37th United States Congress

$115 Million Settlement reached in Whistleblower cases with Adventist Health System

Settlement Amount: 
$115,000,000

A settlement has been reached in whistleblower class action lawsuits brought against Adventist Health System who is acccused of maintaining improper compensation arrangements with referring physicians and by miscoding claims.

The whistleblowers’ share of the settlement has not yet been determined. 

The allegations arose from two lawsuits, the first of which was filed in December 2012 and claimed that Adventist submitted false claims to the Medicare and Medicaid programs for services rendered to patients referred by employed physicians who received bonuses based on a formula that improperly took into account the value of the physicians’ referrals to Adventist hospitals.  Additionally, the settlement resolves allegations that Adventist submitted bills to Medicare for its employed physicians’ professional services containing certain improper coding modifiers, and thereby obtained greater reimbursement for these services than entitled.

Sort Amount: 
115000000.00
Company: 
Adventist Health System

$41 Million Settlement reached in two Whistleblower cases with Kos Pharmaceuticals

Settlement Amount: 
$41,000,000

A settlement has been reached in two whistleblower class action lawsuits brought against Kos Pharmaceuticals, a subsidiary of Abbott Laboratories, who is accused of paying illegal kickbacks to doctors, other medical professionals, physician groups and managed care organizations to get them to prescribe or recommend Niaspan and Advicor.

According to the agreement reached with the government, the Delaware-based company will pay more than $38 million to settle civil allegations under the False Claims Act and a $3.36 million criminal fine. The federal share of the civil settlement is $33,705,310 and the state Medicaid share is $4,454,432.The whistleblowers will receive payments totaling more than $6.4 million from the federal share of the civil recovery. 

The first of the two cases was filed in March 2004 and alleged that between January 2002 and June 2006, two doctors proposed that they would endorse the use of Kos products, including Advicor, for the treatment of cholesterol in exchange for a series of payments. During that time, one of the doctors wrote 4,130 prescriptions for Kos products. According to the court documents, some of those prescriptions were paid for by Medicare and Medicaid. From 2002 to 2004, Kos made a series of payments to the two doctors or a third party intermediary in the form of “sponsorship” of continuing medical education classes conducted by the doctors and purported speakers’ fees. 

If you have a similar case please fill out the form below or email mail@whistleonfraud.com or call: 619 - 866 – 6157

OR

 

If you or someone you know experienced a similar situation or any other wrongdoing within a corporation you should contact mail@whistleonfraud.com or call: 619 - 866 – 6157

Sort Amount: 
41000000.00
Company: 
Kos Pharmaceuticals

$6.88 Million Settlement reached in Whistleblower lawsuit with Pediatric Services Of America And Related Entities

Settlement Amount: 
$6,882,387

A settlement has been reached in a whistleblower class action lawsuit brought against Pediatric Services of America Healthcare, Pediatric Services of America, Inc., Pediatric Healthcare, Inc., Pediatric Home Nursing Services (collectively, “PSA”), and Portfolio Logic, LLC. They are accused of failing to disclose and return overpayments that it received from federal health care programs and submitting false claims to federal health care programs.

The whistleblowers will receive a $1,121,729 share of the recovery.

The case, filed in 2011, alleged that PSA knowingly (1) failed to disclose and return overpayments that it received from federal health care programs such as Medicare and Medicaid, (2) submitted claims under the Georgia Pediatric Program for home nursing care without documenting the requisite monthly supervisory visits by a registered nurse, and (3) submitted claims to federal health care programs that overstated the length of time their staff had provided services, which resulted in PSA being overpaid.

Sort Amount: 
6882390.00
Company: 
PSA Healthcare

$3.89 Million Settlement reached in Whistleblower lawsuit with Heart Device Manufacturer and Hospitals in Ohio & Kentucky

Settlement Amount: 
$3,898,300

A settlement has been reached in a whistleblower class action lawsuit brought against St. Jude Medical Inc, Parma Community General Hospital, and Norton Healthcare. They are accused of violating the False Claims Act in relation to certain illegal kickbacks to secure heart-device business.

Under the terms of the settlement, St. Jude, headquartered in St. Paul, Minn., will pay $3,725,000. Parma Community General Hospital, located in Parma, Ohio, will pay $40,000, and Norton Healthcare in Louisville, Ky., will pay $133,300. The government asserted that Parma and Norton were recipients of improper rebates from St. Jude.  The reward for the whistleblower will be $640,050.

The whistleblower case was originally filed in 2006. The United States alleged that St. Jude paid illegal kickbacks to two hospitals to secure heart-device business and that these kickbacks caused false claims to be submitted to federal health care programs in violation of the False Claims Act. The kickbacks included alleged rebates that were "retroactive" and paid based on a hospital’s previous purchases of St. Jude heart-device equipment and rebates that St. Jude paid for purchases of heart-device equipment sold by its competitors to induce purchases of similar equipment from St. Jude in the future.

Sort Amount: 
3898300.00

$108 Million Settlement reached in Whistleblower lawsuit with The Health Alliance of Greater Cincinnati and the Christ Hospital

Settlement Amount: 
$108,000,000

A settlement has been reached in a whistleblower class action lawsuit brought against The Health Alliance of Greater Cincinnati and one of its former member hospitals, The Christ Hospital. They are acused of paying unlawful remuneration to doctors in exchange for patient referrals.

The whistleblower will receive $23.5 million.

