Thirteen individuals from the metro Detroit area have been
charged in a large-scale health care fraud and drug distribution scheme, United
States Attorney Barbara L. McQuade announced today.
The superseding indictment, adds 13 new defendants and new
charges to a 2011 indictment, which charged Canton Pharmacist Babubhai ‘Bob”
Patel with overseeing a massive health care fraud and drug distribution ring at
more than 20 pharmacies that he owned and controlled in metro Detroit.
The 21-count superseding indictment
charges with prescription fraud involving 26 Michigan pharmacies. The
indictment alleges that the defendants participated in a scheme whereby the
owners/controllers of the pharmacies provided kickbacks, bribes, and other
illegal benefits to physicians to induce those physicians to write
prescriptions for patients with Medicare,
Medicaid, and private insurance. The prescriptions be presented to one of the
defendants’ pharmacies for billing. In exchange for their kickbacks and
inducements, the physicians would write prescriptions for the patients and bill
the relevant insurers for services supposedly provided to the patients without
regard to the medical necessity of those prescriptions and services. The
physicians would direct the patients to fill their prescriptions at one of the
defendant owned pharmacies, where defendants would bill insurers, including
Medicare, Medicaid, and private
insurers, for dispensing the medications, despite the fact that the medications
were medically unnecessary and, in many cases, never provided. Patients were
recruited into the scheme by patient recruiters or “marketers,” who would pay
kickbacks and bribes to patients in exchange for the patients’ permitting the
defendants’ pharmacies and the defendant physicians to bill their insurance for
medications and services that were medically unnecessary and/or never provided.
The indictment further alleges a
conspiracy to distribute controlled substances at the defendants’ pharmacies to facilitate the submission of
false and fraudulent claims to Medicare, Medicaid, and private insurers.
According to the indictment, defendants paid physicians kickbacks for
prescriptions for controlled substances for their patients and directed those
patients to fill the prescriptions at defendants owned/controlled pharmacies.
The controlled substances included the Schedule II drug oxycodone (Oxycontin),
the Schedule III drug hydrocodone (Vicodin, Lortab), the Schedule IV drug
alprazolam (Xanax), and the Schedule V drug cough syrup with codeine. According
to the indictment, prescriptions for these drugs were written outside the
course of legitimate medical practice.
This most recent indictment falls in line with the federal
government’s increased investigation and prosecution of health care fraud
across the country. In May 2009, the
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)
and the Department of Justice (DOJ)
created the Health Care Fraud Prevention and Enforcement Action Team (HEAT),
making the fight against health care fraud a Cabinet-level position. The Heat
task force is focused on nine cities including Detroit.
If you have questions about health care fraud or other legal issues,
please contact Mark Mandell or Tariq Hafeez at 248.380.0000 or online at www.MichiganFraudLawyer.com.
A medical fraud defense attorney is a professional who can give you advice and guidance. You do not have to be in this situation on your own. You can get help and potentially even get out of the situation for good.
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