Showing posts with label Insurance Fraud : Medical. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Insurance Fraud : Medical. Show all posts

Billions recouped in medical fraud

WASHINGTON — Whistle- blowers helped authorities recover at least $9.3 billion from health care providers accused of defrauding states and the federal government, according to an analysis of Justice Department records.

The department ramped up efforts in the 1990s to combat health care fraud by using private citizens with inside knowledge of wrongdoing. They now initiate more than 90 percent of the department's lawsuits focusing on health care fraud.

Whistle-blowers start cases by filing a sealed complaint in federal court. The department investigates the allegation and can intervene, assuming the lead role in the lawsuit. Whistle-blowers then get between 15 percent and 25 percent of the amount recovered.

Of the $9.3 billion recovered between 1996 and 2005, whistle-blowers got more than $1 billion, say analysts, writing for the Annals of Internal Medicine.

The analysts' findings are conservative. Information was available for only about three-quarters of the 379 cases reviewed. Also, some of the largest recoveries have taken place after the period reviewed.

For example, the study doesn't include the single largest settlement, worth $920 million, which came against Tenet Healthcare Corp., one of the nation's largest hospital chains, in 2006.

Still, the study highlights some important trends in health care fraud.

While the number of claims pursued has dropped in recent years, recovery amounts have soared because of a late addition to the cast of defendants — pharmaceutical manufacturers. Recoveries jumped from about $10 million a case in 2002 to $50 million by 2005.

Drugmakers are required to sell products to state Medicaid programs at the "best price" offered in the private marketplace, but the companies might artificially inflate the price, according to the report.

Another common scheme is to market drugs for uses not approved by the Food and Drug Administration.

The report's authors, Aaron S. Kesselheim of Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston and David M. Studdert of the University of Melbourne in Australia, said data on hundreds of whistle-blower lawsuits should be researched to identify what types of allegations turn out to be legitimate and lead to recoveries so that the department can fast-track such cases.

By Kevin Freking
The Associated Press

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Medical identity theft on the rise as health care desperation leads to crime

Although most identity theft cases in the United States involve credit cards and bank accounts, ID thieves are now engaging in medical fraud -- falsely obtaining medical care using someone's stolen identity -- according to today's Los Angeles Times.

After surgery on her shoulder last year, Lind Weaver, a 56-year-old retired schoolteacher, was billed for the amputation of her right foot. Refusing to pay the medical bill collectors, Weaver set about trying to prove that the surgery had obviously not been performed on her -- since her foot was intact -- which proved a more difficult task than recovering from simple credit card ID theft.

Experts say the rising costs of U.S. healthcare are driving medical identity fraud, and many victims are entirely unaware that their medical identity has been stolen unless they receive a hospital bill or an inquiry from their insurance provider. In addition to potentially damaging credit reports and affecting future job status -- since many Fortune 500 companies require access to medical records when hiring or promoting -- medical identity theft can also cause fatal future hospital errors.

For example, Weaver suffered a heart attack in May, and when she awoke in the hospital two days later, a nurse asked her what drugs she was taking to treat her diabetes. Weaver did not suffer from diabetes -- though the woman who stole her identity did -- and diabetes patients receive different heart surgeries than patients without the disease.

However, even if health complications are avoided, medical identity fraud can lead to hellish legal ordeals. In the case of Salt Lake City resident Anndorie Sachs -- whose ID was stolen and used when the thief delivered a baby that tested positive for methamphetamine -- her four children were nearly taken from her by social workers, though she had not given birth for two years. Sachs' case was only resolved after she hired a lawyer and went to the local media. However, when Sachs was admitted to the hospital for a kidney infection last year, the hospital records indicated the wrong blood type, which could have resulted in a fatal error.

Victims of medical identity theft find that clearing their names can be even more difficult than those clearing a traditional credit card ID theft, largely because of laws designed to protect patients' medical records. Once a patient reveals to the hospital or doctor's office that their medical records are somehow tied to someone else's -- even though that person is an identity thief -- their records become much more difficult to access.

The U.S. House and Senate are currently working to pass bills that push wider use of electronic health records, which could potentially make it easier for medical identity theft victims to clear their names.

www.naturalnews.com

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Chiropractor Charged
with Faking Disability


On October 2, 1998, New York State Superintendent of Insurance Neil D. Levin announced that Robert A. Strange, 45, of 749 Route 82 in Hopewell Junction, New York, was arrested September 28 and charged with four counts of insurance fraud in the third degree, two counts grand larceny in the third degree, and five counts of insurance fraud in the second degree.

Strange, a self-employed chiropractor, allegedly collected $38,000 fraudulently from insurance companies claiming that he was disabled and could not work. However, an Insurance Department investigation revealed that Strange treated numerous patients during the period he claimed he was not working. Insurance fraud in the third degree and grand larceny in the third degree are punishable by up to seven years in prison. Insurance fraud in the second degree is punishable by up to four years in prison. Strange was arraigned in Dutchess County Court and released on his own recognizance.

Source: New York State Insurance Department news release.

http://www.chirobase.org

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Chiropractor and Massage Therapist Wife Indicted
for $181,800 in Workers' Compensation Fraud


On December 15, 1996, following an 18-month probe by investigators from the Bureau of Workers' Compensation (BWC), prosecutors from Attorney General Betty Montgomery's Office obtained indictments against a Cleveland Heights chiropractor and his wife, who allegedly billed BWC more than $177,000 for services they did not perform.

"This is the largest case of workers' compensation fraud by a medical provider we have ever prosecuted," said Attorney General Betty Montgomery. "We are committed to rooting out workers' compensation fraud across the state, whether it's committed by workers, employers, or health care providers."

"We take stealing from Ohio's injured workers and employers as a serious affront," said BWC Administrator James Conrad. "Regardless if you are a medical provider or an injured worker, we will find you and we will catch you."

The alleged fraud committed by Frank Andosca, 34, a Cleveland Heights chiropractor and his wife Karyl, 44, a massage therapist, was uncovered during an unrelated review of the couple's billing practices by BWC. As a result of that review, a more extensive fraud investigation was launched against the couple in January 1994.

Frank Andosca was indicted by a Franklin County special grand jury investigating workers' compensation fraud on one count of theft, a second-degree felony; one count of workers' compensation fraud, a third-degree felony; and a second-degree count of receiving stolen property. Prosecutors allege he fraudulently billed BWC for $114,596.

