Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Man pleads guilty to defrauding military insurer.

- LINDA SATTER

A Nashville, Tenn., man on Monday became the fifth person to plead guilty in a Little Rock-based multimilli­on-dollar scheme to defraud Tricare, the U.S. military’s health insurer.

Chief U.S. District Judge Brian Miller accepted a pre-indictment guilty plea from Jason Greene to a charge of conspiring to violate the anti-kickback statute.

Brad Duke, 43, of Little Rock, who prosecutor­s have said was the ringleader of the conspiracy, pleaded guilty Oct. 3 to the same charge. Duke was a former medical sales representa­tive who did business as Medsurg Inc., and admitted that from December 2014 to about July 2015, he conspired to generate Tricare-covered prescripti­ons for compounded drugs for his and his co-conspirato­rs’ financial benefit.

Three more people pleaded guilty Oct. 18 to being a part of the conspiracy in which one of them — Charlotte Leija, 38, of Conway — used beneficiar­y informatio­n provided by Duke to issue fake prescripti­ons under the name of a Little Rock doctor for whom she worked as a medical assistant. Prosecutor­s say the doctor was unaware of the scheme.

The unauthoriz­ed prescripti­ons, for which Leija admitted drawing up the maximum number of fake refills, were for medication­s compounded by a Mississipp­i pharmacy that paid Duke a share of whatever the pharmacy was paid on prescripti­ons issued by affiliated doctors.

Duke, in turn, paid Leija, and also paid patient recruiters to find Tricare beneficiar­ies in whose names prescripti­ons could be written, prosecutor­s say.

Over 70 percent of the prescripti­ons issued under the doctor’s name were for Tricare beneficiar­ies outside Arkansas, according to court documents that said the beneficiar­ies lived in 24 states.

In less than one year, prosecutor­s said, the scheme generated over $10 million in compound prescripti­ons for over 100 Tricare beneficiar­ies from California to Massachuse­tts.

They said Duke paid patient recruiters more than $2 million to find the beneficiar­ies and paid Leija more than $250,000 to issue the prescripti­ons.

Greene’s plea agreement holds him responsibl­e for more than $550,000 in government dollars that were paid out to the scheme participan­ts. The informatio­n to which he pleaded guilty states that he was a medical sales representa­tive in Nashville and was one of several co-conspirato­rs who unlawfully enriched themselves by offering, soliciting and receiving kickbacks and bribes in exchange for referring Tricare beneficiar­ies to receive prescripti­ons issued under the unsuspecti­ng doctor’s name.

His charging document states that on March 19, 2015, he emailed Duke a pre-filled prescripti­on for a beneficiar­y in Nevada for whom three compounds had been pre-selected, and two minutes later, Duke forwarded the email to Leija, writing, “Here’s another Tricare patient.”

On June 1, 2015, the document states, Greene moved $366,513 from his Medsurg account at U.S. Bank to another account he had at the same bank.

The Mississipp­i pharmacy in question hasn’t been identified, but court documents say that among the highest-grossing compounds it manufactur­ed were topical pain, scar and antifungal creams that came in pump bottles, and supplement­s in the form of pills — the same products that Duke promoted.

Documents say preprinted prescripti­on pads listed all of the pharmacy’s compounds so that prescriber­s only needed to check a box beside the desired medication.

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