PHOENIX (AP/AZFamily) — State and federal prosecutors have charged more than 320 people and uncovered nearly $15 billion in false claims in what they described Monday as the largest coordinated takedown of health care fraud schemes in Justice Department history.
In Arizona, seven suspects have been linked to health care fraud in five separate cases.
- Farrukh Jarar Ali is charged with conspiracy to commit health care fraud, money laundering, and wire fraud for his involvement in an alleged $650 million scheme that included 41 substance abuse clinics.
- Cle’Esther Davenport, 51, of Peoria, is accused of a phony sober living home scheme that reportedly defrauded $1.58 million from AHCCCS.
- Ira Denny, 56, of Surprise, is accused of defrauding Medicare by billing for medically unnecessary equipment. Medicare reportedly paid $138,000 on these fraudulent claims, the feds said.
- Tyler Kontos, 29, of Mesa, Joel “Max” Kupetz, 36, of Scottsdale, and Jorge Kinds, 49, of Phoenix, are all charged in connection to a $1 billion amniotic wound allograft fraud scheme. They were indicted for health care fraud, conspiracy to commit health care fraud, and conspiracy to defraud the United States.
- Gina Palacios, 40, of Phoenix, was also charged with conspiracy to commit health care fraud in connection with a scheme to bill Medicare for unnecessary equipment procured through kickbacks.
“These criminals didn’t just steal someone else’s money. They stole from you,” Matthew Galeotti, who leads the Justice Department’s criminal division, told reporters Monday. “Every fraudulent claim, every fake billing, every kickback scheme represents money taken directly from the pockets of American taxpayers who fund these essential programs through their hard work and sacrifice.”
The alleged $14.6 billion in fraud is more than twice the previous record in the Justice Department’s annual health care fraud crackdown. It includes nearly 190 federal cases and more than 90 state cases that have been charged or unsealed since June 9. Nearly 100 licensed medical professionals were charged, including 25 doctors, and the government reported $2.9 billion in actual losses…