DOJ charges more than 600 in historic fraud takedown involving $2B in false claims

https://www.fiercehealthcare.com/payer/doj-jeff-sessions-medicare-strike-force-fraud-takedown-opioids-oig?mkt_tok=eyJpIjoiTXpRelpESTBaVE5tTVRBNSIsInQiOiJmTnBaRmJoVDJaOVZYRkhCd05cL2JXOVNoYU50NlVYN3pIb3ZlRFg1a3RqRWhXbjVMYm5SeEY3Y1ZNdENBb3NQSkZBTXRSR0tDSjZ4R2pJd0RjUFZ2bmRGbnhqXC9pQ2oxaTVCdHN3TUx0b25Ib09rblVuYlJVMW51NlVDcUdzRGNnIn0%3D&mrkid=959610

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Another year, another record-setting healthcare fraud takedown.

This year, the Department of Justice charged 601 individuals involved in fraud schemes totaling $2 billion in losses to the federal government. That’s nearly 200 more people and an additional $700 million than the previous year’s takedown.

There was a clear emphasis on opioid distribution, with 162 individuals charged with illegally prescribing or distributing narcotics. Of those charged for opioid fraud, 76 were physicians.

“Healthcare fraud is a betrayal of vulnerable patients, and often it is theft from the taxpayer,” Attorney General Sessions said in a statement. “In many cases, doctors, nurses, and pharmacists take advantage of people suffering from drug addiction in order to line their pockets. These are despicable crimes.”

Federal enforcement agencies have zeroed in on medical providers as a source of opioid diversion. Last year the DOJ created a new Opioid Fraud and Abuse Detection Unit with 12 dedicated U.S. attorneys and a focus on data analytics. In January, Sessions said the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) would direct agents to focus on prescribers and pharmacies and that dispense an unusual amount of drugs.

“This year’s operations, focusing on opioid-related schemes, spotlight the far-reaching impact of health care fraud,” said HHS Deputy Inspector General Gary Cantrell.

In this year’s takedown announcement, the DOJ said “virtually every health care fraud scheme requires a corrupt medical professional to be involved” and “aggressively pursuing” providers has a deterrent effect and ensures they cannot use their license to perpetuate schemes.

The agency highlighted one particular scheme in which a pain management specialist in New York and New Jersey was accused of taking cash from patients in exchanges for oxycodone and Subsys. He was also charged with second-degree murder after a patient died from an overdose.

Other areas of the country included equally egregious schemes:

  • In Texas a pharmacy owner and pharmacists were charged with using fraudulent prescriptions to fill more than 1 million hydrocodone and oxycodone pills and distributed them to drug dealers.
  • In California, an attorney was accused of offering prostitutes and expensive meals to two podiatrists in exchange for preprinted prescription pads.
  • In Michigan and Illinois, individuals were charged with home health fraud schemes totaling $44 million.
  • In Southern Florida, a hotbed for healthcare fraud, the owner and director of a sober home were charged for a scheme involving widespread fraudulent urine testing and $106 million in claims for substance abuse treatment.

Fraud takedowns of this size and scale have become an annual event, dating back nearly a decade. Both the number of individuals and the amount of money involved in the schemes have gradually increased over the years as the DOJ and the Office of Inspector General (OIG) have emphasized the use of analytics as an investigative tool.

Federal enforcers have also relied on a collaborative approach to enforcement. Like last year, this week’s takedown involved multiple federal agencies, including the Department of Health and Human Services, the OIG, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) and the Medicare Fraud Strike Force.

Since 2016, federal agencies have charged more than 1,300 individuals tied to $4.2 billion in fraudulent billing schemes.

 

HHS announces ‘largest fraud takedown in history’

http://www.healthcarefinancenews.com/news/hhs-announces-largest-fraud-takedown-history-charging-400-defendants-schemes-involving-13?mkt_tok=eyJpIjoiTTJVNFlXUTBOR0pqTmpJMSIsInQiOiJ3S01TRnZaWE5GT2NZMG13bGNnMENVdEc0OTRaNHVac1RJemUzNlhBRjY1ckY3dDQ5TCtlM1RqcTN5NHN0NktPU3Vud3dvUTJMM2ZHdG12R0RGaXZ1SzRGVjdYbE9KVFwvcTVwVENVWVdMbFwvYzh4RGlkNlRcLzY0SFZhMmpDZlBwUiJ9

The Department of Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General, state and federal law enforcement executed a massive fraud takedown this month that charged more than 400 defendants in connection with healthcare fraud schemes that involved roughly $1.3 billion in fraudulent billings to government payers including Medicare and Medicaid, the OIG announced.

The takedown is being called the largest in history, both for the number of defendants charged and the amount of money lost, OIG said.

Additionally, OIG issued exclusion notices to 295 doctors, nurses, and other providers related to opioid diversion and abuse. The notices ban participation in or claim submissions to, all Federal healthcare programs.Those who got the notices include 57 doctors, 162 nurses, and 36 pharmacists.

“Takedowns protect Medicare and Medicaid and deter fraud — sending a strong signal that theft from these taxpayer-funded programs will not be tolerated. The money taxpayers spend fighting fraud is an excellent investment: For every $1.00 spent on health care-related fraud and abuse investigations in the last three years, more than $5.00 has been recovered,” OIG said in a statement.

The schemes spanned the entire nation, from Washington to Puerto Rico, and 115 of those charged are medical professionals, specifically doctors and nurses. Among the fraud schemes, a Texas provider was charged with overprescribing narcotics to patients who had no medical need for them, and some of whom died from drug overdoses. The doctor allegedly fraudulently billed Medicare, netting more than $1.2 million in reimbursement. Another scheme involved seven Michigan defendants, including five physicians, who allegedly perpetrated illegal kickbacks and billing for medically unnecessary joint injections, drug screenings, and home health services. One of the defendants owned multiple health-related businesses and allegedly billed Medicare $126 million as part of the fraud scheme.

Another notable fraud case recently announced by the Department of Justice involved a landmark settlement with historically unique requirements. Pharmaceutical manufacturer Mallinckrodt, one of the largest manufacturers of generic oxycodone, agreed to pay $35 million to settle allegations that it violated the Controlled Substances Act when it failed to report “suspicious orders” for controlled substances, as well as record-keeping infractions. The DOJ said that from 2008 until 2011, Mallinckrodt supplied distributors an “increasingly excessive quantity” of oxycodone pills but didn’t notify the DEA of these suspicious orders. The distributors then supplied various U.S. pharmacies and pain clinics.

The DOJ called the settlement groundbreaking for a couple reasons. First, it involves requiring a manufacturer to utilize chargeback and similar data to monitor and report suspicious sales of its oxycodone at the next level in the supply chain. This typically means sales from distributors to independent and small chain pharmacy and pain clinic customers. Also, it requires a parallel agreement with the DEA through which the company will analyze data it collects on orders from customers down the supply chain to identify suspicious sales.

It is clear government agencies and law enforcement are increasingly zeroing in on healthcare fraud, with other notable settlements in recent months with well-known providers related to False Claims Act violations. Those systems include Carolinas Healthcare, Freedom Health, Los Angeles hospital Pacific Alliance Medical Center, Genesis Healthcare, and even Walmart.