Medicare Fraud and Medicaid Fraud
Whistleblowers are stepping forward to blow the whistle
on illegal kickbacks that cost taxpayers millions of
dollars. The anti-kickback statute makes it illegal for
health care providers to knowingly and willfully accept
bribes or kickbacks in return for generating Medicare,
Medicaid or other federal healthcare program business.
The federal anti-kickback law's main purpose was to
protect patients and federal health care programs from
fraud and abuse by curtailing the corrupting influence
of money on health care decisions.
If you are a health care
professional, hospital administrator, benefit
coordinator, or whistle blower that is aware of a health
care provider accepting kickbacks for generating
Medicare, Medicaid, or other Federal Health Care Program
referrals and services, feel free to
contact Medicare Fraud Illegal Kickback Lawyer, Jason
Coomer via e-mail message or use our
submission form. Some Medicare and Medicaid
Fraud Whistleblowers can recover a large amount of
money, if they are the original source of knowledge and
a successful relator of an illegal kickback Medicare
Fraud Lawsuit, Medicaid Fraud Lawsuit, VA Fraud Lawsuit,
Tricare Fraud Lawsuit, or Champus Fraud Lawsuit.
Medicare & Medicaid Referral
Kickback Lawsuits, Federal Health Program Medical
Provider Referral and Service Kickback Law Claims, and
other Qui Tam Health Care Fraud Lawsuits (Whistleblower
Law Suits)
The Anti-Kickback Statute prevents
payoffs to those who have the power to influence health
care decisions. This prohibition removes potential
economic incentives that could influence health care
providers to refer or recommend medical goods and
services that are medically inappropriate, medically
unnecessary, of poor quality, or even harmful to a
vulnerable patient population. This legislation combined
with the Federal False Claims Act protects federal
health care programs from difficult to detect kickback
referrals and services as well as provides economic
incentives to whistle blowers properly report medical
providers that are wrongfully taking money through
bribes, and unlawful kickbacks.
Heart Device Manufacturer in
Minnesota and Hospitals in Ohio & Kentucky to Pay Nearly
$4 Million to Resolve Fraud Allegations
St. Jude Medical Inc., a heart device
manufacturer; Parma Community General Hospital; and
Norton Healthcare have paid the United States $3,898,300
to resolve false claim allegations that St. Jude paid
illegal kickbacks to two hospitals to secure
heart-device business, the Justice Department announced
today. The government alleges the kickbacks caused false
claims to be submitted to federal health care programs
in violation of the False Claims Act. The kickbacks
included alleged rebates that were "retroactive" and
paid based on a hospital’s previous purchases of St.
Jude heart-device equipment and rebates that St. Jude
paid for purchases of heart-device equipment sold by its
competitors to induce purchases of similar equipment
from St. Jude in the future.
Under the terms of the settlement,
St. Jude, headquartered in St. Paul, Minn., will pay
$3,725,000. Parma Community General Hospital, located in
Parma, Ohio, is paying $40,000, and Norton Healthcare in
Louisville, Ky., is paying $133,300. The government
asserted that Parma and Norton were recipients of
improper rebates from St. Jude.
"Hospitals should base their
purchasing decisions on what is in the best interests of
their patients," said Tony West, Assistant Attorney
General for the Civil Division of the Department of
Justice. "We will act aggressively to ensure that
choices about health care are not tainted by illegal
kickbacks."
This action was initiated by the
filing of an action under the False Claims Act by Jerry
Hudson. Under the qui tam, or whistleblower, provisions
of the Act, private citizens may bring lawsuits on
behalf of the United States and share in any recovery.
Mr. Hudson’s share of the settlement announced today
will be $640,050.
"The Department of Justice is
committed to requiring that federal healthcare monies
are properly spent," said Steven M. Dettelbach, U.S.
Attorney for the Northern District of Ohio. "This case
illustrates the necessity of oversight of federal health
care programs in the United States."
The settlement was the result of an
investigation by the Justice Department’s Civil
Division, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern
District of Ohio, the Office of Inspector General at the
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, and the
FBI.
This settlement is part of the
government’s emphasis on combating health care fraud.
One of the most powerful tools in that effort is the
False Claims Act, which the Justice Department has used
to recover approximately $3.0 billion since January 2009
in cases involving fraud against federal health care
programs.
