DOJ: Personal trainer posed as physician in $25M scheme

https://www.beckershospitalreview.com/legal-regulatory-issues/doj-personal-trainer-posed-as-physician-in-25m-scheme.html

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A 54-year-old personal trainer was arrested in Fort Worth, Texas, Oct. 12, and charged with engaging in a scheme to defraud insurance companies by submitting more than $25 million in false claims for medical services, according to the Department of Justice.

The government claims David Williams, the personal trainer, identified himself as “Dr. Dave” on his website and said he offered in-home fitness training and therapy. Mr. Williams’ website stated he accepted most health insurance plans, according to the DOJ.

To bill health insurance companies for his fitness and exercise training services, Mr. Williams allegedly registered as a healthcare provider with CMS and then billed insurance companies as if he were a physician. He allegedly used different names to enroll as a healthcare provider at least 19 times.

The government alleges Mr. Williams used inaccurate codes to bill for the services he and his staff provided, and he sometimes billed for services that had not been provided.

From November 2012 through August 2017, Mr. Williams submitted $25 million in false claims to UnitedHealthcare, Aetna and Cigna, and he was paid more than $3.9 million in relation to those claims.

If proven guilty, Mr. Williams faces up to 10 years in federal prison and a $250,000 fine.

Ex-Cleveland Clinic Innovation executive pleads guilty in $2.7M fraud case, prison time likely

http://www.fiercehealthcare.com/antifraud/ex-cleveland-clinics-innovation-executive-pleads-guilty-2-7m-fraud-case-prison-time?utm_medium=nl&utm_source=internal&mrkid=959610&mkt_tok=eyJpIjoiWkRSalkyTXpOV0V4WkRkayIsInQiOiJHQUVNRTJhUmhhSkpXVk80NkJoOWo5R21nNW5iV0hQS3NxRzc4SUQrbmRyMFwveXlBUFEwRm83TXFUemp0ZE9aNWlBTmYzSVJWb0dzbXV0RTczYnZSTEFMaGhEeFZKYk9LMWJuaXNxUlRUd2V6WEZnZ3lqRUpYaWp6SU0rbUhUd0cifQ==

Money, handcuffs and a stethoscope

The former head of Cleveland Clinic Innovations pleaded guilty Tuesday for his role in defrauding the nonprofit academic medical center out of more than $2.7 million via a shell company.

Gary Fingerhut was arraigned in U.S. District Court and pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud and honest services fraud and one count of making false statements, Crain’s Cleveland Business reports.

Although he won’t be formally sentenced until Jan. 30, Fingerhut’s attorney told the publication that federal prosecutors will ask U.S. District Judge Christopher Boyko for a sentence of between 41 and 51 months in federal prison. He may also be ordered to pay restitution to the Cleveland Clinic.

Fingerhut served as the executive director of the clinic’s innovation arm for two years until an FBI investigation revealed in 2015 that he was involved in a fraudulent scheme with the chief technology officer of a spinoff company to contract with a company that never intended to perform or provide any goods and services. The deal was in violation of Cleveland Clinic’s ethics and compliance policies and requirements, which prohibit employees from receiving any financial benefit from companies the Clinic did business with, and the organization fired Fingerhut.

Federal prosecutors said Fingerhut accepted at least $469,000 in payments in return for not disclosing the fraud scheme, which diverted nearly $3 million from the Clinic.

Fingerhut’s attorney, J. Timothy Bender of Bender, Alexander & Broome in Cleveland, told Crain’s that Fingerhut is very sorry for his role in the fraud scheme.

Medicare Advantage will have more enrollment, lower premiums in 2018

http://www.healthcaredive.com/news/medicare-advantage-will-have-more-enrollment-lower-premiums-in-2018/506293/

Dive Brief:

  •  The CMS says Medicare Advantage (MA) members will have more choices and lower premiums in 2018. Medicare open enrollment starts on Oct. 15.
  • The average MA monthly premium is expected to decrease by about 6% from $31.91 in 2017 to $30 in 2018. The CMS said 77% of MA enrollees who stay with their current plan will have the same or lower premiums in 2018.
  • MA’s enrollment is expected to increase by 9% to 20.4 million in 2018. The CMS expects that slightly more than one-third of Medicare enrollees will have an MA plan next year.

