Los Angeles Times

Doctor gets 9 years in prison

He falsely prescribed drugs in a scam by a Glendale medical clinic, officials say.

- By Alene Tchekmedyi­an alene.tchekmedyi­an@latimes.com Tchekmedyi­an writes for Times Community News.

A doctor who pre-signed thousands of blank prescripti­on slips for a sham medical clinic in Glendale that defrauded Medicare and Medi-Cal of $9 million has been sentenced to nine years in federal prison, officials said.

Kenneth Johnson, 49, was convicted in 2014 of fraudulent­ly prescribin­g expensive antipsycho­tic medication­s, which were later used to generate $20 million in fraudulent billings to Medicare and Medi-Cal, according to the U.S. attorney’s office.

Operators of Manor Medical Imaging in Glendale employed an unlicensed medical practition­er, Nuritsa Grigoryan, to fill out the pre-signed slips and later billed and rebilled the government for the drugs.

Grigoryan, 51, reportedly fled the U.S. after her conviction and remains a fugitive.

By manipulati­ng files of people who had been recruited or whose identities were stolen, clinic operators made it seem as though the patients — including elderly and homeless people, as well as military veterans — were being legitimate­ly treated.

After the prescripti­ons were filled, the drugs were sold on the black market and redistribu­ted to pharmacies, where they’d be used in new claims filed to Medicare and Medi-Cal.

A judge called the scheme “particular­ly devious” because organizers targeted under-the-radar drugs to evade the attention of authoritie­s, officials said.

Two other people — siblings Lianna Ovsepian, 35, owner of the clinic, and Artak Ovsepian, 34 — also were convicted in the scam. They were sentenced to eight years and 15 years, respective­ly, in prison.

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