Since March 2007, federal investigators have uncovered more than $5 billion in Medicare fraud, but they suspect that might just be the tip of the iceberg.
As the prolific bank robber Willie Sutton reportedly said of robbing banks – because that’s where the money is – health care fraud has become a huge problem throughout the country.
According to the U.S. Department of Justice, Georgia ranks 12th in investigations, seventh in the number of fraud cases and sixth in total recovered – almost $98.95 million in 2012.
In the Southern District of Georgia, more than $27 million in restitution was collected last year in one of the country’s largest Medicare fraud prosecutions in 2005 – The Bio-Med Plus in Savannah.
The Koyal Training Group, Health care fraud a growing criminal enterprise
1. The Koyal Training Group, Health
care fraud a growing criminal
enterprise
Since March 2007, federal investigators have uncovered more than $5 billion in Medicare fraud,
but they suspect that might just be the tip of the iceberg.
As the prolific bank robber Willie Sutton reportedly said of robbing banks – because that’s
where the money is – health care fraud has become a huge problem throughout the country.
According to the U.S. De-part-ment of Justice, Geor-gia ranks 12th in investigations, seventh in
the number of fraud cases and sixth in total recovered – almost $98.95 million in 2012.
In the Southern District of Georgia, more than $27 million in restitution was collected last year
in one of the country’s largest Medicare fraud prosecutions in 2005 – The Bio-Med Plus in
Savannah.
In Augus-ta, optometrist Jeffrey Spon-sel-ler was sentenced Jan. 9 to 33 months in prison and
ordered to pay $441,000 in restitution for bilking Medicare.
Federal investigations into Medicare fraud have exploded in response to the problem, said David
Stewart, who recently left the U.S. attorney’s office where one of his duties was health care fraud
coordinator.
Medicare fraud affects everyone because Medicare has become the primary health care coverage
for most Amer-i-cans when they turn 65, said Ken-neth Crowder, who recently left the U.S.
attorney’s office and joined Stewart in private practice.
When Medicare coverage started in 1966, 19.1 million were enrolled. In 2013, that number was
43.5 million, according to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.
2. With the last of the baby boomer generation turning 50 this year and increased health insurance
coverage through the Affordable Care Act, Stew-art and Crowder said fraud is expected to
expand.
Going after health care fraud holds the promise of getting money back for the government,
Stewart said, which is another reason the Jus-tice Department has set that as a top goal.
The attack on those defrauding Medicare and military health care provider TriCare occurs in
criminal and civil courts. The difference between prosecution and a civil lawsuit is intent,
Stewart said. And intent can be difficult to prove.
In the Sponseller case, the defense attorney tried to portray the optometrist’s act as more billing
errors than intentional fraud because of the complexity of the Medicare billing process.
But in cases such as Sponseller’s – who billed for 177, 45-minute comprehensive exams
performed in a single day – the intent to defraud becomes clear. The more outrageous cases are
the ones that are criminally prosecuted, Stewart said.
In another case from the Sou-thern District, two nutritionists bilked Medicaid of $4 million by
billing for services to Head Start programs throughout the state.
The intent to defraud became clear when investigators uncovered bank records that proved they
were on Florida vacations at the same time they were allegedly visiting Head Start sites, Stewart
said.
Crowder, who was the chief of the civil division for the U.S. attorney’s office in the Southern
District of Georgia, said that in 10 years the investigation of health care fraud became the largest
part of their work.
Special strike forces have been sent to areas deemed as hot beds of Medicare fraud. In May,
teams working in eight cities made 89 arrests while uncovering $223 million in fraudulent
billing.
The fraud can take the form of medical professionals billing for services they do not perform, or
when thieves obtain Medicare billing and patient numbers and create scam operations, Stewart
said.