News

Select a news topic from the list below, then select a news article to read.

Owner of St. Mary's Ambulance Inc. Sentenced for Health Care Fraud Conviction

McALLEN, TX— Jesus Jorge Flores Jr., 38, the owner and operator of St. Mary’s Ambulance Inc., has been sentenced to prison for defrauding Medicare and Medicaid of more than $1 million by submitting false and fraudulent claims, United States Attorney José Angel Moreno and Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott announced today.

United States District Judge Randy Crane sentenced Flores, of Weslaco, Texas, to 24 months in federal prison without parole during a sentencing hearing today. In addition to the prison term, Flores has been ordered to pay restitution to the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services in the amount of $658,2581.13 and to serve a three-year-term of supervised release following the completion of his prison term. Flores pleaded guilty on July 7, 2008, to conspiracy to commit health care fraud -admitting that between February 2004 until September 2005 to having defrauding the two federal health care benefit programs by means of false and fraudulent claims in connection with the medically unnecessary delivery of ambulance transportation services to Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries to and from area hemodialysis centers.

Flores, who has been free on bond since his October 2007 arrest has been permitted to remain on bond until June 7, 2010, when he is ordered to surrender to the U.S. Marshals Service in McAllen, Texas, to be transported a Bureau of Prisons facility where he will serve his sentence.

The investigation leading to the charges in this case was conducted by FBI and the Texas Attorney General’s Office Medicaid Fraud Control Unit. Assistant United States Attorney Carolyn Ferko prosecuted the case.

Existence Genetics Founder Brandon Colby, MD to Speak at 2nd Annual Consumer Genetics Conference

With consumer genetics becoming more of a reality, Brandon Colby, MD, author of Outsmart Your Genes and founder and CEO of Existence Genetics, the world's first predictive medicine company, will join preeminent thinkers from government, healthcare, and biotechnology in leading discussion at the 2nd Annual Consumer Genetics Conference.

The unbiased forum that convenes in Boston at the Hynes Convention Center, June 2-4, will provide open dialogue from multiple perspectives on the challenges of and potential for genetic testing and personalized medicine. The scientific, clinical, business, and financial aspects of genetic testing will be candidly discussed by speakers and expert panels.

Dr. Colby will speak on the ease and importance of using predictive genetic testing in medical practices and illustrate the revolutionary work of Existence Genetics. In addition, he will offer his opinion on the current controversy over whether companies should be allowed to sell direct-to-consumer (DTC) and over-the-counter (OTC) genetic tests. The media are invited to attend this conference where they can hear Dr. Colby speak and meet with him one-on-one.

Founded in 2005 by a team of physicians, Existence Genetics grants health care professionals access to revolutionary predictive medicine services and delivers understandable, useful, and personalized solutions to protect and preserve health. The company's patent-pending Nexus technologies, including a proprietary, highly advanced gene chip known as the Nexus Gene Chip, enable comprehensive genetic testing and analysis that focuses on the personalized prevention of disease. This first-of-its-kind, highly accurate gene chip allows cost-effective, time-efficient screening for hundreds of potential disease predispositions, as well as for genes that are involved in the prevention and treatment of disease, thereby enabling the advent of genetically tailored prevention.

Through Existence's cutting-edge technological advancements, prediction and prevention of a wide range of both common and rare diseases are possible before they ever manifest. The future of medicine starts today.

To learn more about Existence Genetics and the Nexus technologies, visit www.existencegenetics.com.

About Brandon Colby, MD - Dr. Colby is a predictive medicine physician, geneticist, and entrepreneur. He is currently the only physician in the world to have invented his own state-of-the-art comprehensive genetic testing gene chip that is capable of cost-effectively detecting risks for hundreds of disease predispositions at a single time. In addition to being the founder and CEO of Existence Genetics, a company that provides predictive medicine services to the health care industry, he is also the Medical Director of Existence Health, a predictive medicine private practice in Los Angeles, and the author of the popular book Outsmart Your Genes, the definitive layperson's guide to predictive medicine.