The chiropractor faces up to 15 years imprisonment on each of the theft and receiving stolen property charges, and up to two years imprisonment on the workers' compensation charge. Karyl Andosca was indicted on one count of grand theft, a third-degree felony, one third-degree count of workers' compensation fraud, and one count of receiving stolen property, a third degree felony. Prosecutors allege she billed BWC $67,204 for services which she did not provide. The massage therapist faces up to two years in prison on each of the three felony charges.

The cases will be prosecuted by attorneys from the Workers' Compensation Fraud Unit of Attorney General Betty Montgomery's Office. The BWC and the Attorney General's Office have made the detection and prosecution of workers' compensation fraud a priority.

In a separate action, Dr. Bruce Holaday, a chiropractor from Cincinnati, pleaded guilty to a fourth-degree felony charge of workers' compensation fraud on December 6th. Holaday, 32, of 613 Legend Hills Dr., Cincinnati, faces up to 18 months in jail and a fine of up to $2,500 for billing BWC for $13,006 in services that he did not provide. Complaints to BWC by former employees and customers led to the investigation of the proprietor of Advantage Care Chiropractic, Inc. Holaday is expected to be sentenced in January 1997.

To report workers' compensation fraud, call BWC's nationwide, toll-free hotline at (800) 837-1554. Callers may remain anonymous.

http://www.chirobase.org

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Chiropractor Admits to
Workers' Compensation Fraud
News Release, February 27, 1996


Following a joint inquiry by investigators from the Bureau of Workers' Compensation (BWC), Ohio Attorney General Betty Montgomery's Workers' Compensation Fraud Unit, and Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Stephanie Tubbs Jones, a Garfield Heights chiropractor has admitted stealing $142,659 in workers' compensation funds over a three-and-one-half year period.

The investigation was triggered by inquiries from two Cleveland-area employers, Woodhill Plating, 9114 Reno Ave., and Rupp Forge Co., 10410 Meech Ave., who contacted BWC after noticing that their workers' compensation premiums reflected ongoing medical claims for employees whose treatment was known to have ceased. Following the employers' inquires in late 1993 and 1994, BWC began investigating Thomas Campana, 37, of Garfield Heights.

Prosecutors filed a bill of information -- a plea agreement in which the accused waives his right to a grand jury hearing -- against Campana in Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court. He was charged with one count of workers' compensation fraud, a second-degree felony.

The Garfield Heights chiropractor allegedly billed BWC for services he did not perform on more than a dozen patients whose treatments had either been completed or discontinued. He faces two to 15 years in prison and/or up to a $7,500 fine when he is sentenced, following a presentencing investigation.

The BWC and the Attorney General's Office have made the detection and prosecution of workers' compensation fraud a priority. To report workers' compensation fraud, call BWC's nationwide, toll-free hotline at (800) 837-1554. Callers may remain anonymous.

http://www.chirobase.org

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Allstate Sues to Recover
Many More Millions
Stephen Barrett, M.D.


On October 19, 1999, Allstate Insurance Company filed two suits against 258 individuals suspected of participating in two staged accident rings in Camden and Perth Amboy, New Jersey. A third suit targeted chiropractors, medical doctors, and related medical and business corporations who allegedly created a dummy medical corporation to misrepresent a chiropractic facility as a physician-owned medical center. The scheme is connected to a seminar run by a California chiropractor and advertised on the World Wide Web.

The most complex of the three suits was filed in Morris County Superior Court. Allstate accuses Atlantic County chiropractor J. Scott Neuner of setting up a phony medical corporation, Northfield Medical Center, PC, in order to circumvent a New Jersey health-care regulation that limits chiropractors' scope of practice and regulations designed to reduce health care costs. Neuner entered into the alleged illegal arrangement with Robban A. Sica M.D., a Connecticut physician, to create the appearance that Northfield was owned by Sica. Sica has or had suspected ownership interests in at least 14 other similar corporations in New Jersey. Neuner was introduced to Sica through a seminar run by a California chiropractor named Daniel Dahan. Dahan runs a medical management consulting firm called "Practice Perfect," advertised on Dahan's website. Dahan located Neuner's MD-for-hire and also supplied the instructions and paperwork to set up the bogus corporation. In testimony to Allstate, Neuner admitted he never personally met Dr. Sica nor had she ever visited the facility, invested in the corporation, or treated or supervised patients. Allstate expects to name additional parties involved in similar dummy operations.

The second suit, filed in Camden County Superior Court, named Iris Salkauski of Camden County as the ringleader of a staged-accident-fraud ring believed to have been involved in more than 100 claims over a two-year period. Also named are three "runners" and 169 individuals accused of staging 25 automobile accidents in Camden. In a stunning series of confessions to Allstate investigators, several of the staged-accident participants identified Salkauski as the point person who had recruited participants, staged accidents, and provided instruction on feigning injuries. Allstate alleges that she also arranged for participants to meet with attorneys and medical providers who paid her "referral fees" and were willing accomplices in the scam. Sixty medical providers are named as defendant providers, and 51 are named as defendants in interest.

The third suit was filed in Morris County Superior Court against 89 individual participants in a staged accidents ring in Perth Amboy. Allstate filed related complaints earlier this year against medical providers and the alleged ringleaders of the Perth Amboy ring, believed to involve more than 6,724 claimants and $14 million in paid claims. In July, the Office of Insurance Fraud Prosecutor arrested nine people in connection with their ongoing criminal investigation of this case.

With the three actions, Allstate New Jersey, Allstate, and the Allstate Indemnity Company are seeking restitution of paid claims, plus treble damages and an injunction to stop certain defendants from engaging in these allegedly unlawful, fraudulent and deceptive acts. Allstate is also seeking to block and recoup any payments pending or already made to the defendants in PIP arbitration proceedings, and has named the American Arbitration Association (AAA) as a defendant in interest in the complaint.

