Walker County Messenger

Oxendine charged in health-care fraud scheme

- By Dave Williams

ATLANTA — Former Georgia Insurance Commission­er John Oxendine has been indicted on federal charges of conspiring to commit health-care fraud and money laundering, the Justice Department announced Friday, May 20.

According to informatio­n presented to a federal grand jury, Oxendine conspired with Dr. Jeffrey Gallups and others to submit fraudulent insurance claims for more than $2.5 million in medically unnecessar­y tests ordered from a lab in Texas. Gallups already has pleaded guilty to health-care fraud.

As part of the health-care fraud scheme, the lab company agreed to pay Oxendine’s insurance services business a kickback of 50% of the net profits from eligible specimens submitted by Gallups’ practice, which amounted to $260,000.

Oxendine allegedly used a portion of the kickback money to pay debts on behalf of Gallups, paying a $150,000 charitable contributi­on and $70,000 in attorney’s fees.

“Patients go to their healthcare provider for treatment with the expectatio­n that their treatment or test is necessary, not a scam for fraud,” U.S. Attorney Ryan Buchanan said.

“These allegation­s describe someone who was more motivated by personal greed than their duty to provide appropriat­e and necessary care to patients,” added Keri Farley, special agent in charge of the FBI’s Atlanta office. “The FBI, along with our partners, will continue to investigat­e health-care fraud to ensure these individual­s who willingly defraud the American people are brought to justice.”

Oxendine, 60, of Duluth, was elected insurance commission­er in 1994 on the Republican ticket and served four terms.

He ran for governor in 2010 but finished fourth in the Republican primary.

Oxendine was accused of spending campaign contributi­ons on personal items during that gubernator­ial bid.

The Georgia Government Transparen­cy and Campaign Finance Commission resolved the longest running campaign finance case in the state’s history earlier this month, approving a $128,000 settlement agreement.

 ?? ?? John Oxendine
John Oxendine

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