Recent Pronouncements May Foreshadow Surge In Government Pursuit Of Health Care Fraud

Posted On Monday, October 12, 2015

The DOJ’s $69.5 million settlement with North Broward Hospital District and $115 million settlement with Adventist Health System (both relating to allegations of fraud and abuse), on the heels of DOJ’s release of its September 9 memorandum on Individual Accountability for Corporate Wrongdoing, provided health care executives with further warning about the government’s widespread strategies to curb fraud and abuse in health care. While the DOJ’s September 9 memorandum has made significant news since its announcement, a less heralded piece of correspondence may be an important driver in the way HHS pursues allegations of fraud and abuse.

In a previously undisclosed letter, dated February 26, 2015, OMB Director, Shaun Donovan, called upon HHS Secretary Sylvia Burwell to be more aggressive in preventing improper payments to Medicare and Medicaid health care providers. The existence of Director Donovan’s letter was first reported on by NPR and the Center for Public Integrity.

Citing HHS’s FY 2014 report of improper payments, totaling $12.2 billion in the Medicare and Medicaid programs, Director Donovan urged Secretary Burwell to work with his office to “continue to explore new and innovative ways to address the problem and continue to attack the challenge with every tool at our       disposal. . . .”

In the letter, Director Donovan also instructed Secretary Burwell’s agency to “re-examine improper payment reduction strategies on a number of fronts” through the use of the recently revised OMB Memorandum M-15-02, Appendix C to OMB Circular A-123, Requirements for Effective Estimation and Remediation of Improper Payments.  Appendix C details agency requirements for effective estimation and remediation of improper payments and is a direct result of the enactment of the Improper Payments Elimination and Recovery Improvement Act of 2012.

Director Donovan set a date of April 30 for the completion by HHS of a “comprehensive corrective action plan” that “describes the problem’s root causes, establishes critical path milestones to meet improper payment reduction targets”.  Director Donovan also asked for a plan to improve the integrity of the Affordable Care Act insurance programs by May 31, 2015.  According to the reporting of NPR and CPI, it is unclear if the requested documents were ever produced.

In his letter, Director Donovan posed to Secretary Burwell several self-reflective questions, including “[h]ow has your agency advanced data analytics and improved technology to prevent and reduce improper payments?”  This question coupled with many of the requirements set forth in Appendix C to OMB Circular A-123; suggest a more aggressive approach in the offing.  Appendix C includes guidance that states:

“Agencies should refer matters involving possible fraudulent activities to the appropriate parties as determined by specific agency policy.  Such parties may include, but are not limited to, the Office of Inspector General or the Department of Justice.”

This tone, combined with the DOJ’s recent pronouncements regarding pursuit of individuals, suggests that the recent wave of large financial settlements with the DOJ may be a foreshadowing of the government acting even more aggressively in pursuing claims of fraud and abuse against both health care organizations and individual executives and managers.

DOJ Pursues Political Corruption By Targeting Political Operatives And Lobbyists

Posted On Thursday, October 8, 2015
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The practice of lobbying and government relations, particularly on behalf of companies doing business with the government, has long been a focus of DOJ investigators and prosecutors.  They are known to look skeptically at the purpose of “consulting fees,” particularly when those consulting fees appear to be spun into political contributions.  One recent example is the case of lobbyist John P. Raphael, in a matter involving conduit contributions to elected officials in Ohio.  Raphael agreed last Friday to plead guilty in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Ohio to an information charging him with violation of the Hobbs Act.

According to the government, from March 2005 to February 2013, Mr. Raphael served as a lobbyist for RedFlex Traffic Systems, a vendor for red light traffic enforcement cameras.  RedFlex apparently engaged Raphael to seek and obtain contracts for the Cities of Columbus and Cincinnati.  At the time of his plea, Raphael admitted that he solicited campaign contributions from RedFlex on behalf of elected officials in Columbus and Cincinnati, and repeatedly pressured and induced the company to make contributions by advising the company that it would lose its contracts if it did not.  The campaign contributions, which totaled more than $70,000 during this time period, were then funneled through Raphael in his own name and in the names of his family members and business associates.

In June, the former CEO of RedFlex, Karen Finley, pleaded guilty in the same case to an information charging her with conspiracy to commit Federal Programs Bribery and Honest Services Wire and Mail Fraud.  In August, Finley also entered a plea of guilty in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois to similar charges regarding a $2 million bribery scheme in Chicago.  The investigation in that case resulted in charges against Chicago city officials as well. 

Neither Raphael nor Finley have been sentenced yet.  No officials from the Cities of Columbus or Cincinnati have been charged in this case.  According to the government release regarding the plea of Mr. Raphael, the investigation remains ongoing.

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