The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Prosecutor­s: Doctor’s practice stole millions from Medicare

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WEST PALM BEACH, FLA. >> Federal prosecutor­s argued Tuesday that a prominent Florida eye doctor tied to alleged political corruption ran a practice that was actually a well-organized scam that stole millions from Medicare.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Alexandra Chase told a federal jury during closing arguments that Dr. Salomon Melgen, 62, repeatedly performed unnecessar­y tests and treatments on his mostly elderly patients to “line his pockets.” He faces the equivalent of a life sentence if convicted of all or most of the 76 counts against him. Prosecutor­s say he stole up to $105 million between 2008 and 2013.

He is charged separately in New Jersey with bribing Democratic U.S. Sen. Bob Menendez, who has denied any wrongdoing. That trial is scheduled for the fall.

His attorney, Matthew Menchel, argued that Melgen made numerous billing and treatment mistakes that leave him open to lawsuits and possibly losing his medical license, but they weren’t intentiona­l and therefore not a crime. He was an aggressive doctor who refused to give up on his patients when other doctors had, Menchel said.

“Patients testified that if it wasn’t for Dr. Melgen, their eyesight wouldn’t have been saved and improved,” Menchel said. “He was a kind and caring doctor who went out of his way to help his patients.”

But Chase said Melgen’s actions were not honest mistakes. Telling jurors that he ran an office designed to defraud Medicare, she

pointed to tests that should have taken five minutes or more but were done in seconds, making them useless for a diagnosis but still billed to Medicare at the full rate. She pointed to tests and treatments Melgen billed on patients’ fake eyes. She pointed to potentiall­y dangerous treatments performed on patients with no or minor eye problems. In 2012, Melgen received more Medicare reimbursem­ent than any doctor in the country, nearly $21 million.

“Mistakes happen once or twice, here or there, but when they happen over and over again, they are intentiona­l,” Chase said. Melgen stared straight ahead impassivel­y during her two-hour argument, his family and supporters packing the courtroom.

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