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Home Health and Hospice

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April 18, 2017

International Tutoring Services, LLC (d/b/a Hospice Plus; Goodwin Hospice, LLC; Phoenix Hospice, LP; Hospice Plus, L.P.; and Curo Health Services, LLC) agreed to pay $12.21 million to resolve allegations they violated the False Claims Act by paying kickbacks in exchange for patient referrals. The alleged kickbacks took the form of cash, gift cards, sham loans, a free equity interest in another entity, stock dividends, and free rental space. The allegations originated in a whistleblower lawsuit filed under the qui tam provisions of the False Claims Act. The whistleblowers will receive a whistleblower award from the proceeds of the government's recovery. DOJ (NDTX)

March 30, 2017

Godwin Oriakhi, owner of five Houston-area home health agencies pleaded guilty to conspiring to defraud Medicare and the State of Texas’s Medicaid-funded Home and Community-Based Service and Primary Home Care programs of more than $17 million.  According to his plea, Oriakhi admitted that he, his daughter and co-defendant Idia Oriakhi, and other members of his family owned and operated: Aabraham Blessings LLC, Baptist Home Care Providers Inc., Community Wide Home Health Inc., Four Seasons Home Healthcare Inc. and Kis Med Concepts Inc., and that they obtained patients for these home health agencies by paying illegal kickback payments to patient recruiters and his office employees for hundreds of patient referrals.  Oriakhi also admitted that they paid Medicare and Medicaid patients by cash, check, Western Union and Moneygram for receiving services from his family’s home health agencies in exchange for the ability to use their Medicare and Medicaid numbers to bill the programs for home healthcare. DOJ

Hospice Companies Settle FCA Case for $12.2M

Posted  04/20/17
By the C|C Whistleblower Lawyer Team Several Hospice companies settled allegations they violated the False Claims Act (FCA) by paying kickbacks for patient referrals. The companies include Hospice Plus; Goodwin Hospice, LLC; Phoenix Hospice, LP; Hospice Plus, L.P.; and Curo Health Services, LLC. Mooresville, North Carolina-headquartered Curo Health Services operates eight hospice affiliates across 18 states. Curo...

Home Health Agency Owner Pleads Guilty to Conspiring in $17 Million Medicaid Fraud Scheme

Posted  03/31/17
By the C|C Whistleblower Lawyer Team The owner and operator of five Houston-area home health agencies pleaded guilty to conspiring to defraud Medicare and the State of Texas’s Medicaid-funded Home and Community-Based Service and Primary Home Care programs of more than $17 million.  He also pleaded guilty to conspiring to launder money.  These health care programs provided qualified individuals with in-home...

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

Miami residents Mildrey Gonzalez and Milka Alfaro pleaded guilty to fraud charges stemming from their roles in a $20 million home health care fraud scheme.  Gonzalez and Alfaro were co-owners of seven home health care agencies:  Inar Home Care Service Corp., MA Home Health Inc., Golden Home Health Care Inc., Nova Home Health Care Inc., Finetech Home Health Inc., Homestead Home Health Care LLC and Metro Dade Home Health Inc.  Gonzalez and Alfaro admitted paying bribes and kickbacks to medical professionals in return for the provision of prescriptions for home health care services and referrals of Medicare beneficiaries to their home health care agencies. DOJ

Sixteen charged in $60M Medicare hospice fraud scheme

Posted  03/1/17
By the C|C Whistleblower Lawyer Team The Department of Justice announced yesterday that a grand jury returned an indictment charging 16 Texas individuals with participating in a scheme to commit healthcare fraud, billing Medicare and Medicaid over $60 million for fraudulent hospice services, of which the government actually paid over $35 million. Defendants allegedly improperly placed patients in hospice and...

December 15, 2016

Raciel Leon, manager of Mercy Home Care Inc. and a billing employee for D&D&D Home Health Care Inc. was convicted for his role in a $2.5 million Medicare fraud scheme. According to evidence presented at trial, Leon and his co-conspirators used the companies to submit false claims to Medicare that were based on services that were not medically necessary, not actually provided and for patients that were procured through the payment of illegal kickbacks to doctors and patient recruiters.  DOJ

December 2, 2016

Vitas Health Corporation Midwest and related entities agreed to pay $200,000 to resolve allegations that they violated the False Claims Act and the Anti-Kickback Statute by paying Dr. Farid Fata for patient referrals to its hospice care services.  In an earlier unrelated criminal matter, Fata pleaded guilty to health care fraud, conspiracy to pay and receive kickbacks and promotional money laundering, and was sentenced to a term of 45 years in prison.  The allegations originated in a whistleblower lawsuit under the qui tam provisions of the False Claims Act by Rita Dubois who worked at Vitas as the Director of Market Development in Southeastern Michigan.  Dubois will receive a whistleblower award of $36,000 from the proceeds of the government's recovery.  DOJ (EDMI)
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