Miami Herald

Prosecutor­s want to confine healthcare mogul Esformes to his S. Florida home before trial

- BY JAY WEAVER jweaver@miamiheral­d.com Jay Weaver: 305-376-3446, @jayhweaver

Concerned that a healthcare mogul freed by thenPresid­ent Donald Trump might flee the country, Justice Department prosecutor­s urged a federal judge Tuesday to confine Philip Esformes to his South Florida home with an electronic ankle monitor and impose a $10.5 million bond to ensure his appearance for a new trial.

But their request was rebuffed, at least for now.

Instead, U.S. District Judge Robert Scola granted a request by Esformes’ defense team to postpone the government’s bond proposal until mid-August, when it will be taken up again.

Justice Department prosecutor­s recently said they will pursue unresolved charges from Esformes’ healthcare- fraud trial in 2019, when a federal jury deadlocked on the main conspiracy charge and five other offenses but found him guilty of 20 corruption­related counts. Scola sentenced Esformes to 20 years in prison and ordered him to pay $5.3 million in restitutio­n to the taxpayer-funded Medicare program and a

$38 million forfeiture fine.

“The trust that he broke was of epic proportion­s,” Allan Medina, the lead prosecutor in the $1 billion healthcare fraud case against Esformes, said at Tuesday’s hearing.

Just before Christmas, Trump commuted Esformes’ prison term to time served, allowing him to go free after 4 1⁄2 years behind bars. But the president left intact his conviction­s, financial penalties and and probation.

To date, the federal government has seized about $30 million in assets from Esformes, who was accused of running a massive Medicare fraud scheme by bribing medical profession­als at

Larkin Hospital and elsewhere to refer patients to his chain of skilled-nursing and assisted-living facilities in Miami-Dade.

Scola, the judge, noted that all of that confiscate­d money would be lost if Esformes were to flee to Israel or another country to evade his new trial, which will be scheduled early next year. On Monday on the court docket, Scola posted a brief statement that was left with his staff by an anonymous male caller who inquired about the bond hearing. The caller then said:

“Be careful — he is looking to run to Israel.”

But Scola stopped short of considerin­g pre-trial detention at a federal facility because the prosecutor­s did not request it. He also expressed reservatio­ns about burdening Esformes with a multimilli­on-dollar bond with the government already holding so much of his wealth.

Esformes’ defense team tried to put the notion that he was a “flight risk” to rest when they said he is appealing his conviction­s for bribery, money laundering and obstructio­n of justice from the original trial in the hope of clearing his criminal record and recovering his seized assets.

Moreover, Esformes told the judge that he spends his days with his ailing father, a rabbi and wealthy businessma­n, at his Boca Raton home. He said he also visits regularly with his three children at their Miami Beach home and devotes himself to studying and praying at synagogues. He is also pursuing new business opportunit­ies here and in his former hometown of Chicago.

Esformes, 52, told the judge that he has been rebuilding his familial and spiritual life since his release from prison.

“That’s all I’m doing every day and night,” Esformes told Scola, as his trial attorney, Howard Srebnick, stood by his side. “I am

pushing and pushing to be better and better.”

Esformes received clemency from Trump a few days before Christmas. The president’s commutatio­n blindsided Justice Department prosecutor­s because Esformes’ fraud case was the biggest in the history of the Medicare program and was bitterly fought over for months.

Trump’s commutatio­n only affected Esformes’ prison sentence — not his conviction or the half-dozen charges that the jury was unable to reach verdicts on.

 ?? ROB LATOUR Invision via AP, file ?? Philip Esformes was granted clemency but still faces a retrial.
ROB LATOUR Invision via AP, file Philip Esformes was granted clemency but still faces a retrial.

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