Five Doctors, Six Others Indicted for Participating in Million Dollar Medicare Fraud Ring

SACRAMENTO, CA—United States Attorney Benjamin B. Wagner announced today that on May 20, 2010, a federal grand jury returned a 20-count superseding indictment charging five doctors and six others with conspiracy to commit health care fraud. The defendants are as follows:

Dr. Alexander Popov, 44, of Los Angeles;
Dr. Ramanathan Prakash, 63, of Northridge;
Dr. Emilio Cruz III, 57, of Los Angeles;
Dr. Lana Le Chabrier, 62, of Santa Barbara;
Dr. Sol Teitelbaum, 82, of Los Angeles;
Migran Petrosyan, 39, of Burbank;
Khachatur Arutunyan, 51, Tujunga;
Shushanik Martirosyan, 43, of Glendale;
Zoya Belov, 35, of Carmichael;
Nazaret Salmanyan, 27, of Citrus Heights; and
Liw Jiaw Saechao, 44, of Sacramento.

This case is the product of an extensive investigation by the Office of the Inspector General, Department of Health and Human Services, and the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Assistant United States Attorney Philip Ferrari is prosecuting the case.

The superseding indictment alleges that from February of 2006 through August of 2008, the defendants operated three health care clinics in Sacramento, Richmond, and Carmichael that submitted more than $5 million in fraudulent claims to Medicare.

The leader of the conspiracy, Vardges Egiazarian, 60, of Panorama City, was named in an original indictment that focused on the activities of the Richmond Clinic. The original indictment also charged Le Chabrier, Petrosyan, and Arutunyan, as well as Dr. Derrick Johnson with health care fraud.

According to Egiazarian’s guilty plea entered on August 12, 2009, he admitted that claims were submitted to Medicare for patients at each of the three clinics that the physicians did not treat and seeking reimbursement for procedures that were either unnecessary or never performed. Egiazarian admitted the clinic’s patients were recruited and transported to the clinic by individuals who were paid according to the number of patients they brought to the facility. Rather than being charged a co-payment, the patients were paid for their time and the use of their Medicare eligibility, generally $100 per visit. Some of the patients for whom billings were submitted at the Richmond Clinic were actually deceased on the date that they allegedly received services.

On November 6, 2009, Egiazarian was sentenced to six and a half years in prison and ordered to pay over $1.5 million to Medicare in restitution.

On September 9, 2009, Derrick Johnson entered a guilty plea to the original indictment. He admitted that hundreds of Medicare claims for services he allegedly performed at the Richmond clinic were submitted on his behalf, yet he had never set foot in the facility nor had he had any contact with its purported patients. He has yet to be sentenced.

The superseding indictment returned last Thursday adds both a conspiracy charge and allegations relating to the Richmond Clinic and adds the Sacramento and Carmichael Clinics. In sum, the superseding indictment charges that Doctors Popov, Prakash, Le Chabrier and Cruz each submitted applications to Medicare seeking approval to submit claims for medical services allegedly rendered at the clinics. Despite the approval of these applications, and the submission of over $5 million dollars worth of claims to Medicare, none of the doctors ever provided services or treatment at the clinics. As alleged in the indictment, clinic patients seldom received the services purportedly rendered in claims submitted to Medicare. Instead, Medicare-eligible patients were typically given cursory examinations and then paid $100 each for their trouble. The claims submitted to Medicare on behalf of these patients alleged that they received a variety of tests and treatments, including physical therapy sessions and sleep studies that were never performed at the clinics. The clinics maintained falsified medical files that held test results purportedly relating to the patients. In some instances, clinic employees performed procedures such as ultrasounds or blood draws on themselves or each other, and then placed the results in files relating to Medicare-eligible beneficiaries. The money paid by Medicare on these claims was distributed among the members of the conspiracy.

The maximum statutory penalty for a violation of both Health Care Fraud and Conspiracy to Commit Health Care Fraud is 10 years in prison. The actual sentence, however, will be determined at the discretion of the court after consideration of any applicable statutory factors and the Federal Sentencing Guidelines, which take into account a number of variables.

The charges in the superseding indictment are only allegations and each defendant is presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.