The actions are the result of over two years of investigation by Allstate New Jersey's Special Investigative Unit (SIU) in cooperation with the Office of the Insurance Fraud Prosecutor. Allstate works closely with law enforcement officials to facilitate the criminal prosecution of those accused of automobile insurance fraud. Commenting on these cases, an Allstate official noted that "the runner is the linchpin in the scheme" and that New Jersey recently enacted a law to deal with this exact problem.

http://www.chirobase.org

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Chiropractor, Caught in FBI Undercover Sting,
Admits Scheme to Defraud Insurance Companies
December 2, 1998


A Greenbrook chiropractor today pleaded guilty to a scheme to defraud insurance companies by submitting claims for services not performed, U.S. Attorney Faith S. Hochberg announced.

Frank Marinaro, DC, who operated the Marinaro Chiropractic in Greenbrook, pleaded guilty to a one-count Information charging him with mail fraud. When he is sentenced March 5, 1999, by U.S. District Judge Mary L. Cooper, he faces a maximum of five years in prison and a $250,000 fine, according to Assistant U.S. Attorney John J. Carney. Marinaro also may have his chiropractic license suspended or revoked by the New Jersey State Board of Chiropractic Examiners and be fined by the New Jersey State Department of Insurance.

According to the Information, between 1994 and early 1995, Marinaro was a licensed chiropractor operating the Marinaro Chiropractic Center, where he treated patients involved in vehicular accidents and billed insurance companies for services that he never performed.

From in or about late 1994 to in or about early 1995, the FBI conducted an undercover operation into false billing practices by chiropractors, using cooperating witnesses to pose as patients injured in minor car accidents, when in fact there were never any injuries or accidents.

The cooperating witnesses, after establishing the appearance of a minor accident, sought treatment from Marinaro. On several dates when one of the FBI's cooperating witnesses was out of state or otherwise not receiving treatments, Marinaro caused bills to be submitted to insurance companies for services that were purportedly performed by him on these dates. Marinaro performed no such services, according to the Information.

Marinaro attempted to conceal his fraud by causing progress notes falsely stating that he had examined or treated the patient on a particular day to be submitted to insurance companies; he had not examined or treated the patient on that day, according to the Information.

Hochberg credited special agents of the FBI, under the direction of William C. Megary, special agent in charge of the FBI's Newark office, with developing the case against Marinaro. The Government is represented by Assistant U.S. Attorney Carney of the U.S. Attorney's Fraud and Public Protection Division in Newark.

http://www.chirobase.org

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Two Chiropractors and Five Others
Charged with Insurance Fraud


On April 21, 1999, New Jersey Attorney General Peter Verniero announced that two chiropractors, the operator of a physical therapy business above one of the chiropractic offices, and three alleged "runners" were indicted for alleged roles in separate insurance fraud schemes involving computerized accident records illegally obtained from the Newark and North Bergen Police Departments,

The chiropractors and the operator of the physical therapy business were charged in one indictment, and the three alleged runners were charged in three separate indictments. The chiropractors' indictment, if proven, "is a schematic for an insurance fraud mill," Verniero said, "a doctor-controlled, top-to-bottom scheme using a corrupted police employee to purloin internal police data, a third party to make bribe payments and runners who exploited the stolen data to snare chiropractic patients." Named in the four-count indictment were:

* Robert Matturro, D.C., 38, of Fox Run, North Caldwell, who owns Matturro Chiropractic in Bloomfield and West New York Chiropractic Center in Union City
* Nicholas Rosania, D.C., 30, of Daniel Street, Rockaway, operator of Matturro's Union City office
* Annette Licea, 31, of Colombia Ave., North Bergen, who operates a physical therapy business above Matturro's Union City office.

The trio were charged with conspiracy in the second degree, computer theft in the third-degree, official misconduct in the second degree, and bribery in official matters in the second degree. The indictment states that between March 1 and Sept. 24, 1997, Rosania and Matturro conspired with Licea to give money to Licea to bribe an unnamed communications supervisor in the North Bergen Police Department. Licea paid the supervisor on four or more occasions to obtain the accident reports.

To carry out the scheme, Matturro instructed an unnamed unindicted conspirator to get "paperwork" from Rosania to use as leads to solicit patients for the West New York Chiropractic Center, according to the indictment. Rosania gave North Bergen Police Department accident reports to an unindicted conspirator twice in 1997, then gave money to Licea to pay the communications supervisor who supplied the computer records, the indictment states.

"We're targeting health care providers at the top of the fraud chain who pay public officials and police officers for patients with insurance coverage and all the schemers that help them," Assistant Attorney General and Insurance Fraud Prosecutor Edward M. Neafsey said. "This is the mandate we received from the legislature to clean up insurance fraud."

Three individual indictments related to 1998 activities were returned in the second alleged scheme:

* Cyrano Green, 39, of Mountain Way, West Orange is charged with one count of conspiracy in the second degree, one count of second-degree bribery in official matters, and six counts of third-degree bribery in official matters. Green is charged with conspiring to pay cash bribes to an unnamed City of Newark Police officer who, unbeknownst to Green, was working undercover with investigators now assigned to the Office of Insurance Fraud Prosecutor. The officer received seven cash bribes totaling approximately $1,600 in return for turning over accident reports to Green on 17 occasions.
* Abagail Romero, 36, of New Street, Newark, is charged with one count of conspiracy in the second degree, one count of second-degree bribery in official matters, and four counts of third-degree bribery in official matters. Romero is charged with conspiring to pay five cash bribes to the undercover City of Newark Police officer in return for accident reports on 12 occasions and paying bribes totaling approximately $1,800 for them.
* James Lee Campbell, 46, of Lawrence Avenue, West Orange is charged in four counts with conspiracy in the second degree, and three counts of bribery in official matters the second degree. Campbell paid a total of $1,200 in cash to the undercover officer in return for accident reports on 15 occasions.

Each second-degree offense for which a defendant is convicted carries a maximum of 10 years in State prison and a fine of $100,000 to $150,000. Each third-degree offense for which a defendant is convicted carries a maximum of five years in State prison and a $15,000 fine. If convicted, each defendant's actual sentence would be based upon a variety of factors, including the severity of the crime as well as any aggravating and mitigating factors.

http://www.chirobase.org

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Manager of North Jersey Chiropractic Center
Indicted on Eight Counts of Insurance Fraud


A state grand jury has indicted the manager of a chiropractic center in Passaic, New Jersey, for allegedly submitting fraudulent claims for chiropractic treatments that were not actually rendered to patients who had been in automobile accidents. On February 18, 1999, New Jersey Attorney General Peter Verniero and state Insurance Fraud Prosecutor Edward Neafsey announced that Esther DelPino, 51, of 267 Main Ave., Hackensack, has been with second degree conspiracy, second degree theft by deception, three counts of fourth degree falsifying records, and three counts of fourth degree falsifying medical records.