Dive Insight:

While the CMS has talked negatively about the Affordable Care Act (ACA), CMS Administrator Seema Verma is a big fan of MA. Verma (a candidate for HHS secretary in the wake of Tom Price’s departure) said MA and Medicare Part D “demonstrate what a strong and transparent health market can do — increase quality while lowering costs.”

Payers are enjoying positive financial numbers in the MA market. UnitedHealth Group said recently that it believes eventually half of all Medicare beneficiaries will have an MA plan. Payers are looking at the MA market for growth opportunities. In some cases, payers, such as Humana, are cutting back on ACA plans and investing more in MA.

Despite the CMS’ overall support of MA, the agency still sees one way to improve the program. The CMS wants MA payers to provide current and accurate information about their providers. The CMS found that 45% of MA provider directories had incorrect information, such as listing which providers are taking new patients, or providing the wrong phone numbers and addresses.

Currently, the CMS can only review MA plans’ provider networks when there is a triggering event. This can include when the insurance company starts in MA or extends its coverage, or the CMS receives a complaint about provider network issues. The CMS wants to have more oversight over provider network information, so that it can ensure the information is up to date.

While MA plans have been popular with the CMS, members and payers, there is a concern about a small number of payers monopolizing the market. The Kaiser Family Foundation said UnitedHealth controls nearly one-quarter of the MA market and is a major MA player in 42 states and the District of Columbia. KFF found UnitedHealth, Humana and Blue Cross Blue Shield affiliates make up 57% of MA enrollment and the top eight MA payers comprise three-quarters of the market.

Another issue for MA payers is that federal investigators are concerned about how much MA is paying insurers. The Department of Justice (DOJ) is investigating payments to insurance companies involved with MA.

Two of the bigger cases involve UnitedHealth. The payer is involved in two whistleblower lawsuits that allege MA overpaid the insurer by billions. The DOJ joined the lawsuits, which allege that UnitedHealth changed diagnosis codes to make patients seem sicker, which resulted in higher reimbursements to the insurer.

The CMS estimated that it overpaid $14.1 billion in 2013 to MA organizations. Medicare Advantage payers received about $160 billion in 2014. The CMS estimated about 9.5% of those payments were improper.

Dallas lab company accused of paying kickbacks fights to keep its federal licenses

https://www.dallasnews.com/news/crime/2017/09/04/dallas-lab-company-accused-paying-kickbacks-fights-keep-federal-licenses

Erik Bugen, defendant in medical kickback scam case.(Linkedin/Linkedin)

Erik Bugen, defendant in medical kickback scam case.

An embattled Dallas laboratory company accused of masterminding a $100 million fraud through bribes and kickbacks is fighting to keep its licenses to stay in business, according to a federal civil lawsuit.

Lawyers for Next Health and Medicus Laboratories filed a lawsuit on Aug. 18 against state and federal officials and agencies, seeking a temporary restraining order and injunction to stop them from suspending or revoking the company’s federal laboratory licenses.

Such a move would effectively put them out of business, the lawsuit says. Federal inspectors said they found regulatory violations without offering specifics, according to Next Health’s lawsuit.

That’s not the company’s only concern.

Two of Next Health’s principals, Andrew Hillman and Semyon Narosov, are currently facing federal bribery and kickback charges along with 19 others in connection with the former doctor-owned hospital chain Forest Park Medical Center. Prosecutors say the hospital paid about $40 million in bribes and kickbacks in exchange for patient referrals that generated $200 million in paid claims.

The $100 million fraud allegation against Next Health comes from a lawsuit UnitedHealthcare filed in February against the company, with allegations similar to those in the criminal case. The insurer alleges that Next Health paid bribes and kickbacks to doctors and other providers between 2011 and 2016 for overpriced and unnecessary drug and genetic tests.

Legal observers say laboratories are under intense federal scrutiny due to concerns that some are paying doctors to order genetic and drug tests that aren’t medically necessary.

