Allegiant Experts
Oct 10, 20192 min
With each story about health care fraud that the
Allegiant Experts Blog analyzes, it demonstrates the growing number of
fraudsters who are brought to justice. We suppose that’s a good thing, of
course. However, the spike in justice being served doesn’t seem to deter those
who continue to wish to defraud our nation’s health care insurance programs.
Last week, our blog reported on one of the largest health care fraud schemes ever. It involved charges being laid against 35 different individuals who participated in a fraudulent genetic testing scheme responsible for over $2.1 billion in losses. As you may have guessed, the story we’re analyzing this week further proves the lengths people will go to commit health care fraud.
As reported by the Northern District of Ohio branch of the United States Department of Justice, “six people from Ohio pleaded guilty in federal court to crimes related to a health care fraud conspiracy in which Medicaid was billed $48 million for drug and alcohol recovery services, many of which were not provided, not medically necessary, lacked proper documentation, or had other issues that made them ineligible for reimbursement.”
Those six people are Ryan P. Sheridan, Jennifer M.
Sheridan, Kortney L. Gherardi, Lisa M. Pertee, Thomas Bailey and Arthur H.
Smith. They are all expected to be sentenced in January 2020.
According to the court documents, the 39 year-old Sheridan
owned Braking Point Recovery Center, among other businesses such as recovery
houses for those battling drug and alcohol abuse. His drug and alcohol
rehabilitation centers in Austintown and Whitehall, Ohio provided detox,
intensive outpatient treatment, day treatment and residential living
rehabilitation.
Sheridan is a certified provider. As a result, he
agreed to follow the rules and regulations of the Ohio Medicaid Program and the
Ohio Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services. However, between January
2015 and October 2017, numerous fraudulent billings for drug and alcohol
services were submitted to Medicaid.
Among them was the fact the billings were coded to reflect a service more costly than was actually provided, without proper documentation and without proper assessment documents containing valid diagnosis. The 45 year-old Bailey, who was also charged in this case, had some of the billings related to him. They included the dispensing of Suboxone (which is used to treat dependence on opioid drugs) even though Bailey did not have the authority to do so. These violations only scratch the surface of the charges laid.
All in all, Braking Point submitted approximately
134,744 claims to Medicaid for a total of over $48.5 million in services. The
billings were for services purported to be provided between May 2015 and
October 2017, resulting in payouts of more than $31 million. Medicaid suspended
payments to Braking Point on October 18, 2017, reports the DoJ.
Please don’t hesitate to contact Allegiant Experts to find out how our clinical expertise may help your case. Give us a call at 407-217-5831 or email us at info@allegiantexperts.com.
#drugandalcoholrecoveryservices #Suboxone #Ohio #guiltyplea #healthcarefraud