"Insurance fraud costs New Jersey residents an untold amount of money each year," Verniero said. "Combating insurance fraud is a high priority of this office. Anyone who defrauds the insurance industry, thereby cheating the citizens of this state, will be prosecuted to the full extent of the law."

According to Neafsey, DelPino was the manager of Lexington Chiropractic Center in Passaic. The indictment alleges that three State Investigators went to Lexington Chiropractic, posing undercover as automobile accident victims. Neafsey said that the investigators received some treatment, but that when the bills were submitted to the insurance carriers, they included claims for additional treatments the investigators had not received. Those bills included claims for treatments purportedly given on approximately 80 days when the investigators were not even at Lexington Chiropractic, Neafsey explained.

In addition to the instances involving the undercover investigators, the indictment alleges that between Jan. 1, 1993 and July 31, 1996, DelPino directed employees of Lexington Chiropractic to prepare other false and inflated bills that included claims for chiropractic treatments that were not actually rendered. Those bills were submitted to two dozen insurance companies. Of the $342,000 in false insurance claims allegedly submitted by DelPino, Lexington Chiropractic collected $245,000 from the insurance companies. The claims were paid under the personal injury protection (PIP) portion of automobile insurance policies.

The indictment also alleges that DelPino paid cash referral fees to people who referred patients to the center. In one case, Neafsey said, DelPino paid $500 to an undercover investigator for referring a "patient" who was another undercover state investigator.

The insurance carriers allegedly defrauded include:

AIG Claim Services, Inc; Allstate Insurance Company; AMGRO; C.N.A. Insurance Companies; Colonial Penn Insurance Company; Continental Insurance Companies; First Trenton Indemnity Company; General Accident Insurance Company; Hanover Insurance Company; Hertz Claim Management Corp.; Liberty Mutual Insurance Company; Market Transition Facility; Material Damage Adjustment; Motor Club of America Insurance Company; National Consumer Insurance Company; Ohio Casualty Group; Preferred Dealer Insurance; Progressive Compensation; Prudential Property and Casualty Insurance Company; St. Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Company; State farm Insurance Companies; USAA Casualty Insurance Company; United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company, and Warner Insurance Services, Inc.

The case is being prosecuted by the Office of Insurance Fraud Prosecutor, Division of Criminal Justice, Department of Law and Public Safety. Deputy Attorney General Steven B. Farman presented the case to the grand jury and will represent the state at trial. No trial date has been set. If convicted on all counts, DelPino faces a maximum penalty of $245,000 and 39 years in prison.

http://www.chirobase.org

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Las Vegas chiropractor convicted of mail fraud
Glenn Puit

A Las Vegas chiropractor has been convicted of mail fraud in federal court in what authorities alleged was a scheme to illegally collect insurance money.
Thomas Mark Shleifer was convicted of one count of mail fraud early Thursday afternoon, according to federal authorities. Several other related counts were dismissed after a jury could not reach a decision on the charges.
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Shleifer was retried by prosecutors after a 1996 trial that resulted in a hung jury. The government claimed that in 1990, Shleifer participated in a scam in which he claimed to treat five people who rammed their car into a telephone pole on Lake Mead Boulevard.
Prosecutors argued that as a result of the accident, an insurance company paid $38,000 in false medical bills.
Shleifer's attorneys countered that the witnesses who testified were liars and cheats who stood to benefit from taking the stand against the chiropractor.

http://www.reviewjournal.com

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Boston Area Chiropractor and Wife
Sentenced in Fraud Case
September 7, 1995

A Boston-area chiropractor and his wife, the executive director of his chiropractic business, were sentenced in federal court today following their pleas in April to participating in a scheme to defraud several Massachusetts automobile and workers' compensation insurance providers between 1989 and 1993.

United States Attorney Donald K. Stern and FBI Special Agent-In-Charge Richard Swenson announced that Alan S. Rosenthal, DC, 38, of 280 Wellesley Avenue, Wellesley, Massachusetts, was sentenced this afternoon by United States District Court Judge Richard G. Stearns to 15 months in prison. In addition, Judge Stearns departed upwards from the Federal Sentencing Guidelines to impose a criminal fine of $300,906.61 to be paid by December 31, 1995. Counsel for Dr. Rosenthal informed the Court that the criminal fine would be paid out of proceeds of the sale of the Rosenthals' Wellesley home, which is scheduled to take place on October 31. Judge Stearns further ordered Rosenthal to pay to the Clerk of the United States District Court $129,093.39 in restitution, which the Clerk will disburse to several area insurance companies that Rosenthal defrauded. Finally, Judge Stearns imposed a two-year term of supervised release to follow Rosenthal's incarceration, and imposed as a special condition of his supervised release that Rosenthal not obtain a license to practice chiropractic in Massachusetts until at least October 18, 1997. On August 23, 1995, the Board of Registration of Chiropractors for the Commonwealth of Massachusetts revoked Rosenthal's license to practice in Massachusetts following his conviction on 30 counts of fraud in April.

Judge Stearns sentenced Caterina A. Rosenthal, 37, to a two-year term of probation. As part of the plea agreement with the government, she also relinquished her interest in assets jointly held with her husband to enable him to pay the criminal fine and restitution.

As outlined by prosecutors at the Rosenthals' April 18, 1995, plea hearing, the Rosenthals defrauded automobile and workers' compensation insurers by overstating patients' injuries and by running up patients' bills with unnecessary tests and treatments. The Rosenthals' business, which at its peak employed as many as six "associate" chiropractors and many clerical employees, was almost entirely dependent on referrals from personal injury lawyers.

To build and sustain the business, the Rosenthals prepared reports for use by lawyers negotiating insurance settlements in which virtually all automobile and workers' compensation patients were stated to suffer periods of total or partial disability, regardless of whether the patients' medical records supported such findings. In addition, the Rosenthals made sure that virtually every automobile accident patient who came to their clinic received a high enough bill to get over the $2,000 "no-fault" lawsuit threshold. (Under Massachusetts' "no-fault" auto insurance laws, persons who claim to have been injured in car accidents are entitled to have their medical bills paid, but those who claim so-called "soft-tissue" injuries, such as "whiplash," cannot bring lawsuits for "pain and suffering" damages unless their medical bills exceed $2,000.)

