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October 22, 2014

Tayyab Aziz, founder of three Detroit-area home health agencies Prestige Home Health Services Inc., Royal Home Health Care Inc., and Platinum Home Health Services Inc. pleaded guilty for his role in a $22M home health care fraud scheme. Specifically, Aziz admitted he and his co-conspirators submitted fraudulent claims to Medicare for services that were medically unnecessary or never performed. They also submitted claims for services purportedly provided to Medicare beneficiaries who were recruited through illegal kickbacks paid to the patients and recruiters. DOJ

October 10, 2014

Extendicare Health Services Inc., an operator of a chain of skilled nursing facilities, and its subsidiary Progressive Step Corporation (ProStep), agreed to pay $38 million that Extendicare billed Medicare and Medicaid for materially substandard nursing services that were so deficient they were effectively worthless and billed Medicare for medically unreasonable and unnecessary rehabilitation therapy services. It is the largest failure of care settlement with a chain-wide skilled nursing facility in the Justice Department’s history. The government’s charges originated from two whistleblower lawsuits filed by Tracy Lovvron and Donald Gallick under the qui tam provisions of the False Claim Act. They will receive whistleblower awards of more than $1.8 million and $250,000, respectively. DOJ

September 26, 2014

Detroit-area physician Dr. Vicha Janviriya pleaded guilty for making fraudulent referrals for home health care in a $1.3 million Medicare fraud scheme. He admitted that he falsified medical documentation which would be used to support false claims to Medicare for services that were never rendered or not medically necessary, or where the Medicare beneficiary referrals were obtained through the payment of kickbacks. DOJ

September 22, 2014

Akinola Afolabi, former owner of Long Beach, California medical supply company Emmanuel Medical Supply was sentenced to serve 30 months in prison and ordered to pay $1.5 million in restitution for his role in a scheme to provide unnecessary power wheelchairs to Medicare patients, resulting in $2.6 million in fraudulent claims to Medicare.DOJ

September 16, 2014

Wesley Harlan Kingsbury, general manager of the Southern California ambulance company Alpha Ambulance Inc., pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit Medicare fraud. According to court documents, Kingsbury conspired with Alex Kapri and Aleksey (Russ) Muratov, the owners of Alpha Ambulance, as well as the training supervisor Danielle Medina, to bill Medicare for ambulance transportation services for individuals that Kingsbury knew did not need to be transported by ambulance. In addition, he instructed emergency medical technicians that worked at Alpha Ambulance to conceal the true medical condition of patients they were transporting by altering requisite paperwork and creating false reasons to justify the transportation services. DOJ

August 4, 2014

Community Health Systems (CHS), the nation’s largest operator of acute care hospitals, agreed to pay $98 million to resolve multiple whistleblower lawsuits alleging the company billed government health care programs for inpatient services that should have been billed as outpatient or observation services. According to the government, CHS engaged in a corporate-driven scheme to increase inpatient admissions of Medicare, Medicaid and TRICARE (military) beneficiaries over the age of 65 who originally presented to the emergency departments at 119 CHS hospitals.Whistleblower Insider

August 1, 2014

Olufunke Ibiyemi Fadojutimi, a registered nurse and former owner of Lutemi Medical Supply, a durable medical equipment (DME) supply company, was found guilty of health care fraud relating to a 10-year scheme in which Medicare was fraudulently billed more than $8 million for DME that was not medically necessary. The trial evidence showed that between September 2003 and January 2013, Fadojutimi and others paid cash kickbacks to patient recruiters and physicians for fraudulent prescriptions for DME, such as power wheelchairs, that the Medicare patients did not actually need. DOJ

July 23, 2014

Elsa Ruiz, the owner and administrator of the Miami-based home health care agencies Professional Home Care Solutions and LTC Professional Consultants, pleaded guilty for her participation in a $74M Medicare fraud scheme. According to court documents, Ruiz and her co-conspirators operated the two companies for the purpose of billing Medicare for expensive physical therapy and home health care services that were either never provided or not medically necessary. DOJ

June 23, 2014

Cruz Sonia Collado, the owner and operator of Nestor’s Health Services, a now-defunct Miami home health care agency, pleaded guilty to a $6.5M million health care fraud scheme. According to the government, Collado and her co-conspirators operated Nestor for the purpose of billing Medicare for expensive physical therapy and home health care services that were not medically necessary or never provided. As part of the scheme, Collado allegedly also paid kickbacks and bribes to patient recruiters, in return for those recruiters providing patients to Nestor for these unnecessary or phantom home health care and therapy services. DOJ

June 13, 2014

Gwendolyn Climmons-Johnson, the owner and operator of Urgent Response EMS, a Houston area ambulance company, was sentenced to 97 months in prison and to pay roughly $1M for her role in a $2.4M Medicare fraud scheme. In October she had been convicted by a federal jury in Houston of four counts of health care fraud. According to evidence presented at trial, from January 2010 through December 2011, Climmons-Johnson and others conspired to enrich themselves by submitting false and fraudulent claims to Medicare for ambulance services that were medically unnecessary and/or not provided. DOJ
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