000 to resolve allegations it violated the False Claims Act by submitting false claims to Medicare tainted by the payment of kickbacks to a physician under the guise of a professional services agreement in return for the physician’s referral of patients to the hospital.  Specifically, the physician received payments above fair market value, or for services not rendered, and made improper referrals to the hospital for Medicare-reimbursed services.  DOJ (WDTX)

February 7, 2017

Florida physician Gary L. Marder, and the owner of the Allergy, Dermatology & Skin Cancer Centers in Port St. Lucie and Okeechobee, stipulated to a consent final judgment of over $18 million to settle False Claims Act allegations that Dr. Marder submitted claims to federal healthcare programs for medically unnecessary biopsies and radiation therapy services, radiation therapy services performed in contravention of standard practice regarding the amount of time between radiation treatments, and radiation therapy services performed without direct supervision and by unlicensed and/or unqualified physician assistants.  Dr. Kendall also allegedly submitted false claims to federal and state healthcare programs for laboratory services tainted by kickbacks to, and improper financial relationships with, Dr. Marder.  The allegations originated in a whistleblower lawsuit filed by Dr. Theodore A. Schiff under the qui tam provisions of the False Claims Act.  He will receive a yet-to-be-determined whistleblower award from the proceeds of the government's recovery.  DOJ (SDFL)

February 6, 2017

U.S. hospital service provider TeamHealth Holdings (as successor in interest to IPC Healthcare Inc., f/k/a IPC The Hospitalists Inc.), agreed to pay $60 million to resolve allegations it violated the False Claims Act by billing Medicare, Medicaid, the Defense Health Agency and the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program for higher and more expensive levels of medical service than were actually performed (a practice known as “up-coding”).  The allegations originated in a whistleblower lawsuit filed under the qui tam provisions of the False Claims Act by Dr. Bijan Oughatiyan, a physician formerly employed by IPC as a hospitalist.  He will receive a whistleblower award of roughly $11.4 million.  DOJ

February 2, 2017

Pain management physician Dr. Robert Windsor, owner of National Pain Care, Inc. which owns pain management clinics in Georgia and Kentucky, agreed to the entry of a $20 million consent judgment to resolve allegations he violated the False Claims Act by billing federal health care programs for surgical monitoring services he did not perform and for medically unnecessary diagnostic tests.  The allegations originated in two whistleblower lawsuits filed under the qui tam provisions of the False Claims Act by Kris Frankenberg, Stephanie Herder and Bradley Davis.  They will receive a yet-to-be-determined whistleblower award from the proceeds of the government’s recovery.  Whistleblower Insider
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