Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Medicare fraud conviction overturned

- By Jay Weaver Miami Herald

A woman branded by prosecutor­s as the “matriarch of patient brokers” for a Hollywood hospital that fleeced about $40 million from Medicare has been freed by a federal judge in a rare ruling that spares her from spending potentiall­y the rest of her life in prison.

U.S. District Judge Cecilia Altonaga threw out a Miami jury’s guilty verdicts against Tiffany Foster, 49, saying the trial evidence showed that she had “withdrawn” from the scheme to bilk Medicare more than five years before prosecutor­s filed an indictment against her and others in May 2014.

As a result, Foster should not have been charged because the statute of limitation for that period had already run out. Altonaga concluded that Foster “cannot be punished for the offenses for which she was convicted.”

The clock was ticking for Foster, who faced up to 25 years in prison at her sentencing on April 30.

Foster, who received $500,000 in payments for supplying patients to the Hollywood psychiatri­c hospital, was released Thursday from the federal detention center in downtown Miami after the judge’s ruling. She had been detained by Altonaga in February after the 12-person jury found her guilty of two conspiraci­es: defrauding the taxpayerfu­nded Medicare program and receiving kickbacks from the Hollywood facility.

In her ruling, Altonaga highlighte­d Foster’s interview in March 2009 with FBI agents, who accused her of not coming clean about her criminal involvemen­t in Hollywood Pavilion’s Medicare racket before she had left the facility four years earlier.

Altonaga questioned the testimony of an FBI agent at trial, concluding that “Foster made multiple disclosure­s of criminal activities at HP [in her interview], including the recycling of patients, the defrauding of Medicare, and threats to withhold money from patients if they failed to return.”

The Justice Department, which strongly opposed Louis’ post-verdict motion for acquittal, said Friday that it is reviewing the judge’s ruling.

In February, prosecutor­s won a major conviction against the lead defendant, Aventura psychiatri­st Barry Kaplowitz, 54, for lying about providing treatment for purported mental health patients whom he never saw at Hollywood Pavilion. However, he was acquitted of the main conspiracy charge to defraud Medicare.

Kaplowitz had worked part time as the medical director of Hollywood Pavilion’s outpatient facility from 2008 to 2011 before his arrest last year. He now faces up to five years in prison at his sentencing on April 30.

The same jury convicted Foster, an Alabama resident who last worked as a marketing contractor for the Broward County facility a decade ago.

A third defendant, Melvin Hunter, 63, of Broward, who had worked as an inpatient admissions supervisor during the past decade, was acquitted.

A fourth defendant, Christophe­r Gabel, 62, of Davie, the former chief operating officer, pleaded guilty in November to conspiring to commit health-care fraud and pay kickbacks to patient recruiters. Gabel, who is serving a six-year prison term, testified that Medicare beneficiar­ies were admitted regardless of whether they qualified for treatment or even saw a doctor.

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