The Commercial Appeal

C’ville counselor sentenced for bilking Tenncare out of $600K

- By Beth Warren

A Colliervil­le mental health profession­al who admitted to charging TennCare as much as $600,000 for counseling she never performed for wayward youths and others was sentenced Tuesday to three years in a federal prison.

Mechell Debronett Toles, 44, whose clients consisted mainly of referrals from Shelby County Juvenile Court, pleaded guilty in March to federal health care fraud, a felony, but asked for probation.

Her husband, a Memphis police officer, sat in court during the hearing but didn’t speak. In a letter sent to the judge, he described his wife of 19 years as “the backbone” of their family and a devoted mother to their two children.

Toles, who remained seated during the hearing because of an undisclose­d health problem, didn’t speak in court but prepared a statement read aloud by her attorney, Lorna McClusky.

“I feel too overwhelme­d and ashamed” to speak in court, she wrote. “I have no viable reason for committing fraud. I did not need anything.”

U.S. Dist. Judge Jon McCalla, however, said court records detailed her debt, including unpaid taxes.

Toles’ letter expressed “sorrow” for the impact on patients, her children and husband, who has recently taken on two extra jobs.

But Asst. U.S. Atty. John Fabian read statements Toles made to investigat­ors, saying she overbilled “more than I can even understand. ... It was just easy to do. It did not seem harmful to others.”

The prosecutor said the fallout from Toles’ failure to counsel troubled youths is impossible to measure, but pointed to a few cases.

In one case, Toles falsely claimed she held 29 sessions with a teen referred to her after assault and disorderly conduct charges. He later was convicted as an adult for robbery and sentenced by McCalla to nearly 10 years in a federal prison.

Another youth Toles pretended to counsel 35 times ultimately was charged with aggravated robbery and first-degree murder in a beating death.

A third juvenile who was supposed to receive 43 counseling sessions from Toles is serving an eightyear prison sentence for aggravated robbery.

Toles’ attorney agreed there was “collateral damage” but said no one can prove a link between the youths’ future crimes and the lack of interventi­on by Toles.

Juvenile Court officials referred 571 troubled youths to Toles from 2005 to 2012 for behavioral problems ranging from drug addiction and uncontroll­able anger to sexual misconduct, said Larry Scroggs, the court’s chief administra­tive officer.

In the majority of the cases, handled at her offices at 324 Poplar View Pkwy. in Colliervil­le and 2693 Union Ext. in Memphis, the services would have been paid for by TennCare.

And, at least 21 times, Toles billed for more than 24 hours of counseling for the same day.

In some cases, Toles billed for dozens of appointmen­ts that predated the time the patients were first referred to her.

Agents watched Toles during a two-day period in which she billed TennCare for 15 sessions for individual­s and 15 for families at a rate of $40-$50 per session. During that time, only three juveniles walked in to Toles’ office building, the prosecutor said.

 ?? PHOTOS BY MARK WEBER/ THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL ?? Arlington United Methodist Church pastor Ken Stewart (middle) distribute­s lunch to guests at Highland Heights United Methodist Church on a recent Monday morning. On every fifth Monday, Arlington UMC volunteers help feed the low-income, unemployed and...
PHOTOS BY MARK WEBER/ THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL Arlington United Methodist Church pastor Ken Stewart (middle) distribute­s lunch to guests at Highland Heights United Methodist Church on a recent Monday morning. On every fifth Monday, Arlington UMC volunteers help feed the low-income, unemployed and...
 ??  ?? Andrea Dowdy (left) cleans up while fellow Arlington UMC outreach program members Sherry Chapman (middle) and her son, Sam Chapman, 16, prepare hot meals.
Andrea Dowdy (left) cleans up while fellow Arlington UMC outreach program members Sherry Chapman (middle) and her son, Sam Chapman, 16, prepare hot meals.

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