Four Austin men, for example, were indicted in Dallas in July, accused of paying kickbacks to physicians for ordering bogus urine tests at North Texas labs. Another Texas lab company, Sky Toxicology, is fighting similar allegations from UnitedHealthcare in a lawsuit in San Antonio. Sky lawyer David Navarro said, “We intend to pursue our claims and vigorously defend against United’s counterclaims.”

Jeffrey Baird, a health care attorney in Amarillo, said many new testing labs have opened across the nation over the past two years. He said he advises his clients not to pay marketers any commissions to find specimens for testing due to the federal anti-kickback law.

“Anytime somebody figures out that a government program is paying money for something, you’re going to have folks try to figure out how to access that money,” he said.

Once federal authorities shut down one abusive practice, fraudsters figure out another way to bill for unnecessary medical services, he added. “It’s whack-a-mole. It’s almost this cat-and-mouse game,” Baird said.

Next Health is the majority owner of Medicus, a clinical testing laboratory that became a Medicare provider in 2010, court records say. UnitedHealthcare says in its lawsuit that Hillman and Narosov control Next Health.

Medicus in 2014 paid $5 million to settle a federal civil complaint that it defrauded Medicare over urine testing services. Next Health says Medicus has stopped certain testing “out of an abundance of caution” and also ceased operations at four other labs it owns because of the latest controversy.

Government overreach?

Next Health and Medicus allege that state and federal officials have a “premeditated intent to shut down the plaintiff’s business operations” and are not following their own rules and procedures.

Company representatives could not be reached for comment. But in court documents, they say they were not given time to correct “alleged deficiencies.”

A team of state and federal inspectors arrived at Medicus’ laboratory in April for a five-day inspection, reportedly in response to an anonymous complaint, the lawsuit said. The team also inspected five other labs owned in part by Next Health, the lawsuit said.

Next Health’s chief compliance officer, who accompanied the inspectors, noticed a copy of an email left in plain sight from one team member to others, saying the labs had received ample media attention and that the inspectors needed to find a way to pursue a “complaint investigation,” the lawsuit said.

“Defendants’ employees and agents were instructed to make findings that would close down plaintiffs’ operations before they even went to plaintiff’s laboratories,” the suit says.

The email is proof, the lawsuit says, that the inspection was not due to a complaint but part of an effort to shut down Medicus’ lab and prevent Next Health from running any other labs “through a regulatory ban.”

A May 10 letter from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services to Next Health and Medicus officials — appended in the lawsuit — said inspectors found problems with testing.

“Your laboratory demonstrated systemic and pervasive problems throughout the laboratory which has led to the findings of immediate jeopardy,” the letter says.

A finding of immediate jeopardy allows CMS to suspend, limit or revoke a laboratory’s license to operate without a hearing or opportunity for the lab to refute the allegations, the lawsuit says.

A CMS representative said the agency does not comment on pending lawsuits.

Federal charges

It’s not the first time Hillman has been in trouble with the law over alleged health care fraud.

In 2005, Hillman and his high school friend, Jason White, were indicted on mail fraud and health care fraud charges for an alleged scheme to defraud workers’ compensation insurance companies by getting them to pay for unnecessary medical equipment.

The following year, the U.S. attorney’s office in Dallas dropped the charges against Hillman after White took blame for the fraud and said Hillman had nothing to do with it, according to court records. That came after White had already pleaded guilty to conspiring with Hillman to commit the fraud, court records show.

Hillman was indicted for a second time in November — in the Forest Park Medical case — along with Narosov, a licensed physical therapist.

The indictment says the hospital paid Hillman and Narosov about $190,000 in kickbacks and bribes for referring patients to Forest Park Medical for surgeries and other procedures.

Both men have pleaded not guilty in that case and have filed a motion to dismiss the indictment. Attorneys for Hillman and Narosov said in court filings that their clients are not part of the alleged conspiracy and that the five-year statute of limitations bars charges against their clients in the case.

Narosov’s lawyer declined to comment. Hillman and Next Health and their lawyers could not be reached for comment.

Gift cards for urine

One of Next Health’s former marketing contractors was implicated in an unrelated criminal case involving an alleged laboratory kickback scheme.