The Rosenthals' false reports helped lawyers obtain larger settlements than they could have if patient's true medical condition had been reported; and the excessive testing and treatment enabled lawyers to bring suits that would have been barred is their bills were not over $2,000. The Rosenthals profited both directly, by getting paid for services that were not medically reasonable and necessary, and indirectly, by encouraging attorneys to refer their patients to the clinics.

A portion of the recommended restitution order in this case is intended to repay insurance companies for payments they made to the Rosenthals for 46 cases in which Dr. Rosenthal exaggerated the patients' disabilities. In actuality, the associate chiropractors who actually examined and treated the patients had found that the patients had no such periods of total disability, or shorter periods of disability than indicated. Both Rosenthals directed associate chiropractors to report total and partial disability, regardless of their actual findings, and threatened to fire those who refused to do so.

In order to run up patients' bills, Alan Rosenthal instituted policies designed to ensure unnecessary and excessive testing and treatment of patients. During the early 1990s, all automobile accident and workers' compensation patients at the Rosenthal clinics were subjected to a battery of high-technology tests including "Dynatron" (a strength impairment test), surface EMG (an electronic test for muscle spasm), X-ray digitization (preparation of computerized images from routine X-rays), and thermography (infra-red photography of patients' backs). These tests were not provided to so-called "private" patients (that is, patients whose bills were not being paid by automobile or workers' compensation insurers). The prosecutors stated that the associate chiropractors who actually saw the patients did not use these test results to guide their diagnosis or treatment.

To further ensure that automobile patients met the no-fault "threshold," Alan Rosenthal enforced a rule -- which did not apply to "private" patients -- that all automobile accident and workers' compensation patients must undergo at least 25 office visits, regardless of the patients' injuries or needs. Associate chiropractors at Rosenthal Chiropractic who failed to abide by this policy were reprimanded and threatened with termination.

The prosecutors asserted that the Rosenthals' policy of requiring excessive testing and treatment was largely responsible for the huge volume of patients at the clinic. Associate chiropractors treated as many as 100 patients each per day, with a typical fee of $60 per visit -- not including charges for tests.

The case was investigated by Special Agents of the FBI and the Internal Revenue Service, Criminal Investigative Division, with the assistance of Investigators of the Massachusetts Insurance Fraud Bureau. It was prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Brien T. O'Connor and Paul G. Levenson from Stern's Criminal Division, with the assistance of Assistant U.S. Attorney Patrick Hamilton, of the Asset Forfeiture Unit of Stern's Criminal Division. According to Stern, the investigation of others involved in the scheme is continuing.

http://www.chirobase.org

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Allstate Alleges Chicago Businessman
Operated Unlicensed Chiropractic Clinics
Stephen Barrett, M.D.

On August 19, 1999, Allstate Insurance Company filed suit in Cook County Circuit Court against Richard Burton and his corporation, Mandella Business Services, Inc, accusing them of providing medical services without a license through two Chicago-area chiropractic clinics they owned: Oak Park Medical Center a/k/a Oak Park Chiropractic Clinic, and Spellmate Medical Center a/k/a Universal Chiropractic Clinic. Allstate also accuses Burton of permitting unlicensed individuals to provide treatment to the clinics' patients without the necessary supervision from a licensed health care professional, and of rubber-stamping medical reports with the signatures of licensed chiropractors to mislead Allstate into believing that a licensed professional prepared the reports and provided treatment. The company is seeking $700,000 in statutory and compensatory damages [1].

The suit describes how Burton and his companies employed Burton's lay relatives to regularly perform treatment and therapeutic procedures such as electrical stimulation, intersegmental traction, hot packs and other treatments upon the clinics' patients. These laypersons performed these treatments without the required license(s) from the Illinois Department of Professional Regulation, and without being supervised by licensed health care providers.

Allstate's Special Investigative Unit has 600 members who detect, investigate, prosecute and deter insurance fraud. Commenting on this case, Edward J. Moran, the unit's assistant vice president, stated:

Insurance fraud affects all of us. We are serving notice that we will use every legal means at our disposal to stop anyone no matter what his or her profession, who through fraud is hampering our ability to deliver lower rates to our policyholders [1].

In 1997, Allstate sued over 1,000 people involved in an auto insurance fraud ring in New Jersey. In 1998, Allstate filed a $107 million lawsuit against several lawyers, doctors and chiropractors for filing false auto insurance claims in California [2]. On October 19, 1999, the company filed three more suits in New Jersey that charged 258 individuals with operating a fraudulent auto accident ring that collected more than$14 million [3].

http://www.chirobase.org

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Three Chiropractors Among 14
Arrested for Staged Accident Scheme

In June 1998, Charles G. LaBella, United States Attorney Southern District of California; William D. Gore, Special Agent in Charge, San Diego Division of the Federal Bureau of Investigation; and Chuck Quackenbush, Insurance Commissioner, California Department of Insurance; announced the culmination of a three-year investigation code-named "Twisted Metal." Eleven individuals in San Diego and 3 individuals in the Los Angeles area were arrested:

  • Bruce Edward Ankrom, DC, 43, chiropractor
  • Viatcheslav M. Borokhov, 52 , "stuffed passenger"
  • Inna Elana Gofman, 37, attorney
  • Dmitry Goldman, 46, "stuffed passenger"
  • Gavriyel Kaziyev, 50 , "stuffed passenger"
  • Irma Elizabeth Palacios, 53 , paralegal/office administrator
  • Igor Pruchanskiy, 22 , "stuffed passenger"
  • Mikhail Rozenberg, 53 , paralegal/office administrator
  • Paul G. Shvartsburd, 47 , physical therapist
  • Igor Snarsky, 39 , capper/recruiter
  • Marvin Charles Spatz, DC, 68 , chiropractor;
  • Kenneth Howard Stern, DC, 31 , chiropractor
  • Regina S. Vartanova, 37, "stuffed passenger"
  • Anatoliy I. Zakinov, 46, "stuffed passenger"

The California Department of Insurance and the FBI, in partnership with the National Insurance Crime Bureau, the Immigration and Naturalization Service, and the San Diego Police Department, have successfully penetrated a large-scale staged auto accident ring operating out of San Diego. Evidence has been gathered throughout the State of California regarding 11 staged automobile accidents.

