Allegiant Experts
Apr 11, 20193 min
24 people, 130 durable medical equipment (DME) companies and $1.2 billion. It all adds up to one of the largest health care fraud schemes pulled off in United States history. As Jonathan Stempel of Reuters.com reports, the huge scheme involved doctors, telemarketers and owners of the aforementioned DME companies who all worked to together to sell unnecessary orthotic braces to hundreds of thousands of disabled and elderly patients.
The company owners have been accused of paying
kickbacks and bribes to doctors in exchange for their referrals. The doctors
were working with fraudulent telemedicine companies to get the back, knee,
shoulder and wrist braces that patients did not need.
“The scheme allegedly involved the use of call
centers in the Philippines and throughout Latin America, with proceeds
laundered through offshore shell companies and used to buy exotic cars, yachts
and luxury real estate,” reports Stempel, “Medicare’s anti-fraud unit said it
was taking action against 130 medical equipment companies that had submitted
more than $1.7 billion of claims, and been paid more than $900 million.”
They were brought in from California, Florida, New
Jersey, Pennsylvania, South Carolina and Texas. Florida residents, Creaghan
Harry, Lester Stockett and Elliot Loewenstern took the title of having pulled off
the largest individual scheme amongst the group. The trio, who consists of the
owner, chief executive and marketing vice president of call centers and
telemedicine companies, respectively, bilked a grand total of $454 million from
Medicare.
New Jersey residents, Neal Williamsky and Nadia Levit
owned about 25 DME companies and participated in a scheme that drew $150
million away from Medicare.
The United States Department of Justice report on this case provides further details about the collaborative scheme between all involved parties. “Some of the defendants allegedly controlled an international telemarketing network that lured over hundreds of thousands of elderly and/or disabled patients into a criminal scheme that crossed borders, involving call centers in the Philippines and throughout Latin America,” the DoJ report details.
It goes on to explain that the defendants allegedly
paid doctors to prescribe durable medical equipment to patients even if they
had no interaction with them at all. In some cases, only brief telephone
conversations were conducted before the unnecessary prescriptions were written.
“This Department of Justice will not tolerate
medical professionals and executives who look to line their pockets by cheating
our health care programs,” he is quoted as saying, “I commend the Criminal
Division prosecutors and our partners from U.S. Attorney’s Offices and law
enforcement agencies across the country for their unrelenting efforts to stop
this alleged fraud before more money was stolen from American taxpayers.”
If so, please don’t hesitate to contact the Allegiant Experts team to find out how our clinical expertise may help your case. Our experts have been providing expert clinical services for nearly twenty years! Give us a call at 407-217-5831 or email us at info@allegiantexperts.com.
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