纽约诈骗犯在6800万美元成人日托欺诈案中认罪。
New York Scammers Plead Guilty In $68M Adult Day Care Fraud Scheme

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/political/new-york-scammers-plead-guilty-68m-adult-day-care-fraud-scheme

两名布鲁克林居民,Manal Wasef和Elaine Antao,已承认共谋实施医疗欺诈,涉案金额高达6000万美元,欺诈了纽约州的医疗补助居家护理项目。2017年至2024年间,她们将医疗补助受益人引流至特定的成人日托中心和一家家庭健康公司,以换取非法回扣和贿赂。 该骗局利用了消费者自主个人助理计划(CDPAP),这是一个监管有限的系统,利用多家公司洗钱并向受益人支付从未提供或通过非法支付获得的服务的费用。 作为认罪协议的一部分,Wasef和Antao将没收约100万美元,并面临最高10年监禁。她们是此案中认罪的第六和第七名个人,该案件最初涉及八人,包括涉事医疗实体的所有者和相关人员。司法部强调了其对追究纳税人资助的医疗保健项目欺诈行为的承诺。

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原文

Two scammers in Brooklyn pleaded guilty on Thursday to defrauding the state's controversial Medicaid home care program to the tune of $60 million. 

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Manal Wasef and Elaine Antao, both 46, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit health care fraud. Their scheme involved referring Medicaid recipients to two Brooklyn social adult day care centers and a home health company in exchange for illegal kickbacks and bribes, the DOJ announced on Thursday. 

Between approximately October 2017 and July 2024, in exchange for illegal kickbacks and bribes, Wasef and Antao referred Medicaid recipients to the social adult day cares and the home health company. The defendants also paid illegal kickbacks and bribes to Medicaid recipients for social adult day care services and home health care services that were billed to Medicaid but were not provided or that were induced by kickbacks and bribes. Wasef and Antao used multiple business entities to launder the fraud proceeds and generate the cash used to pay kickbacks and bribes. In connection with their guilty pleas, Wasef and Antao agreed to collectively forfeit approximately $1 million. Wasef and Antao are the sixth and seventh individuals, respectively, to plead guilty in this case. -DOJ

The pair were tapping into the Consumer Directed Personal Assistance Program (CDPAP), which allows people with minimal health care experience to care for their elderly disabled relatives and friends. According to the NY Posthundreds of 'middleman' firms work as de-facto payroll agents between the caregivers and Medicaid - all with minimal oversight.

On top of their guilty plea, the pair agreed to pay back around $1 million.

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"Today’s guilty pleas demonstrate the Department’s longstanding commitment to rooting out fraud in government health care programs by aggressively prosecuting those who steal from taxpayer-funded programs," said Assistant Attorney General A. Tysen Duva of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division.

The pair are scheduled to be sentenced in May, where they each face a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison. 

Overall, eight people were initially accused of participating in the yearslong scheme to defraud the state. Also charged were owners Zakia Khan and Ahsan Ijaz, as well as Oasmneah Hamdi, Ansir Abassi, and Amran Hashmi. 

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