Erik Bugen, of Austin, was indicted in July. Prosecutors say a company he co-founded, the ADAR Group, drummed up unnecessary tests for different labs and got the military’s health care system, Tricare, to pay for them. Soldiers were given Wal-Mart gift cards in exchange for providing saliva and urine, the criminal filing said.

Bugen has pleaded not guilty. He and his lawyer could not be reached.

The ADAR Group also found specimens for Next Health by giving people $50 gift cards to urinate in cups at Whataburger restrooms, according to the UnitedHealthcare lawsuit. Next Health labs conducted the tests under the guise of a “wellness study,” the lawsuit alleges.

Next Health lawyers have filed a motion to dismiss the lawsuit, saying UnitedHealthcare has failed to show any evidence of fraud.

“UHC has failed to allege any facts demonstrating a ‘meeting of the minds’ necessary to establish a claim for ‘conspiracy to commit fraud,’” said Ernest Martin Jr., one of the Next Health’s attorneys, in the filing.

Martin said doctors referring specimens for testing at the Next Health labs “exercise independent professional judgment in determining what testing services are appropriate and necessary.”

Physician who claimed to have 11k patients sentenced to 35 years in prison

http://www.beckershospitalreview.com/legal-regulatory-issues/physician-who-claimed-to-have-11k-patients-sentenced-to-35-years-in-prison.html

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A 60-year-old Texas physician was sentenced Aug. 9 to 35 years in prison for orchestrating a $375 million healthcare fraud scheme, according to the Department of Justice.

Federal prosecutors said Jacques Roy, MD, and his cohorts used promises of cash, groceries and food stamps to recruit patients, including some of Dallas’ homeless, as part of the fraud scheme.

From January 2006 to November 2011, Dr. Roy’s office, Medistat Group Associates in DeSoto, Texas, handled more home healthcare visits than any physician’s office in the country. Dr. Roy allegedly certified or directed the certification of more than 11,000 individual patients from more than 500 home healthcare agencies for home health services during that time, according to the DOJ.

“A doctor cannot care for 11,000 patients at once,” Assistant U.S. Attorney P.J. Meitl said during the trial, according to The Dallas Morning News

In April 2016, Dr. Roy, who has lost his medical license, was found guilty on eight counts of healthcare fraud, two counts of making a false statement relating to healthcare matters, one count of obstruction of justice and one count of conspiracy to commit healthcare fraud. Three owners of home healthcare agencies were also convicted on various felony offenses.

In addition to his 35-year prison term, Dr. Roy was ordered to pay $268.15 million in restitution.

BCBS of Michigan faces more than 30 lawsuits alleging hidden health plan fees

http://www.beckershospitalreview.com/legal-regulatory-issues/bcbs-of-michigan-faces-more-than-30-lawsuits-alleging-hidden-health-plan-fees.html

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More than 30 lawsuits filed against Detroit-based Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan in the past week claim the insurer charged employers unauthorized and hidden fees for their health plans, Bloomberg BNA reports.

Filed between Aug. 9 and Aug. 11 in Michigan’s federal court, the lawsuits allege BCBSM issued hidden markups to employers’ health plan assets to shore up its finances, the report states. The allegations stem from a 2014 appeals court decision finding the payer responsible for the unauthorized fees under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act. The decision also upheld a $6 million judgment against BCBSM.

More than 200 ERISA lawsuits alleging hidden health plan fees were filed against the payer since the 2014 decision, the report states. A college, an auto parts maker, a plastics manufacturer and a car dealer are among the employers suing BCBSM.

BCBSM did not respond to Bloomberg BNA‘s request for comment.

Former director of finance charged with embezzling $1.5M from UNC hospital

http://www.beckershospitalreview.com/legal-regulatory-issues/former-director-of-finance-charged-with-embezzling-1-5m-from-unc-hospital.html

Kimberly R Hobson

The former director of finance for UNC Regional Physicians was charged Tuesday with embezzling more than $1.5 million while she worked at High Point (N.C.) Regional Health, part of Chapel Hill, N.C.-based UNC Health Care.

