Doctors usually advise against taking a double dose of medication to catch up when a recommended spoonful, pill or shot has been missed. (Sometimes the side effects of missing a dose can be detrimental to one’s health when the doctor’s orders are not followed.)The owner of two pharmacies in the Miami area used her businesses to claim way more than a double dose – more like an overdose – of Medicare reimbursements she was not entitled to. (One of the side effects of her illegal acts could be prison.)
Fraudsters sometimes use family members to help carry out their scams. The woman at the center of this particular case used her son, who was a pharmacy technician at one of her two pharmacies to assist with paying kickbacks to Medicare beneficiaries. The son’s part involved writing checks to money launderers in order to obtain cash to pay the kickbacks to the Medicare beneficiaries. (The mastermind mom accumulated $16 million in overpayments from Medicare by also writing prescriptions that were medically unnecessary and sometimes never even dispensed to the beneficiaries.)
Both the 54-year-old mother and 29-year-old son pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit health care fraud in the multi-million-dollar Medicare fraud scheme. (It looks like she’ll be forced to follow the judge’s orders and swallow a bitter pill dispensed by the justice system when sentenced later this Fall.)
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