Austin Medical Times

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Austin Medical Times

Legal Matters DOJ Creates National Rapid Response Strike Force as Focus on Health Care Fraud Continues to Grow

By Brian T. Rafferty, JD Brea M. Croteau, JD Polsinelli, PC

A

s COVID-19 continues to ravage the United States, the Department of Justice (DOJ) has recently announced its new National Rapid Response Strike Force within the Health Care Fraud Unit to investigate and prosecute fraud cases involving major health care providers that operate in multiple jurisdictions. The newly created Strike Force will focus on the investigation and prosecution of individuals and corporations, and cases like the large-scale rural hospitals billing fraud matter indicted in the Middle District of Florida and the global resolution with

Tenet Healthcare Corporation and related individual prosecutions will be within the purview of the Strike Force. Those cases involve a range of alleged violations of federal statutes, including healthcare fraud, conspiracy, and the Anti-Kickback Statute. The Strike Force relies on data analytics to target fraudulent activities, as opposed to the traditional reliance on whistleblowers and qui tam actions in the health care arena. Additionally, the Strike Force is based in Washington, D.C., with experienced investigators and prosecutors enabling the Strike Force to act quickly and take the burden away from local U.S. Attorneys’ offices that are inundated with complaints of COVID-related fraud. The Strike Force will also handle the prosecutions of those seeking to criminally exploit the COVID-19 pandemic through health care fraud and related financial fraud schemes. The Strike Force will handle criminal cases like the case recently brought against a North Carolina man who

fraudulently sought over $6 million in Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) loans for several entities. His PPP loan applications were supported by false statements about the companies’ employees and payroll expenses, and fake documents, including falsified tax filings. Charges, in that case, included wire fraud, bank fraud, and engaging in unlawful monetary transactions. The case was investigated by the U.S. Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration, the FDIC Office of Inspector General (OIG), and the FBI, with the assistance of the Small Business Administration OIG. This is not the only example of a criminal case swiftly investigated and indicted in recent months specifically targeting those trying to exploit PPP loans and other COVID-related relief programs. In Texas, a woman was charged after receiving more than $1.9 million in PPP loans on behalf of two entities that neither had employees nor paid wages consistent with the amounts claimed in the loan

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applications. A National Football League player in Florida was indicted for his participation in a conspiracy to obtain more than $24 million in PPP loans, using more than $104,000 of the proceeds from the fraudulent loans to purchase luxury goods from Dior, Gucci, and jewelers. Two brothers in New York were charged with wire fraud conspiracy after submitting at least eight fraudulent loan applications in an attempt to obtain nearly $7 million in PPP loans. These examples are an indication of the explosion of criminal prosecutions related to the disbursement of COVID relief funds see Legal Matters...page 14

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November 2020


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