What Medicaid Fraud Looks Like: Mansions, Sports Cars, Klingon Battle Swords, and 30,000 Dubious Claims

Yesterday, I noted a recent Government Accountability Office (GAO) report finding that, even after a decade on GAO's list of programs at high risk for fraud, Medicaid had made $14.4 billion in improper payments during the 2013 fiscal year.
Not all of that is outright fraud, but some of it is. And it's not all piddly scam-work either—minor billing tricks or other small-time schemes. Some of the fraud is really spectacular.
For example: There's the recent case of Rehan Zuberi, who allegedly managed to defraud New Jersey's Medicaid program of about $8 million over a five year period, according to a report in yesterday's Star-Ledger.
Zuberi ran a network of diagnostic imaging centers, and allegedly paid other doctors a total of about $300,000 to send patients to his offices for scans that they didn't need. Zuberi charged Medicaid for the procedures, kept most of the money for himself, and tipped other doctors to keep referring additional patients in order to keep the scan-scam going. According to the state's Attorney General, Zuberi filed some 30,000 fraudulent claims to the program before he was caught.
During the time he is alleged to have been running the scam, Zuberi managed to live the high life: He resided in what the Star-Ledger describes as a 9,000-square foot mansion, and kept $100,000 in cash in his home. He used a $400,000 cashier's check to buy a brand new 2014 Lamborghini. The state AG's office also reportedly seized a Ferrari and a Rolls-Royce as part of the investigation this week.
You hear this sort of large-scale fraud story far too often in conjunction with the nation's two big governemnt-run health programs. In February, officials charged 20 people with operating multiple competing Medicaid fraud rings in the District of Columbia—including one woman who had been barred from participating in federal health programs, but went on to bill D.C. Medicaid for $75 million.
These sorts of stories aren't limited to Medicaid. Medicare, the federal health program for seniors, made $49.9 billion in improper payments last year, up more than 10 percent from the year before. In 2011, the Justice Department busted a mob ring that had made $163 billion worth of fraudulent bills. Authorities took custody of a cache of weapons, including a replica of a Klingon battle sword.
In 2011 congressional testimony, a Texas concert-promoter turned Medicare fraudster explained how he fraudulently billed the government for $10 million over three years. It's "incredibly easy to commit," he said. "The primary skill required to do it successfully is knowledge of basic data entry on a computer."
The is what health care fraud looks like: mansions and fancy cars, mob activity and weird weapons, and tens or hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars spent funding fraudsters who find the program incredibly easy to scam.
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Without Medicaid, indigent children would be dying in the streets of easily preventable illnesses.
NEEDZ MOAR MUNNY
William Munny?
Deserve's got nuthin' to do with it.
The Duck of Death.
/Little Bill
"Deserve's" got nothing to do with it.
"It's a hell of a thing to kill a man. Take away all he's got, all he's ever done."
Thanks Reason for my daily reminder that I'm a complete sucker for leading a moral life and showing up at a job every day and working hard just to maintain a lifestyle with the bare basics!!!
And also thanks for the tutorial on medicaid fraud. Time to milk the teat of the state for all its got.
The trick is to not start living so far above your means that you get noticed.
Come on Suderman. Even Politico managed to actually use the term bat'leth. Also the bat'leth in that photo looks...really impractical?
That is the Sword of Kahless. Suderman should kill you where you stand.
I'm referring to the seized one in the Politico story. I know better than to disparage the Sword of Kahless.
The wind does not respect a fool, Hugh. You are wise.
Not if he starts talking shit about Jadzia, he's not.
Look, I don't have a problem with Jadzia okay? It's just that Ezri is way better.
Hab SoSlI' Quch!
Just remember, Hugh, that Nicole De Boer is named...Nicole. That kind of makes her almost the worst. At least Terry Farrell isn't named Nicole.
All I'm going to say is...which one of them was fucking sick enough to be into Bashir?
I have no idea, nicole. DS9 sucked and I barely watched any of it. Man, you really are the worst.
Uh Epi, DS9 was the best Star Trek series. TNG and VOY were great, but it's not even a contest.
Hugh's favorite Star Trek movie is Generations, followed by Into Darkness.
Haha, you know, I watched Generations again a couple weekends ago and I was like, damn, Epi must fucking hate this shit.
The only bad thing about Generations was that Shatner only died the one time.
Try Insurrection again, and you'll be thinking that double. I will admit that First Contact is pretty good though.
I give Insurrection a pass because Salieri, but...yeah.
The worst part (something you would understand) is that I got an advance copy from a friend before anyone else had it or could watch it...and it was that. Yay! I got an advance copy of shit!
People would love Insurrection if it were a two-part season finale episode. Why making it a movie turns it into the Worst. Thing. Evar. is beyond my comprehension.
I like the JJ Abrams ones.
Well, being the worst, I actually like it, because I mean, Gilbert and Sullivan, Picard slutting it up, Salieri...yeah.
It's the only Star Trek movie about the Prime Directive. And the only time Riker and Troi take a bath together. What's not to love?
...Riker?
You really are the worst.
I liked Insurrection too. Yeah it's a little hammy but there are several installments that are WAY worse.
Your prejudice against the genetically engineered is an ugly thing, nicole.
You mean my prejudice against douchebags?
Well, then, Suderman should kill you where you stand for other reasons.
This is a good day to defraud!
Sure, but did Politico use Klingon in its alt-text?
Good point. There is honor in your journalism. batlh bIHeghjaj.
Best. Alt-text. Ever.
I have a suggestion for a Fed. program that could be trimmed back. Trimmed back roughly 14.4 billion dollars worth.
including a replica of a Klingon battle sword.
A replica that looks like the maker never saw a bat'leth. The blades are supposed to curve toward the enemy, not toward the user.
And they're not supposed to have gaps in the blade. The whole point is for the bat'leth to act as both sword and shield.
This is what you use for your hegh'bat, when the time comes.
Or a disruptor.
You are not Fek'lhr!
The is what health care fraud looks like: mansions and fancy cars, mob activity and weird weapons, and tens or hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars spent funding fraudsters who find the program incredibly easy to scam.
The NYT, at this very moment, is working on a heartrending tale of that one poor struggling mother who is battling both a unique debilitating ailment and the heartless pennypinchers at some corporate insurance company, whose life could be made inestimably better by free unlimited health care provided by the federal government.
How could anybody oppose that?
that one poor struggling mother who is battling both a unique debilitating ailment
How could anybody oppose that?
If the people who want to repeal laws ever figure this out, they might make some headway in the political world. Nobody gives a crap about numbers and stats, but show them some innocent person* who has been tragically impacted and people will start to pay attention.
*think Bounkham "Bou Bou" Phonesavanh
The is what health care fraud looks like: mansions and fancy cars, mob activity and weird weapons
I'm thinkin its about time for a career change.
Indeed. Even if you get busted, you *still* have your needs taken care of by the government!
I remember the power wheel chair scam from about 10 years ago. The ringleaders got into Medicare fraud b/c it was safer and more lucrative than illegal drugs.
the power wheel chair scam
"Don't think you're eligible? Let US worry about that. Let's get started on your application today."
You hear this sort of large-scale fraud story far too often in conjunction with the nation's two big governemnt-run health programs
Yeah, and you also often hear about it in conjunction with an immigrant doctor or owner of the business. If they skip town on bail back the old country they can keep most of what they stole.