The former High Point Regional Health employee, Kimberly Hobson, was charged with felonious embezzlement, according to the Winston-Salem Journal.

Hospital officials discovered the alleged embezzlement July 28 and subsequently fired Ms. Hobson.

She is being held at High Point jail on $1 million bail. Her next court date is set for Sept. 15.

The investigation into the alleged embezzlement is ongoing on the state and federal levels, according to the report.

Former healthcare CFO sentenced to more than 3 years in prison for fraud

http://www.beckershospitalreview.com/legal-regulatory-issues/former-healthcare-cfo-sentenced-to-more-than-3-years-in-prison-for-fraud.html

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U.S. District Judge Malcolm J. Howard sentenced William Canupp, former CFO of Beulaville, N.C.-based Eastpointe Human Services, to 3 1/2 years for wire fraud, tax fraud and conspiracy to commit federal program fraud, according to The Wilson Times.

Mr. Canupp served as Eastpointe’s CFO from March 2010 to April 2013. Eastpointe manages the public sector behavioral health system for several counties in eastern North Carolina.

On May 24, 2016, a federal grand jury returned a 47-count indictment against Mr. Canupp, charging him with conspiracy, bribery, organization fraud, wire fraud and money laundering. The indictment was issued nearly one year after a state audit found Mr. Canupp had facilitated kickbacks from two Eastpointe contractors. The audit revealed Eastpointe paid two contractors more than $1 million for renovations from 2010 to 2013. Each time a check was received from Eastpointe, the contractor wrote a personal check to Mr. Canupp. The contractors paid the former CFO a total of $547,595.

Mr. Canupp pleaded guilty in March to conspiracy to commit federal program fraud, wire fraud and tax fraud, according to The Wilson Times.

 

Auditor: 15-bed Missouri hospital at heart of $90M billing fraud scheme

http://www.beckershospitalreview.com/finance/auditor-15-bed-missouri-hospital-at-heart-of-90m-billing-fraud-scheme.html

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Putnam County Memorial Hospital, a 15-bed hospital in Unionville, Mo., received $90 million in insurance payments in less than a year for lab services that were performed at other facilities across the country, according to The St. Louis Post-Dispatch, which cited a report released Wednesday by Missouri State Auditor Nicole Galloway.

According to Ms. Galloway’s report, Putnam County Memorial Hospital contracted with Hospital Laboratory Partners in September 2016 to operate a clinical laboratory on behalf of the hospital.

“Immediately upon signing the management contract with the hospital, the CEO and his associates began billing significant amounts of out-of-state lab activity through the hospital,” according to the auditor’s report.

Putnam County Hospital allegedly acted as a shell company by submitting claims for other labs and funneling the insurance payments through the hospital.

“Based on our review of hospital accounts, the vast majority of laboratory billings are for out-of-state lab activity for individuals who are not patients of hospital physicians,” states the auditor’s report.

Ms. Galloway has turned her findings over to the Missouri attorney general, the FBI and the Putnam County prosecuting attorney, according to KCUR.

On Thursday, Hospital Laboratory Partners said the auditor’s report mischaracterizes the payments. The company said Putnam County Hospital, a critical access hospital, is authorized to bill for off-site lab work.

“The assignment of non-patient lab specimens has been standard practice for rural and critical access hospitals for many years,” Hospital Laboratory Partners attorney Mark Thomas said in a statement to The Kansas City Star“The purpose of the rural/critical access exceptions is to give rural healthcare facilities a fighting chance to survive and serve their local communities.”

 

Whistleblowers: United Healthcare Hid Complaints About Medicare Advantage

http://www.healthleadersmedia.com/leadership/whistleblowers-united-healthcare-hid-complaints-about-medicare-advantage?spMailingID=11626431&spUserID=MTY3ODg4NTg1MzQ4S0&spJobID=1220355933&spReportId=MTIyMDM1NTkzMwS2#

Die Whistleblower

 

The suit, filed by United Healthcare sales agents accuses the giant insurer of keeping a “dual set of books” to hide serious complaints about its services

United Healthcare Services Inc., which runs the nation’s largest private Medicare Advantage insurance plan, concealed hundreds of complaints of enrollment fraud and other misconduct from federal officials as part of a scheme to collect bonus payments it didn’t deserve, a newly unsealed whistleblower lawsuit alleges.

