The Columbus Dispatch

Drug-treatment operators perpetuate deadly cycle of fraud

- By Curt Anderson

The Reflection­s treatment center looked like just the place for Michelle Holley’s youngest daughter to kick heroin. Instead, as with dozens of other addiction-treatment centers in Florida, the owner was more interested in defrauding insurance companies by keeping his patients hooked, her family says.

“It looked fine. They were saying all the right things to me. I could not help my child, so I trusted them to help my child,” Holley said.

Instead, the center refused to give 19-yearold Jaime Holley her prescripti­on medicine when she left, forcing her to use illegal drugs to avoid acute withdrawal symptoms, her mother said. She died of a heroin overdose in November.

“Right to my face they lied to me,” her mother said.

Rather than working to get people well, a growing number of unscrupulo­us industry players are focusing on getting patients to relapse so that insurance dollars keep rolling in, according to law enforcemen­t officials, treatment experts and people trying to beat their addictions.

“It’s terrible right now. I don’t know of any business that wants to kill its customers, but this one does,” said Timothy Schnellenb­erger, who has worked for years in running addiction-recovery centers in Florida. “It really breaks my heart. Kids are dying left and right.”

Reflection­s and Journey — both centers owned

by Kenneth Chatman — are shuttered now, and Chatman is serving a 27-year federal prison sentence after pleading guilty to health-care fraud and money laundering, but that’s little comfort to Holley, who described her daughter’s ordeal in an interview.

“I couldn’t fix it. And as a parent, I wanted to fix it,” she said, trying to contain her tears as she looked through her daughter’s pictures and Mother’s Day cards.

As drug addiction destroys families across America, “there’s a need for a positive, vibrant recovery network to help people get off of opioids,” said State Attorney Dave Aronberg, chief prosecutor in Palm Beach County. “You can’t just arrest your way out of this problem.”

But lately, sunny South Florida has become the focal point of rampant insurance fraud that relies on a lethal cycle of intentiona­l failure, authoritie­s say.

“The incentive is to keep

them in this relapse system, this gravy train that doesn’t end until the person leaves in a body bag or an ambulance,” said Aronberg, whose opioid task force has made more than 30 fraud arrests. “There’s no money in sobriety.”

Overcoming substance abuse generally involves a treatment center, where urine tests are done, prescripti­ons dispensed and recovery group meetings held, and a “sober home,” where people recovering from addictions live together to get group support.

It’s a $1 billion business in Palm Beach County alone, federal officials say.

Florida has the most sober homes per capita of any state, said David Sheridan, president of the National Alliance for Recovery Residences. Opioid-treatment fraud has surfaced in California and Arizona, but Florida stands out, in part because so many people come for treatment.

Two people overdose on opioids every day in Palm Beach County, mainly from heroin laced with the synthetic drug fentanyl, investigat­ors say. Statewide, deaths from this combinatio­n rose 75 percent in 2015 as more than 2,500 people died in Florida from opioid-related overdoses, according to the state medical examiner.

One operation alone — the Real Life Recovery Delray treatment center and the Halfway There Florida home — collected almost $19 million by fraudulent­ly billing insurance companies for $58 million over four years, according to the FBI. That case has not yet gone to trial.

The FBI affidavit said the fraud included unnecessar­y or faked urinalysis samples, double-billing and paying kickbacks to patients in the form of gift cards, trips to casinos and strip clubs and free airline tickets. Other tactics included paying “patient brokers” to illegally direct addicts to particular facilities.

Chatman’s patients were given drugs to trigger a positive drug test so they could be considered in “relapse” when their insurance coverage was about to expire. Court documents say he induced some female patients into prostituti­on for free rent at his sober home, and confiscate­d car keys, cellphones and prescripti­on medication­s.

“They don’t care if you die. They just want to keep swiping that insurance card so they can keep getting money out of you,” said Blake Oppenheime­r of Louisville, Kentucky, who was ordered into treatment and landed in a center that was shut down for fraud. “I felt like I was something in a store that was just trying to be sold over and over again.”

Fraudulent operators are exploiting a web of state and federal laws that make oversight difficult. People being treated for addictions are protected by the Americans With Disabiliti­es Act and health privacy laws. With children up to age 26 now covered under their parents’ insurance, there’s more money to be made.

 ?? [LYNNE SLADKY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTOS] ?? Michelle Holley of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, holds a photograph of her daughter Jaime Holley, 19, who died of a heroin overdose in November 2016. Holley says the treatment center her daughter went to shares in the blame for her daughter’s death.
[LYNNE SLADKY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTOS] Michelle Holley of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, holds a photograph of her daughter Jaime Holley, 19, who died of a heroin overdose in November 2016. Holley says the treatment center her daughter went to shares in the blame for her daughter’s death.
 ??  ?? Recovering addicts join hands during a meeting at Recovery Boot Camp in Delray Beach, Fla. The center is run by Timothy Schnellenb­erger, who said the influx of criminal operators has cast a dark shadow over an industry with deep roots in South Florida.
Recovering addicts join hands during a meeting at Recovery Boot Camp in Delray Beach, Fla. The center is run by Timothy Schnellenb­erger, who said the influx of criminal operators has cast a dark shadow over an industry with deep roots in South Florida.
 ?? [LYNNE SLADKY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] ?? With so many being caught up in the opioid crisis, the need for legitimate treatment centers is growing. Unfortunat­ely, South Florida has become the focal point of rampant insurance fraud that relies on a lethal cycle of patient failure, authoritie­s say.
[LYNNE SLADKY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] With so many being caught up in the opioid crisis, the need for legitimate treatment centers is growing. Unfortunat­ely, South Florida has become the focal point of rampant insurance fraud that relies on a lethal cycle of patient failure, authoritie­s say.

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