Federal prosecutors have accused the owner of a Houston-area wound care clinic and several affiliated clinics in other states of orchestrating a massive healthcare fraud scheme involving Medicare and Tricare billing. According to the indictment, the defendants allegedly submitted approximately $906 million in claims for medically unnecessary allograft procedures between October 2023 and April 2025. The government claims it paid roughly $297 million as a result of the alleged scheme.
Investigators contend that patients, including some who were terminally ill, received allograft treatments that were not medically necessary. Prosecutors allege the clinics generated extraordinarily high billing volumes, averaging more than $1 million in claims per patient. The indictment also claims the clinic operator received millions of dollars in kickbacks from companies distributing allograft products and paid healthcare providers to refer Medicare beneficiaries to the clinics.
The case highlights ongoing federal scrutiny of healthcare billing practices involving advanced wound care products and tissue grafts. For insurance professionals and fraud investigators, the allegations illustrate how medical necessity disputes, referral arrangements, and product reimbursement structures can create significant exposure for public and private payers…