Dental Services Fraud

April 16, 2008 by brian  

The Medicaid Dental Center (MDC), a corporation in North Carolina that owned a chain of dental clinics under the name of Smile Starters and Carolina Dental Center, has agreed to pay $10,000,050 to the federal government and to the State of North Carolina for Medicaid fraud allegations. MDC is owned by dentist Michael Derose and Letitia Ballance and were discovered to have performed unnecessary pulpotomies (commonly referred to as “baby root canals,” and unnecessarily placed stainless steel crowns in children, in order to submit wrongful claims for Medical Assistance (Medicaid monies). Medicaid financing is shared in all states between the federal and state governments. If you are seeing fraud on the government, contact us by calling 800-377-1812 for strictly confidential advice from experienced counsel, with no fee obligation.

Connecticut Hospital Settles False Claims Case

March 13, 2008 by brian  

The Yale Daily News and U.S. Attorney Kevin O’Connor announced on March 8, 2008, that Yale-New Haven Hospital agreed to pay a $3.78 Million fine on a False Claims Act case for Medicare fraud allegations, stemming from over billing of Medicare for infusion therapy, chemotherapy and blood transfusions on patients.

The Oncology Infusion Service was also accused of giving medications and conducting lab studies without a doctor order. Federal Medicare only allows payment for one unit of infusion therapy, chemotherapy or blood transfusion per patient per day, but the hospital had billed Medicare as often as five times per day for the same patient. This is the second False Claims Act settlement by this hospital.

If you are seeing fraud on the government, contact us by calling 800-377-1812 for strictly confidential advice from experienced counsel, with no fee obligation.

Cathedral Healthcare Fraud Settlement

March 10, 2008 by brian  

The Earth Times and the U.S. Department of Justice reported on March 4, 2008, settlement of a False Claims Act case against Cathedral Healthcare System, Inc. in New Jersey. Whistleblowers Peter Salvatori and Sarah Iveson will receive $848,000 of the $5.3 Million settlement paid by Cathedral.

The hospital system improperly increased charges to Medicare patients to obtain higher Medicare reimbursement from the federal government. The whistleblowers helped the federal government with the evidence that Cathedral had wrongfully increased charges for both inpatient and outpatient care of Medicare patients, illegally obtaining higher “outlier” type payments from Medicare than the hospital system was entitled to receive.

If you are seeing fraud on the government, contact us by calling 800-377-1812 for strictly confidential advice from experienced counsel, with no fee obligation.

Miami Hospital Pays $15.4 Million to Resolve Fraud Case for Kickbacks and Unnecessary Treatments

December 14, 2006 by brian  

via United States Department of Justice

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2006

WASHINGTON – Larkin Community Hospital in Miami and its current and former owners, Dr. Jack Michel, Dr. James Desnick, Morris Esformes and Philip Esformes, have paid $15.4 million to settle federal and Florida civil health care fraud claims against them, the Justice Department announced today. Additionally, 34 related companies owned by the Esformes that were used to operate nine assisted living facilities are part of the settlement along with Claudia Pace, an employee of one of the Esformes-owned companies; and Frank Palacios, a long-time employee of the hospital.

The settlement resolves the civil case entitled United States v. Jack Jacobo Michel, M.D., et al., which the government filed in 2004, alleging violations of the False Claims Act. The state of Florida joined the suit later that year.

The government alleged that in 1997, Larkin, then owned by Desnick, paid kickbacks to physicians in return for patient admissions. The United States contended that the primary recipient of the kickbacks was Jack Michel, who was paid for patient admissions to Larkin by himself and his brother, Dr. George Michel. Jack Michel purchased Larkin in 1998. In 2000, Desnick was a party to a $14 million settlement with the United States for a similar kickback scheme from 1992 to 2000 at another facility he owned, Doctors Hospital of Hyde Park in Chicago.

The United States also alleged in the Michel suit that from 1998 to 1999, Jack Michel, George Michel, Morris Esformes, Philip Esformes, Frank Palacios and Claudia Pace conspired to admit patients to Larkin for medically unnecessary treatment. The government asserted that some of these patients came from assisted living facilities owned and operated by Jack Michel, Morris Esformes and Philip Esformes.

“The Department of Justice is committed to vigorously litigating cases about conduct that undermines the integrity of the Medicare and Medicaid programs,” said Peter D. Keisler, Assistant Attorney General for the Department’s Civil Division. “We will not tolerate health care providers who pay kickbacks or perform medically unnecessary treatments on elderly beneficiaries in order to generate Medicare and Medicaid payments.”

The case was investigated by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Inspector General; the Federal Bureau of Investigation; and the Florida Medicaid Fraud Control Unit. The case was handled by the Justice Department’s Civil Division, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Florida in Miami and the Office of the Attorney General of the state of Florida.

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