Drug and Alcohol Offenses: Lifetime Consequences

First offense simple possession of marijuana or underage possession of alcohol criminal charges usually do not carry heavy penalties in and of themselves. A fine and court costs may be the only penalty in Court if you plead guilty or are found guilty. The real penalty, however, occurs when you leave the courtroom. This penalty follows you for life. This penalty is a criminal record.

An estimated 80% of employers conduct criminal background checks. Apartment landlords obtain criminal record checks on most tenants. Almost everyone from employers to universities will check your criminal record. Their failure to investigate criminal backgrounds may open them to liability suits. Today, your criminal record is important to keep clean.

In our current economy where jobs have been cut and unemployment is high, there are numerous applicants for each job opening. For each applicant with a criminal record, his or her resume usually is discarded as there are many equally qualified candidates for the position without criminal records. A simple possession, first offense, will affect you the rest of your life.

Many believe that criminal offenses are like insurance points; they fall off your record after a certain number of years. Others believe that if the offenses occurred when they were between 16 and 21 years of age, they will fall off your record. This is not the case. Once on your criminal record, the offense stays on your criminal record, unless expunged.

If you have been charged with a first offense simple possession of marijuana or underage possession of alcohol, beware. Do not take the easy way out by pleading guilty and paying a fine and leaving the courthouse. There are programs designed for first offenders that will help keep your record clean. Successful completion of such programs usually allow for expungements of all information concerning the offense. Expungements keep your record clean. Remember however, you only get one such expungement in a lifetime in North Carolina.

Education, hard work and dedication are essential to a successful future. A clean criminal record is also essential. If you have made a mistake and been charged with a criminal offense, do not compound it by pleading guilty. Your future depends on it. Consult an attorney to determine your options to maintain a clean criminal record. In years to come, you will be glad you did.

Article provided by Ingram Law Office - Raleigh Personal Injury Attorney
Visit us at www.jringram.com

Breast Cancer Summit in Darwin: Supporting Sisters and Aunties to Survive!

More than 50 women representing Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities as far afield as Alice Springs and the Tiwi Islands, along with Aboriginal Health Workers and other health professionals, are expected to attend a breast cancer summit in Darwin on 26 May.

The Supporting Sisters and Aunties to Survive! Summit, has been funded by the Rudd Government under a $2.7 million Supporting Women in Rural Areas Diagnosed with Breast Cancer Program.

The Minister for Indigenous Health and Rural and Regional Health, Warren Snowdon, said the summit aims to support Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women who have been diagnosed with breast cancer, the rural health professionals who treat them, and their families and carers.

“Breast cancer is the most common cancer that women face. We know that at a time of great emotional stress Territory women often have to travel great distances to their treatment, away from their support networks, such as family and friends.

“For Indigenous women, the situation is often worse, because breast cancer is usually detected at a later stage and outcomes are generally poorer than for non-Indigenous women with breast cancer,” Mr Snowdon said.

The summit will be delivered by the National Breast and Ovarian Cancer Centre (NBOCC), and will be hosted by presenters from NBOCC, the Rural Doctors Association of Australia, BreastScreen NT, Cancer Council Northern Territory and the Royal Darwin Hospital.

It will provide information in a culturally-appropriate manner about breast cancer treatment and care and discuss practical initiatives and service delivery needs to help women with breast cancer.
The Supporting Women in Rural Areas Diagnosed with Breast Cancer Program complements other Australian Government breast cancer initiatives. These include:

    • $120 million for the latest digital mammography equipment for BreastScreen Australia;
    • $168 million for the continued funding of the Herceptin program, providing a therapeutic antibody treatment people with metastatic breast cancer;
    • $31 million to reimburse external breast prostheses for women who have had a mastectomy as a result of breast cancer; and
    • $12 million to the McGrath Foundation to employ breast care nurses now located in 44 communities across Australia.

In addition, the Rudd Government has committed $560 million to building a national network of best-practice regional cancer centres, to help improve access and support for cancer patients in rural and regional Australia.

Event Details:
The conference will be held on Wed 26 May at the Mirambeena Travelodge, 10am-3pm.