Background History

Insurance premiums are higher than they would otherwise be as a result of unscrupulous healthcare providers, personal injury attorneys, and other individuals who participate in schemes to defraud insurance companies by staging fraudulent automobile accidents. The Chicago-based National Insurance Crime Bureau estimates that property/casualty insurance fraud cost U.S. insurance companies and ultimately those who pay the premiums a total of $20 billion a year. A substantial portion of this amount is from staged automobile accident schemes. The biggest beneficiaries of this illegal business are dishonest attorneys, medical professionals, and "cappers." The cooperating passengers also receive a portion of the illegal proceeds. NICB further estimates that all forms of insurance fraud cost the U.S. insurance industry between $30 billion and $50 billion a year. The average homeowner will pay an extra $200 per year, and an extra $100 per year for each vehicle owned, as a result of insurance fraud.

Since 1995, the California Department of Insurance (CDI) Fraud Division, the FBI, the San Diego Police Department, the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) and the National Insurance Crime Bureau (NICB) have worked jointly on an undercover scenario to penetrate an organization involved in staging automobile collisions. The primary undercover agent was a California Department of Insurance investigator. Others were from the San Diego Police Department, the California Department of Health Services, the Bureau of Narcotics Enforcement, as well as other Department of Insurance investigators.

The undercover agents worked closely with the subjects of the investigation who planned and executed 11 staged accidents and two staged auto thefts. The subjects were tape-recorded describing the manner in which they staged the collisions, how the scheme was conducted with the participating attorneys and doctors, and how the participants divided the proceeds. During the the investigation, over 500 undercover contacts were made in a 22-month period. Over 40 separate fraudulent claims were made to private insurance carriers based on the 11 staged collisions.

On May 13, 1998, 14 subjects were indicted in the Southern District of California (San Diego). The subjects included "cappers," attorneys, administrators, chiropractors and "stuffed passengers". These defendants were each charged with one count of conspiracy to commit mail fraud, and up to 27 counts of mail fraud and aiding and abetting.

On June 23, 1998, the California Department of Insurance, the FBI, the San Diego Police Department and members of the Regional Auto Theft Task Force (RATT) executed search warrants on nine locations, seven of which were in San Diego and two of which were in the Los Angeles area. Arrest warrants for 14 individuals were also executed, 11 in San Diego and three in Los Angeles. In all, over 150 federal and state agents were involved in the searches and arrests conducted on June 23, 1998.

Terminology

  • "Cappers" - Individuals typically involved in recruiting "stuffed passengers" who will be used to submit fraudulent claims to the insurance companies. "Cappers" are typically paid a percentage of the total receipts from the false claims. They supply cooperating passengers for the participating attorneys and medical providers.
  • "Stuffed passengers" - Individuals recruited to make false claims regarding their involvement in automobile accidents. They are typically coached as to the details of the fictitious collisions and resulting fictitious injuries.
  • "Nail car" - The "victim" vehicle involved in the staged accident that is hit by the "hammer car." The vehicle is often "stuffed" with passengers, who then file the fraudulent claims with the assistance of legal professionals.
  • "Hammer car" - The "at fault" vehicle in a staged accident that hits the "nail car." This car is typically insured, and the insurer is often defrauded of an average of $6,000 per claimant per accident.
  • Kickbacks - Fees paid to "cappers" by unethical attorneys and medical providers for the referral of accidents. These payments are often made in cash to conceal them from investigators.

Law Enforcement Participants

  • California Department of Insurance
  • Federal Bureau of Investigation
  • U.S. Attorney's Office, Southern District
  • District Attorney's Office, San Diego County
  • San Diego Police Department
  • Regional Auto Theft Task Force;
  • Immigration and Naturalization Service
  • The National Insurance Crime Bureau

Private Industry Participants

  • Farmers Insurance Company
  • 20th Century Insurance
  • Liberty Mutual Insurance
  • Geico Insurance
  • State Farm Insurance
  • Wawanesa Insurance
  • Prudential Insurance

For Further Information

  • FBI Special Agent Jan Caldwell: (619) 514-5915
  • Dana Spurrier at California Department of Insurance: (916) 492-3301
  • Assistant United States Attorney Lawrence Spong: (619) 557-5815
http://www.chirobase.org

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Allstate Suing 21 for Insurance Fraud

On August 24, 1998, Allstate Insurance Company served summons and complaints accusing 13 physicians, chiropractors, health care providers and others, of taking part in an elaborate scheme to defraud the company of millions of dollars. Allstate seeks to recover approximately $25 million in statutory damages, attorneys' fees, and costs from the defendants.

The two suits, filed in Los Angeles County and San Bernardino County, detail how the named medical professionals had allegedly engaged in insurance fraud, ranging from "upcoding" to charging for services that were never rendered. Upcoding involves submitting invoices for more expensive services than the injured person actually received, in an attempt to obtain a larger fee from the insurance company.

Allstate first suspected that it had been victimized by these individuals and entities in November 1997. The company's Special Investigative Unit immediately initiated an inquiry that led to these lawsuits. To date, Allstate has identified 331 potentially fraudulent claims. That number is expected to grow with additional defendants facing legal action.

Recently, Allstate was awarded $10 million in California after it successfully used the Racketeer Influenced Corrupt Organizations (RICO) act to sue several lawyers and chiropractors for filing false auto insurance claims.

Allstate's Special Investigative Unit is made up of 600 analysts and investigators who are specially trained to identify suspicious claims and prepare cases for legal and criminal prosecution

http://www.chirobase.org

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Insurance Fraud and Abuse : A Very Serious Problem.

Fraud and abuse are widespread and very costly to America's health-care system. Fraud involves intentional deception or misrepresentation intended to result in an unauthorized benefit. An example would be billing for services that are not rendered. Abuse involves charging for services that are not medically necessary, do not conform to professionally recognized standards, or are unfairly priced. An example would be performing a laboratory test on large numbers of patients when only a few should have it. Abuse may be similar to fraud except that it is not possible to establish that the abusive acts were done with an intent to deceive the insurer.

