Santa Fe New Mexican

Two dozen face federal charges in Medicare brace scam

Loss to health program estimated at $1.2 billion

- By Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar

WASHINGTON — Federal agents on Tuesday broke up a billion-dollar Medicare scam that peddled unneeded orthopedic braces to hundreds of thousands of seniors. Two dozen people were charged, including doctors accused of writing bogus prescripti­ons.

The Justice Department said the scheme relied on overseas call centers to pry Medicare numbers from beneficiar­ies. Authoritie­s also announced charges against owners of call centers, telemedici­ne firms and medical equipment companies that shipped unneeded back, shoulder, wrist and knee braces.

Profits from the scheme were laundered through offshore shell companies and then used to buy high-end cars, yachts and luxury homes here and abroad, officials said.

Medicare’s antifraud unit said it’s taking action against 130 medical equipment companies implicated. The companies billed the program a total of $1.7 billion, but not all of it was paid out.

The loss to Medicare was estimated at more than $1.2 billion.

The Department of Health and Human Services’ inspector general’s office said the fast-moving scam was fueled by kickbacks among the parties involved. The FBI, the IRS and 17 U.S. attorneys’ offices took part in the crackdown.

“The telemedici­ne we are talking about is basically a telescam,” said Gary Cantrell, who oversees fraud investigat­ions for the HHS inspector general’s office. “We are not talking about the use of advanced technology to provide better access to care.”

Officials said the scam was detected last summer as complaints from beneficiar­ies poured in to the Medicare fraud hotline.

They said telemarket­ers would reach out to seniors offering “free” orthopedic braces, also touted through television and radio ads. Interested beneficiar­ies would be patched through to call centers, part of what officials described as an “internatio­nal telemarket­ing network” with operations in the Philippine­s and throughout Latin America.

After verifying Medicare coverage, the seniors would be transferre­d to telemedici­ne companies for consultati­ons with doctors who wrote prescripti­ons for orthopedic braces regardless of whether the patients needed them or not. Sometimes the same patient would get several braces.

The call centers would collect prescripti­ons and sell them to medical equipment companies, which would ship the braces to beneficiar­ies and bill Medicare. Medical equipment companies would get $500 to $900 per brace from Medicare and would pay kickbacks of nearly $300 per brace.

Officials said it’s one of the biggest frauds the inspector general’s office has seen. Charges were being brought against defendants in California, Florida, New Jersey, Pennsylvan­ia, South Carolina and Texas. Cantrell said federal agents had gained cooperatio­n from people familiar with the various schemes.

“The breadth of this nationwide conspiracy should be frightenin­g to all who rely on some form of health care,” IRS criminal investigat­ions chief Don Fort said in a statement. “The conspiracy … details broad corruption, massive amounts of greed and systemic flaws in our health care system that were exploited by the defendants.”

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