Manager indicted in VA records probe
Prosecutors claim he had wait-time documents falsifified.
A manager at a Veterans Affffffffffffairs medical center in Georgia is on leave with pay following his indictment on 50 counts of ordering his staffff to falsify medical records of veterans waiting for outside medical care.
The case against Cathedral Henderson appears to be the fifirst round of criminal charges stemming from a wait-times scandal that came to light last year and led to the resignation of VA Secretary Eric Shinseki.
Henderson, 50, was in charge of revenue and billing and chief of “purchase care” in Augusta, coordinating medical care for veterans that VA could not offffffffffffer. He was responsible for ensuring that more than 2,700 veterans awaiting approval for care outside the system were properly referred to for doctor’s appointments.
But under pressure from VA headquarters in 2014 to close out all requests for outside care, Cathedral simply ordered his staffff to falsify the waiting patients’ medical records to show that the veterans had either completed or refused services, prosecutors allege.
Each of the charges against Henderson refers to a veteran with a pending need for medical care: Two patients were waiting for imaging, one for an ultrasound, one for neurology, another for surgery and 45 more for mammograms, according to prosecutors.
Henderson appeared in U.S. District Court and was released on bond. If convicted, he faces a maximum sentence of fifive years in prison and a $250,000 fifine.
His attorney,Keith B. Johnson of Augusta, told The Augusta Chronicle that his client “was following the directive of his supervisors.”