Although no precise dollar amount can be determined, some authorities contend that insurance fraud constitutes a $100-billion-a-year problem. The United States Goverment Accountability Office (GAO) estimates that $1 out of every $7 spent on Medicare is lost to fraud and abuse and that in 1998 alone, Medicare lost nearly $12 billion to fraudulent or unnecessary claims [1].


Type of Fraud and Abuse

False claim schemes are the most common type of health insurance fraud. The goal in these schemes is to obtain undeserved payment for a claim or series of claims [2]. Such schemes include any of the following when done deliberately for financial gain:


  • Billing for services, procedures, and/or supplies that were not provided.

  • Misrepresentation of what was provided; when it was provided; the condition or diagnosis; the charges involved; and/or the identity of the provider recipient.

  • Providing unnecessary services or ordering unnecessary tests [3].

Many insurance policies cover a percentage of the physician's "usual" fee. Some physicians charge insured patients more than uninsured ones but represent to the insurance companies that the higher fee is the usual one. This practice is illegal. It is also illegal to routinely excuse patients from copayments and deductibles. (A copayment is a fixed dollar amount paid whenever an insured person receives specified health-care services. A deductible is the amount that must be paid before the insurance company starts paying.) It is legal to waive a fee for people with a genuine financial hardship, but it is not legal to provide completely free care or discounts to all patients or to collect only from those who have insurance. Studies have shown that if patients are required to pay for even a small portion of their care they will be better consumers and select items or services because they are medically needed rather than because they are free. Routine waivers thus raise overall health costs. They are considered fraudulent because averaging them with the doctor's full fees would make the "usual" fees lower than the amounts actually billed for.

Other illegal procedures include:

  • Charging for a service that was not performed.

  • Unbundling of claims: Billing separately for procedures that normally are covered by a single fee. An example would be a podiatrist who operates on three toes and submits claims for three separate operations.

  • Double billing: Charging more than once for the same service.

  • Upcoding: Charging for a more complex service than was performed. This usually involves billing for longer or more complex office visits (for example, charging for a comprehensive visit when the patient was seen only briefly), but it also can involve charging for a more complex procedure than was performed or for more expensive equipment than was delivered. Medicare documentation guidelines describe what the various levels of service should involve [4].

  • Miscoding: Using a code number that does not apply to the procedure.

  • Kickbacks: Receiving payment or other benefit for making a referral. Indirect kickbacks can involve overpayment for something of value. For example, a supplier whose business depends on physician referrals may pay excessive rent to physicians who own the premises and refer patients. Another example would be a mobile testing service that performs diagnostic tests in a doctor's office. Kickbacks can distort medical decision-making, cause overutilization, increase costs, and result in unfair competition by freezing out competitors who are unwilling to pay kickbacks. They can also adversely affect the quality of patient care by encouraging physicians to order services or recommend supplies based on profit rather than the patients' best medical interests. In 2000, the Office of the Inspector General issued a fraud alert warning against kickbacks disguised as rental payments [5].

Criminals sometimes obtain Medicare numbers for fraudulent billing by conducting a health survey, offering a free "health screening" test, paying beneficiaries for their number, obtaining beneficiary lists from nursing homes or boarding facilities, or offering "free" services, food, or supplies to beneficiaries.

Excessive or Inappropriate Testing

Many standard tests can be useful in some situations but not in others. The key question in judging whether a diagnostic test is necessary is whether the results will influence the management of the patient. Billing for inappropriate tests—both standard and nonstandard—appears to be much more common among chiropractors and joint chiropractic/medical practices than among other health-care providers. The commonly abused tests include:


  • Computerized inclinometry: Inclinometry is a procedure that measures joint flexibility. Inclinometer testing may be useful if precise range-of-motion measurements are needed for a disability evaluation, but routine or repeated measurements "to gauge a patient's progress" are not appropriate [6].

  • Nerve conduction studies: These tests can provide valuable information about the status of nerve function in various degenerative diseases and in some cases of injury [7]. However, "personal injury mills" often use them inappropriately "to "follow the progress" of their patients.

  • Surface electromyography: This test, which measures the electrical activity of muscles, can be useful for analyzing certain types of performance in the workplace. However, some chiropractors claim that the test enables them to screen patients for "subluxations" and to follow their progress. This usage is invalid [6].

  • Thermography: Thermographic devices portray small temperature differences between sides of the body as images. Chiropractors who use thermography typically claim that it can detect nerve impingements or "nerve irritation" and is useful for monitoring the effect of chiropractic adjustments on subluxations. These uses are not appropriate [6].

  • Ultrasound screening: Diagnostic ultrasound procedures have many legitimate uses. However, ultrasonography is not appropriate for "diagnosing muscle spasm or inflammation" or for following the progress of patients treated for back pain [6].

  • Unnecessary x-rays: X-rays examinations can be important to look for conditions that require medical referral. However, it is not appropriate for chiropractors to routinely x-ray every patient to look for "subluxations" or to "measure the progress" of patients who undergo spinal manipulation [6].

  • Spinal videofluoroscopy: This procedure produces and records x-ray pictures of the spinal joints that show the extent to which joint motion is restricted. For practical purposes, however, simply physical examination procedures (such as asking the patient to bend) provide enough information to guide the patient's treatment [6].

Many insurance administrators are concerned about chiropractic claims for "maintenance care" (periodic examination and "spinal adjustment" of symptom-free patients) , which is not a covered service. To detect such care, many companies automatically review claims for more than 12 visits. In 1999, the U.S. Inspector General recommended automatic review after no more than 12 visits for Medicare recipients [8]. Some chiropractors attempt to avoid review by issuing a new diagnosis after the 12th visit.

Personal Injury Mills

Many instances have been discovered in which corrupt attorneys and health-care providers (usually chiropractors or chiropractic/medical clinics) combine to bill insurance companies for nonexistent or minor injuries. The typical scam includes "cappers" or "runners" who are paid to recruit legitimate or fake auto accident victims or worker's compensation claimants. Victims are commonly told they need multiple visits. The providers fabricate diagnoses and reports and commonly provide expensive but unnecessary services. The lawyers then initiate negotiations on settlements based upon these fraudulent or exaggerated medical claims. The claimants may be unwitting victims or knowing participants who receive payment for their involvement [9]. Mill activity can be suspected when claims are submitted for many unrelated individuals who receive similar treatment from a small number of providers.

