Connecticut Post

Milford doc gets prison term for narcotics fraud

1 of 2 area physicians charged in nationwide sweep

- By Michael P. Mayko

The first of two local doctors charged in a nationwide narcotics fraud sweep has been sentenced to more than four years in prison.

Bharat Patel, the 71-yearold founder of Immediate Health Care — which later became Family Health Urgent Care on Norwalk’s Main Street — was sentenced to 54 months in prison Friday by Senior U.S. District Judge Janet Bond Arterton.

Patel was accused of writing hundreds of medically unnecessar­y prescripti­ons for oxycodone and hydrocodon­e in exchange for $158,523.95 in government reimbursem­ents and other payments.

The money has been forfeited to the government.

Patel pleaded guilty in June 2018 to one count of conspiracy to distribute oxycodone and hydrocodon­e, and one count of health care fraud.

Patel, who lives in Milford and has been detained since his arrest in 2017, worked at Stamford Hospital while a young doctor.

His lawyer, a former U.S. Attorney for Connecticu­t, provided 90 letters on Patel’s behalf and called him a leader in India and its community of residents in the U.S.

He said that Patel has lost his good name, profession­al reputation and medical license as a result of the prosecutio­n.

“For almost 40 years, residents and patients in and around Fairfield and New Haven Counties have been served by this universall­y liked, communityd­riven doctor,” said Stanley A. Twardy Jr

Current U.S. Attorney John Durham had a different opinion.

“A lengthy prison term is appropriat­e for any physician who abandons his oath and profits by selling prescripti­ons for opioids, by overprescr­ibing these highly addictive drugs to patients — many of whom illegally distribute­d the drugs they received — and by defrauding our health care system,” said Durham.

“This doctor’s criminal conduct contribute­d to the ongoing opioid epidemic as tens of thousands of narcotic pills were dispensed to individual­s who didn’t need them and shouldn’t have them,” Durham said.

Last month, Dr. Ramil Mansourov, 49, of Tokeneke Road, Norwalk, who bought the clinic from Patel but also hired him to work there, pleaded guilty to health care fraud and money laundering. He will be sentenced Dec. 5 by Arterton.

Mansourov was accused of billing Medicaid for nearly $5 million for home, office and nursing home visits that never occurred. Some of that money was transferre­d to a Swiss bank account. He faces up to 30 years in prison.

Mansourov also is expected to be ordered to forfeit $50,000 for providing narcotic painkiller­s to patients who did not medically need them and in some instances allegedly resold them.

The pair was indicted as part of a nationwide probe into the over-prescripti­on of narcotic pain-killers and health care fraud which included charges against 115 doctors, nurses and medical profession­als and involved $1.3 billion in false billings

Patel was arrested and his home and office searched on July 12, 2017, by federal agents. Mansourov allegedly fled to Montreal, where he was caught the following day by Canada Border Services agents on an immigratio­n charge.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Rahul Kale has a 12-minute black and white video which shows a cooperatin­g witness sliding three $100 bills to Patel in March 2017 after telling the doctor to write him several prescripti­ons for narcotics with specific dates.

Documents filed by Kale in federal court allege that Patel repeatedly wrote narcotic pain killer prescripti­ons for addicts and dealers in exchange for $100 for each script.

Some of the prescripti­ons were for people he never saw and many were paid for by Medicaid and Medicare. One of them was to a convicted Norwalk drug dealer.

Kale also claimed that nearly 40 participan­ts in a Norwalk Narcotics Anonymous meeting had been Patel’s patients at one time.

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