The suit, filed by United Healthcare sales agents in Wisconsin, accuses the giant insurer of keeping a “dual set of books” to hide serious complaints about its services and of being “intentionally ineffective” at investigating misconduct by its sales staff. A federal judge unsealed the lawsuit, first filed in October 2016, on Tuesday.

The company knew of accusations that at least one sales agent forged signatures on enrollment forms and had been the subject of dozens of other misconduct complaints, according to the suit. In another case, a sales agent allegedly engaged in a “brazen kickback scheme” in which she promised iPads to people who agreed to sign up and stay with the health plan for six months, according to the suit.

Though it fired the female sales agent, United Healthcare concluded the kickback allegations against her were “inconclusive” and did not report the incident to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, according to the suit.

Asked for comment on the allegations in the suit, United Healthcare spokesman Matt Burns said: “We reject them.”

Medicare serves about 56 million people, both people with disabilities and those 65 and older. About 19 million have chosen to enroll in Medicare Advantage plans as an alternative to standard Medicare. United Healthcare is the nation’s biggest operator, covering about 3.6 million patients last year.

The whistleblowers accuse United Healthcare of hiding misconduct complaints from federal officials to avoid jeopardizing its high rankings on government quality scales. These rankings are used both as a marketing tool to entice members and as a way for the government to pay bonuses to high-quality plans.

Medicare paid United Healthcare $1.4 billion in bonuses in fiscal 2016 based upon their high quality ratings, compared with $564 million in 2015, according to the suit. CMS relies on the health plans to report problems and does not verify the accuracy of these reports before issuing any bonus payments.

The suit alleges the bonuses were “fraudulently obtained” because the company concealed the true extent of complaints. In March 2016, for instance, the company advised CMS only of 257 serious complaints, or about a third of the 771 actually logged, according to the suit.

The suit was filed by James Mlaker, of Milwaukee, a sales agent with the insurance plan in Wisconsin, and David Jurczyk, a resident of Waterford, Wis., a sales manager with the company.

The suit says Jurczyk had access to “dual” complaint databases, described as “the accurate one with a complete list of complaints and more details of the offenses and the fraudulent, truncated one provided to CMS.”

Jurczyk “has direct, personal knowledge of dozens of cases in Wisconsin alone in which customer complaints raising serious issues were routinely determined and falsely documented as either “inconclusive” or “unsubstantiated” by the company, according to the suit. Overall, about 84 percent of complaints alleging major infractions, such as forging signatures on enrollment forms, were determined to be inconclusive or unsubstantiated, according to the suit.

According to Mlaker, one sales agent faced little disciplinary action even after allegedly forging a customer’s signature on an enrollment form. The customer was “shocked” to learn that the agent had enrolled him because he had told the agent he was “not interested and did not want to enroll,” according to the complaint.

As a result, according to the suit, CMS officials never learned of these customer complaints.

The two men said that in early 2013 they began noticing that investigations of serious customer complaints that previously would have been completed “swiftly” instead “were drawn out; little actual inquiry was made, or even worse, known facts were ignored and discounted to falsify findings,” according to the suit.

Complaints also brought “much fewer and less serious corrective or disciplinary actions,” according to the suit. According to the suit, United Healthcare took steps to encourage any members with complaints to report them directly to the company rather than to complain to CMS.

The unsealing of the Wisconsin cases comes as United Healthcare and other Medicare Advantage plans are facing numerous cases brought under the Federal False Claims Act. At least a half-dozen of the whistleblower suits have surfaced since 2014.

The law allows private citizens to bring actions to recover damages on behalf of the federal government and retain a share. The Justice Department elected not to take over the Wisconsin case, which could limit the amount of money, if any, recovered. United Healthcare spokesman Burns said the company agreed with that decision.

In May, the Justice Department accused United Healthcare of overcharging the federal government by more than $1 billion by improperly jacking up risk scores over the course of a decade.