The original case was filed in March 2003. The United States complaint alleged that The Christ Hospital limited the opportunity to work at the Heart Station to those cardiologists who referred cardiac business to The Christ Hospital. The government further alleged that cardiologists whose referrals contributed at least two percent of the hospital’s yearly gross revenues were rewarded with a corresponding percentage of time at the Heart Station, where they had the opportunity to generate additional income by billing for the patients they treated at the unit and for any follow-up procedures that these patients required.

The government asserted that The Christ Hospital’s use of Heart Station panel time to induce lucrative cardiac referrals violated the federal Anti-Kickback Statute, which prohibits a hospital from offering or paying, or a physician from soliciting or receiving, anything of value in return for patient referrals. The United States also alleged that the claims The Christ Hospital submitted to Medicare and Medicaid as a result of this illegal kickback scheme constituted a violation of the False Claims Act.

Sort Amount: 
108000000.00

$87.5 Million Settlement reached in Whistleblower case with EMC Corporation

Settlement Amount: 
$87,500,000

A settlement has been reached in a whistleblower class action lawsuit brought against EMC Corporation who is accused of violating both the False Claims Act and the federal Anti-kickback Act.

The whistleblower reward for this settlement was not disclosed.

The original whistleblower case was filed in September 2004. The United States complaint alleged that, by misrepresenting its commercial pricing practices, EMC fraudulently induced the General Services Administration (GSA) to enter into a contract with prices that were higher than they would have been had the information technology company not made false misrepresentations. Specifically, the United States alleged that the Hopkinton, Mass.-based company represented during contract negotiations that, for each government order under the contract, EMC would conduct a price comparison to ensure that the government received the lowest price provided to any of the company’s commercial customers making a comparable purchase. According to the government’s complaint, EMC knew that it was not capable of conducting such a comparison, and so EMC’s representations during the negotiations – as well as its subsequent representations to GSA that it was conducting the comparisons – were false or fraudulent.

The United States also alleged that EMC engaged in an illegal kickback scheme designed to influence the government to purchase the company’s products. EMC maintained agreements whereby it paid consulting companies fees each time the companies recommended that a government agency purchase an EMC product.

Sort Amount: 
87500000.00
Company: 
EMC

$4.5 Million Settlement reached to resolve False Claims Act Allegations against Learning Tree International Inc

Settlement Amount: 
$4,500,000

A settlement has been reached to resolve False Claims Act allegations against Learning Tree International Inc who is accused of knowingly invoicing federal agencies for training courses that were not provided.

The settlement resolves allegations that Learning Tree knowingly invoiced federal agencies in advance for multi-course training packages before employees of the purchasing agencies had attended the full number of courses available under each. The government further alleged that upon expiration of the training packages, Learning Tree retained federal funds that the company received in connection with unused courses without providing a refund or credit. As a result, Learning Tree received federal funds for training courses that were not, in fact, provided.

Sort Amount: 
4500000.00
Company: 
Learning Tree

$12 Million Settlement reached in Whistleblower case with Hospice companies Florida Health Care Provider & Individual Physician

Settlement Amount: 
$12,000,000

A settlement has been reached in a whistleblower class action lawsuit brought against Dr. Todd J. Scarbrough and Melbourne Internal Medicine Associates P.A. (MIMA), who are accused of submitting false claims to Medicare and the military’s health care program - TRICARE.

The whistleblower will receive $2.64 million of the settlement.

The case was originally filed in July 2008.  The United States alleged MIMA Cancer Center had defrauded the federal health care programs by improperly inflating claims through various schemes specifically designed to cloak the fraudulent practices. In particular, the MIMA Cancer Center billed for services not supervised, duplicate and unnecessary services, services not rendered and upcoded services - a practice in which provider services are billed for higher procedure codes than were actually performed. The United States’ investigation found that MIMA executives had knowledge of a substantial number of the fraudulent billing practices at the facility, but had failed to stop the fraudulent billing.

Sort Amount: 
12000000.00
Company: 
Dr. Todd J. Scarbrough

$3.76 Million Settlement reached in Whisteblower case with Atricure Inc

Settlement Amount: 
$3,760,000

A settlement has been reached in a whistleblower class action lawsuit brought against Atricure Inc who is accused of submitting false and fraudulent claims for Medicare reimbursement.

The whistleblower that filed this lawsuit will receive a total of $625,000.

The case was originally filed in 2007.  The United States alleged that Atricure marketed its medical devices to treat atrial fibrillation (the most common cardiac arrhythmia or abnormal heart rhythm), a use that is not approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Atricure also allegedly promoted expensive heart surgery using the company’s devices when less invasive alternatives were appropriate, advised hospitals to up-code surgical procedures using the company’s devices to inflate Medicare reimbursement, and paid kickbacks to health care providers to use its devices. The United States asserted that by engaging in this conduct, Atricure knowingly violated the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act and caused the submission of false and fraudulent claims in violation of the False Claims Act.

Sort Amount: 
3760000.00
Company: 
Atricure

$1.97 Million Settlement reached to resolve False Claims Act Allegations against Omni Home Care

Settlement Amount: 
$1,970,000

A settlement has been reached to resolve False Claims Act allegations brought against Omni Home Care, and its parent corporation, Omni Home Health.  They are accused of failing to obtain certain required physician approvals before submitting bills for home health services to Medicare.

In August 2008, Omni submitted a disclosure to the Office of Inspector General, Department of Health and Human Services, in which Omni stated that the required physician signatures were not timely obtained for certain services provided at its Evansville, Ind., facility. 

The settlement reached resolves the violations mentioned in the Company's disclosure.

Sort Amount: 
1970000.00
Company: 
Omni Home Care

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