Quackery-Related Miscoding

In processing claims, insurance companies rely mainly on diagnostic and procedural codes recorded on the claim forms. Their computers are programmed to detect services that are not covered. Most insurance policies exclude nonstandard or experimental methods. To help boost their income, many nonstandard practitioners misrepresent what they do. They may also misrepresent their diagnosis. For example:


  • Brief or intermediate-length visits may be coded as lengthy or comprehensive visits.

  • Patients receiving chelation therapy may be falsely diagnosed as suffering from lead poisoning; and the chelation may be billed as "infusion therapy" or simply an office visit [10].

  • The administration of quack cancer remedies may be billed as "chemotherapy."

  • Live-cell analysis may be billed as one or more tests for vitamin deficiency.

  • Nonstandard allergy tests may be represented as standard ones.

  • Services not covered because they were performed outside of the United States may be billed as though they were performed within the United States.

Viatical Fraud

In a viatical settlement transactions, people with terminal illnesses assign their life insurance policies to viatical settlement companies in exchange for a percentage of the policy's face value [11]. The company, in turn, may sell the policy to a third-party investor. The company or the investor then becomes the beneficiary to the policy, pays the premiums, and collects the face value of the policy after the original policyholder dies. Fraud occurs when agents recruit terminally ill people to apply for multiple policies. They misrepresent the truth and answer "no" to all of the medical questions. Healthy impostors then undergo the medical evaluation. In many cases, the insurance agent who issues the policy is a party to the scheme. The agent or one applicant may even submit the same application to many insurance companies. Viatical settlement companies then purchase the policies and sell them to unsuspecting third-party investors. The insurance industry is the biggest victim of this fraud and could incur huge losses (conservatively estimated at $1 billion+) within the next few years [12]. Some investors receive nothing in return for their "guaranteed" investment.

Bogus Health Insurance Companies

The General Accounting Office has issued two reports concerning the sale of health insurance plans that lack legal authorization. These plans place the buyer at risk for financial disaster if serious illness strikes. One report focuses on consumer vulnerability [13]. The other notes that from 2000 to 2002, 144 unauthorized entities enrolled at least 15,000 employers and more than 200,000 policyholders who got stuck for over $200 million in unpaid claims [14]. The investigatirs found that many of the entitles bore names similar to those of legitimate companies. In response to the report, the Health Insurance Institute of America is again urging the National Association of Insurance Commissioners to create an online database of licensed health insurance companies so that anyone can easily check the legitimacy of companies offering health insurance products. Meanwhile, the Coalition Against Insurance Fraud offers ten warning signs of a possible swindle:


  • The coverage costs 25 percent or more below the norm, yet promises generous benefits and a large provider network.

  • The plan readily accepts people with serious illnesses and other medical conditions that other plans normally reject.

  • The insurance has few or no underwriting guidelines—the agent or rep appears almost too eager to sign you up.

  • You're approached by an insurance agent, phone or direct mail. Honest group plans normally are sponsored by your employer—and aren't sold directly to individuals.

  • The plan isn't licensed in your state, and the agent (falsely) assures you the federal ERISA law exempts the plan from state licensing.

  • The plan seems like insurance, but the agent or rep avoids calling "insurance," and instead uses evasive terms such as "benefits."

  • The agent or rep doesn't have clear answers to your questions, seems ill-informed, or avoids sharing information.

  • You've never heard of that health insurance company—and nobody else has, either.

  • You have to join an "association" or "union" to obtain the health coverage. But you get no voting rights, receive no bylaws or other material, and aren't involved in the group's activities.

  • Your hospital keeps calling you to complain that your health plan isn't paying your medical bills. Often the plan's reps keep making flimsy excuses, or stop returning phone calls altogether [15].

Anti-Fraud Programs

Several large insurance companies have joined forces through the National Health Care Anti-Fraud AssociationFederal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and the Office of the Inspector General (OIG) each have assigned hundreds of special agents to health-fraud projects. The Coalition Against Insurance Fraud, a public advocacy and educational organization founded in 1993, includes consumers as well as government agencies and insurers. to develop sophisticated computer systems to detect suspicious billing patterns. The

The Omnibus Consolidated Appropriation Act of 1997 authorized a Health Care Anti-Fraud, Waste, and Abuse Community Volunteer Demonstration Program to further reduce fraud and abuse in the Medicare and Medicaid programs. The program enrolled thousands of retired accountants, health professionals, investigators, teachers, and other community volunteers to help Medicare beneficiaries and others to detect and report fraud, waste, and abuse. The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 funded a similar program that trained community agency workers [16]. This act also gave the U.S. Inspector General jurisdiction over private insurance plans as well as public ones.

The Inspector General's office has recovered over a billion dollars through fines and settlements. Its Operation Restore Trust, which began in 1995, was a joint federal-state program aimed at fraud, waste, and abuse in three high-growth areas of Medicare and Medicaid: home health agencies, nursing homes, and durable medical equipment suppliers. The questionable activities included:


  • Billing for advanced life support services when basic life support was provided. Documentation may be falsified to indicate a patient needed oxygen—which is a key indicator in establishing medical necessity for advanced life support.

  • Billing for larger amounts of drugs than are dispensed; or billing for brand-name drugs when less expensive generic versions are dispensed.

  • Billing for more miles than traveled for transportation.

  • Falsification of documentation to substantiate the need for a transport from a hospital back to the patient's home. Medicare will only cover transport from hospital to home if the patient could not go by any other means.

Allstate Insurance Company has announced that during 2004, judges and juries around the country awarded the company more than $30 million in damages resulting from insurance fraud schemes against the company—the result of a campaign Allstate began in 2001 to go after the pocketbooks of fraud perpetrators in court. Since that time, the company has gotten more than $55 million in judgments against criminals that range from individuals to sophisticated organized crime syndicates. Unfortunately, bankruptcies and money laundering make it difficult to collect such awards. In February 2005, Allstate reported that only $5.24 million out of the $30.81 million awarded in 2004 had been recovered [17].

What You Can Do

Many frauds can be detected by examining insurance payment reports to see whether they accurately reflect the services rendered. Suspicious reports involving a private insurer claim should be reported to the company's fraud department. Suspicious practices involving Medicare or other federal programs should be reported to the OIG Hotline by phone (1-800-368-5779) or e-mail.

Thanks to : Stephen Barrett, M.D.

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