Medicare & Medicaid Referral
Kickback Lawsuits, Federal Health Program Medical
Provider Referral and Service Kickback Law Claims, and
other Qui Tam Health Care Fraud Lawsuits (Whistleblower
Law Suits)
In
1972, the United States Congress passed the
anti-kickback statute which made it illegal for
providers, including doctors, to knowingly and
willfully accept bribes or other forms of
remuneration in return for generating Medicare,
Medicaid or other federal healthcare program
business. The federal anti-kickback law's main
purpose was to protect patients and federal health
care programs from fraud and abuse by curtailing the
corrupting influence of money on health care
decisions. The legislation prevents payoffs to
those who have the power to influence health care
decisions. This prohibition removes potential
economic incentives that could influence health care
providers to refer or recommend medical goods and
services that are medically inappropriate, medically
unnecessary, of poor quality, or even harmful to a
vulnerable patient population. This legislation
protects federal health care programs from difficult
to detect kickback referrals and services as well as
works with other laws to provide incentives for
whistle blowers that are aware of medical providers
that are wrongfully taking money to benefit from
disclosing these unlawful kickbacks.
Federal Anti-Kickback Statute
Lawsuits, Federal Health Care Program Referral Claim
Lawsuits, Federal Health Care Program Medical Supply
Bribery Claim Lawsuits, and Benefits for Generating
Medicare, Medicaid, Champus/Tricare, and other Federal
Health Care Program Lawsuits
The Anti-Kickback statute prohibits
any person or business entity from making or accepting
payment to induce or reward any person for referring,
recommending or arranging for the purchase of any item
or service for which payment may be made under a
federally-funded health care program. The statute
prohibits kickbacks, bribes, inducements, rewards, and
other economic incentives that induce physicians to
refer patients for services or recommend purchase of
medical supplies that will be reimbursable under
government health care programs.
Health Care Provider claims for
reimbursement to federal health care programs for
services or medical supplies that are the result of
bribes, kickbacks, or other economic incentives are
false claims and are subject to potential Medicare Fraud
Kickback Lawsuits including Medicare Anti-Kickback
Statute Lawsuits, Medicaid False Claims Act Lawsuits,
and other Federal Health Care Program Fraud Lawsuits.
Failure of a health care
provider to comply with the Anti-Kickback Statute is a
precondition to participation in federal health care
programs and violations of the Anti-Kickback Statute can
result in loss of funding, payments, and reimbursements
from Medicare, Medicaid, and other Federal Health Care
Programs.
The Anti-Kickback Statute "Safe
Harbor" Provisions
Because the Anti-Kickback Statute was
initially broad on its face, concerns arose among health
care providers that some beneficial commercial
arrangements were prohibited. Responding to these
concerns, Congress authorized "safe harbors" for various
payment and business practices that, while potentially
prohibited by the law, would not be prosecuted.
The Antikickback Statute contains
certain exceptions or "safe habors", which allow conduct
that would otherwise violate the statute including
allowing the Secretary of Department of Health and Human
Service to promulgate regulations which identify
practices which do not violate the Antikickback Statute.
Some of these safe habors can be found at 42 C.F.R.
§ 1001.952.
Medicare Fraud Kickback Lawyers,
Medicare Fraud Medical Device Kickback Lawyers, Illegal
Hospital Kickback False Claims Act Lawyers, Medicaid
Fraud Kickback Lawyers, and other Illegal Kickback Qui
Tam Health Care Fraud Lawyers
(Medicaid and Medicare Illegal Kickback Whistleblower
Lawsuits)
It is extremely important that
Medical Professionals, Hospital Administrators, Benefit
Coordinators, Accountants, and other Whistle Blowers
continue to expose fraudulent billing practices,
kickback arrangements, Federal Health Care Program
Referrals, Federal Health Care Program Medical Supply
Bribery Rings, and unnecessary treatments that cost
hundreds of billions of dollars.
Medicare Fraud Illegal Kickback
Lawyer Jason S. Coomer commonly works with other
Medicare Fraud Whistleblower Lawyers, Medicare
Fraudulent Kickback Lawyers, Medicare Fraud Medical
Device Kickback Lawyers, Medicare Fraud Illegal Hospital
Kickback Lawyers, and Other Illegal Kickback False
Claims Act Lawyers on Medicaid and Medicare Illegal
Kickback Whistleblower Lawsuits.
If you are aware of a large health
care company or individual that is defrauding the United
States Government out of millions or billions of
dollars, contact
Medicare Fraud Illegal Kickback Lawyer Jason
Coomer. As a Texas Medicaid and Medicare Fraud Illegal
Kickback Lawyer, he works with litigation teams of
powerful qui tam lawyers that handle large Health Care
Government Fraud
Federal False Claims Act cases throughout the nation
to blow the whistle on fraud that hurts the United
States.