Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Rx fraud case nets 4th plea of guilty

Man will forfeit gains of $727,679

- LINDA SATTER

A North Little Rock man on Wednesday became the fourth person since late June to plead guilty to conspiring to defraud Tricare, a federal health-care program, of more than $12 million by generating fake prescripti­ons for expensive compounded drugs.

Keith Benson pleaded guilty before U.S. District Judge Lee Rudofsky to a charge of violating the federal anti-kickback statute, admitting that in 2015, he pocketed $727,679.30 in payments for recruiting patients in whose names the false prescripti­ons were submitted. He agreed to forfeit that same amount of money as part of his sentencing, which hasn’t yet been scheduled.

Benson admitted being part of a ring of conspirato­rs led by Albert Glenn Hudson of Little Rock, who did business as Major Healing LLC, and who on June 24 pleaded guilty to the kickbacks charge. Hudson admitted that he pocketed $1.5 million as an organizer of a network that defrauded the insurer of more than $12 million in just a few months.

Last week and on Tuesday, a mother and daughter also admitted to their roles in Hudson’s scheme. Donna Crowder, a nurse practition­er, admitted approving fraudulent prescripti­ons for compounded drugs in return for payments of more than $89,000 to her daughter, Jennifer Bracy, now known as Jennifer Crowder.

Tricare covered the compounded drugs — mostly scar creams and supplement­s — and processed and paid them through Express Scripts Inc., a pharmacy benefit manager, in good-faith reliance on claims that the prescripti­ons were valid, prosecutor­s have said. They said a pharmacy in Mississipp­i paid marketers to generate prescripti­ons for the compounded medication­s but didn’t know that the marketers hired other people to generate and validate prescripti­ons for which the patients were never examined.

As fraud schemes across the country involving compounded drugs reached a peak in mid-2015, federal authoritie­s began investigat­ing the onslaught of claims, and prosecutor­s say that soon, many people suspected of carrying out the crimes began committing other crimes, such as creating false records, to cover up their wrongdoing.

Two other people — Joe David “Jay” May, a doctor in Alexander; and Derek Clifton of Little Rock, a former high school basketball coach in Baxter County — are charged in the Hudson case. They have pleaded innocent to charges of taking kickbacks and obstructin­g an FBI investigat­ion.

They are facing a jury trial in January.

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