The Columbus Dispatch

Former Bengal Odom among former NFL players convicted in $2.5M scheme

- Kevin Grasha

All 15 former players charged in a scheme to defraud an NFL healthcare benefit program, including former Bengal Antwan Odom, have now pleaded guilty, prosecutor­s said.

Odom, a defensive end who played for the Bengals from 2008 to 2010, pleaded guilty last year to charges related to the scheme, which prosecutor­s say defrauded the program out of $2.5 million.

Former Washington running back Clinton Portis and former Kansas City Chiefs wide receiver Tamarick Vanover on Friday became the most recent explayers to be convicted.

Portis, 40, and Vanover, 47, pleaded guilty in federal court in Lexington to conspiracy to commit healthcare fraud, the U.S. Department of Justice announced Tuesday. Portis is scheduled to be sentenced on Jan. 6, 2022; Vanover's

sentencing is set for Jan. 20. Odom will be sentenced on Jan. 12.

Each faces up to 10 years in prison. Portis, Vanover and Odom were among 15 former players to face federal charges related to the scheme.

Last month, Portis and Vanover stood trial in federal court in Lexington. But jurors were unable to reach a unanimous verdict regarding Portis, and a mistrial was declared on certain counts for Vanover, court records say.

A retrial had been set to begin Tuesday.

Prosecutor­s said former Baltimore Ravens linebacker Robert Mccune orchestrat­ed the nationwide fraud. In 2016, according to prosecutor­s, Mccune began submitting fraudulent claims in his name to the healthcare program using forged prescripti­ons and other falsified documents. In 2017, he began submitting fake claims in other players' names.

“To grow the scheme,” prosecutor­s said in court documents, “Mccune needed more willing former players…to join the conspiracy.” Among them were Portis and Vanover, prosecutor­s said.

The program, called the Gene Upshaw NFL Player Health Reimbursem­ent Account Plan, allows retired players to be reimbursed for out-of-pocket medical care that is not covered by insurance.

In 2018, according to court documents, Mccune submitted claims in Portis' name totaling nearly $100,000 for an oxygen chamber and “cryosauna.” Portis, the documents say, ignored the fact that the items “were not medically necessary and were not actually provided.”

Portis wired $4,000 of the proceeds to Mccune, the documents say.

Vanover recruited three other former NFL players into the scheme. Prosecutor­s say he helped them in causing fraudulent claims to be submitted to the plan, obtaining nearly $160,000 for expensive medical equipment that was not actually provided.

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