The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Lawrencevi­lle drug lab raided by feds made millions; now it’s for sale

- Chris Joyner

In November, federal agents raided a Lawrencevi­lle toxicology lab, serving warrants and taking away boxes of papers.

Two days later, the lab filed Chapter 11 bankruptcy. Next month it heads for the auction block after years of Medicare reimbursem­ents at one of the highest rates in the nation, according to one study.

The firm is Confirmatr­ix Laboratory, and if that name sounds familiar it’s likely because the company was at the center of a campaign donation bundling scandal in 2014 when then-U.S. Rep. Jack Kingston was running for an open Senate seat.

Employees with Confirmatr­ix and associated companies combined to shower Kingston with more than $80,000 in bundled contributi­ons at a fancy fundraiser at Chateau Elan. At the time, no one had ever heard of Confirmatr­ix or its sister company, Nue Medical Consulting, a medical billing company. Both firms had only recently been founded by a Palestinia­n national named Khalid Satary.

The problem for Kingston was that Satary, aka D J Rock, was an ex-con under a federal deportatio­n order.

Satary served more than three years in federal prison for running a counterfei­t CD operation the feds valued at $50 million. He got out of prison in 2008 and quickly got into the fast-growing and lucrative field of toxicology — testing urine for drugs.

That’s what he was doing when employees in his companies made a big play for Kingston.

Putting it mildly, the Kingston contributi­ons were fishy. First, none of the 26 donors had a history of political activism. In fact, most did not appear to be registered voters.

A whistleblo­wer who helped organize the fundraiser said Satary promised bonuses to anyone who contribute­d to Kingston. That’s called a “straw donor” scheme and is illegal.

Wes Warrington, Confirmatr­ix’s CEO at the time, said employees were not encouraged to give. That may be the case, but whatever impulse seized them in December 2013 apparently let go just as quickly. None of the employees has contribute­d since to a

federal campaign.

Well, there’s one exception.

Yussuf Abdel-Aleem, a lawyer who served as general counsel for Nue Medical, gave $2,500 to Kingston. Apparently, Abdel-Aleem has broad political tastes, because three years after giving to the Georgia conservati­ve, he donated $500 to Sen. Bernie Sanders’ Democratic presidenti­al bid. Abdel-Aleem said he no longer represents Nue Medical and had no comment.

In short, there is plenty of circumstan­tial evidence that the bundled donations to Kingston were just an attempt to curry favor with a candidate who, at the time, was considered the front-runner to be the next senator from Georgia.

Political newcomer David Perdue hammered Kingston about the fundraiser in political ads, narrowly defeating the 11-term congressma­n in a GOP primary runoff. Perdue went on to win the general election.

$9.1 million billed to Medicare

All this smoke caught the attention of the FBI and federal prosecutor’s office. But after Kingston lost the primary runoff, the investigat­ion lost steam.

In the interim, Confirmatr­ix kept billing Medicare for millions in testing fees. The company was tagged as submitting the highest reimbursem­ent requests in the nation.

Laboratory Economics, a business newsletter, reviewed Medicare Part B payments to labs across the nation for drug testing and found Confirmatr­ix to be “the biggest outlier” with an average per-patient cost of $2,406. The national average per-patient cost was $751.

The study found Confirmatr­ix billed Medicare $9.1 million in just one year for the tests, while noting the lab’s felonious founder.

Inflated Medicare billing is a big concern to feds. Last week, the Justice Department announced its largest indictment yet for Medicare fraud, charging 412 defendants in 41 federal districts involving $1.3 billion in false billings.

In 2016, the federal government clamped down on reimbursem­ent rates for urine tests, sending shock waves through the industry and contributi­ng to Confirmatr­ix’s bankruptcy, according to court filings.

Why did bank loan money?

Still, the company billed $1 million for the tests in December, a month after the fed raid, court records reveal. And in one of the bankruptcy filings, new CEO Ann Durham listed Confirmatr­ix’s assets at between $10.6 million and $12.7 million, with up to $7 million in outstandin­g bills.

SunTrust Bank, which loaned $4 million to the company, complained Confirmatr­ix blew its deadlines to file a reorganiza­tion plan and reneged on a deal to make a $150,000 payment on its debt.

In filings, Confirmatr­ix claimed it needed more time to come up with a plan and get shareholde­rs to buy into it. Baloney, SunTrust said.

The bank’s attorneys said Confirmatr­ix paid SunTrust some money by selling “excess toxicology machines.”

The bank may be getting what it deserves here. SunTrust agreed to extend Confirmatr­ix a $6 million revolving line of credit in February 2016, when a Google search of the company would have turned up its shady connection­s.

I guess millions in inflated Medicaid payments for urine tests impresses bankers more than it does the taxpayers who pay for them. A SunTrust spokesman declined to comment, citing the pending litigation.

Satary not deported

Satary doesn’t have any legal claim on Confirmatr­ix and Nue Medical, which changed its name to GNOS Medical and was originally incorporat­ed under his then-teenage son’s name.

According to an order filed this week, Confirmatr­ix will go up for public auction next month at an amount that is expected to pay off creditors and shareholde­rs. The company’s largest shareholde­r is a limited liability partnershi­p called Premier Worldwide, whose princi- pals are secret.

Here’s what I was able to find out: Premiere Worldwide’s registered agent is a lawyer named Andrew O’Hara, a board member at Confirmatr­ix. O’Hara also is the CEO of GNOS Medical, where Satary’s son is CFO and secretary.

Atlanta defense attorney Steve Sadow represents both Satary and his son, but he said he has received no new informatio­n about the federal investigat­ion since December. The FBI and federal prosecutor­s offered no comment on the case, but it’s apparently ongoing.

The irony is that, while the federal government cracks down on undocument­ed immigrants, detaining mostly poor recent arrivals from war-torn countries, Satary, a convicted felon apparently under active investigat­ion by the federal government, remains at large.

Why? Federal immigratio­n officials say they would like to kick him out, but Israel won’t take him.

Lucky us. As AJC Watchdog, I’ll be writing about public offi cials, good governance and the way your tax dollars are spent. Help me out. What needs exposing in your community? Contact me at cjoyner@ajc.com.

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 ??  ?? FROM LEFT: Khalid Satary, Jordan Satary, Jack Kingston, and Confirmatr­ix VP Richard Sasnett gather at a Dec. 6, 2013, fundraiser for Kingston at the Chateau Elan Winery and Resort in Braselton.
FROM LEFT: Khalid Satary, Jordan Satary, Jack Kingston, and Confirmatr­ix VP Richard Sasnett gather at a Dec. 6, 2013, fundraiser for Kingston at the Chateau Elan Winery and Resort in Braselton.

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