Ban Ki-moon: break the corruption chain

Message from UN Secretary-General, Ban Ki-moon,
  on International Anti-Corruption Day
9 December 2015

Global attitudes towards corruption have changed dramatically. Where once bribery, corruption and illicit financial flows were often considered part of the cost of doing business, today corruption is widely — and rightly — understood as criminal and corrosive. The new 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, our plan to end poverty and ensure lives of dignity for all, recognizes the need to fight corruption in all its aspects and calls for significant reductions in illicit financial flows as well as for the recovery of stolen assets.

Corruption has disastrous impacts on development when funds that should be devoted to schools, health clinics and other vital public services are instead diverted into the hands of criminals or dishonest officials.

Corruption exacerbates violence and insecurity. It can lead to dissatisfaction with public institutions, disillusion with government in general, and spirals of anger and unrest.

The United Nations Convention against Corruption provides a comprehensive platform for governments, non-governmental organizations, civil society, and individual citizens. Through prevention, criminalization, international cooperation and assets recovery, the Convention advances global progress toward ending corruption.

On International Anti-Corruption Day, I call for united efforts to deliver a clear message around the world that firmly rejects corruption and embraces instead the principles of transparency, accountability and good governance. This will benefit communities and countries, helping to usher in a better future for all.

Anche il semplice mancato aggiornamento del Piano Anticorruzione, è sanzionato dall’ANAC.

ANAC, provvedimento n. 423 del 18 novembre 2015.
Un Comune, pur avendo adottato il Piano Triennale di Prevenzione della Corruzione (P.T.P.C.) ed il relativo Piano della Trasparenza (P.T.T.I.) relativamente al triennio 2014-2016, ha omesso l’adozione degli aggiornamenti del P.T.T.I. e del P.T.P.C. relativi al triennio 2015-2017.
A seguito dell’avvio del procedimento sanzionatorio disposto dall’ANAC, l’Amministrazione comunale con nota a firma del segretario comunale responsabile anticorruzione, nulla ha riferito in ordine all’aggiornamento del PTPC e PTTI per l’anno 2015.
L’Amministrazione comunale non ha fornito idonee giustificazioni rispetto alla mancata adozione dei documenti indicati e nulla ha riferito circa la volontà di adottare gli atti mancanti.
Il Comune ha quindi violato l’obbligo di aggiornamento del PTPC 2015-2017 e del PTTI (art. 1, comma 8 della legge 6 novembre 2012 n.190, Comunicato del Presidente del 13.7.2015, delibera n. 50 del 2013), e l’ANAC ha irrogato una sanzione amministrativa di 1.000 euro.
PTPC omesso aggiornamento ANACSanzione_423_2015

Owner of Los Angeles Medical Supply Company Convicted in $4 Million Medicare Fraud Scheme

A federal jury in Los Angeles convicted a Los Angeles man and owner of a medical supply company today for his role in a $4 million Medicare fraud scheme.
Owner of Los Angeles Medical supply Company Convicted in $4 Million Medicare Fraud Scheme
According to evidence presented at trial, Valery Bogomolny, 43, used his company, Royal Medical Supply, to bill Medicare $4 million between January 2006 and October 2009 for power wheelchairs (PWCs), back braces and knee braces that were medically unnecessary, not provided to beneficiaries or both
Since its inception in March 2007, the Medicare Fraud Strike Force, now operating in nine cities across the country, has charged nearly 2,300 defendants who have collectively billed the Medicare program for more than $7 billion.

457 hospitals pay to DOJ 250Mil. Whistleblowers receive 38Million

The Department of Justice has reached 70 settlements involving 457 hospitals in 43 states for more than $250 million related to cardiac devices that were implanted in Medicare patients in violation of Medicare coverage requirements, the Department of Justice announced today.
The whistleblowers have received more than $38 million from the settlements.  
The NCD expressly prohibits implantation of ICDs during the waiting periods, with certain exceptions.  The Department of Justice alleged that from 2003 to 2010, each of the settling hospitals implanted ICDs during the periods prohibited by the NCD.  

A whistleblower will receive $31,83 million, share of $256 million paid from Millenium Health

Millennium Health, formerly Millennium Laboratories, has agreed to pay $256 million to resolve alleged violations of the False Claims Act for billing Medicare, Medicaid and other federal health care programs for medically unnecessary urine drug and genetic testing and for providing free items to physicians who agreed to refer expensive laboratory testing business to Millennium, the Justice Department announced today.
The whistleblowers will receive $30.35 million from the False Claims Act recovery for the urine drug testing claims and $1.48 million from the False Claims Act recovery for the genetic testing claims.
Millennium, headquartered in San Diego, is one of the largest urine drug testing laboratories in the United States and conducts business nationwide.
As part of today’s announced settlements, Millennium has agreed to pay $227 million to resolve False Claims Act allegations, detailed in a complaint filed by the United States, that Millennium systematically billed federal health care programs for excessive and unnecessary urine drug testing from Jan. 1, 2008, through May 20, 2015. The United States alleged that Millennium caused physicians to order excessive numbers of urine drug tests, in part through the promotion of “custom profiles,” which, instead of being tailored to individual patients, were in effect standing orders that caused physicians to order large number of tests without an individualized assessment of each patient’s needs. This practice violated federal healthcare program rules limiting payment to services that are reasonable and medically necessary for the treatment and diagnosis of an individual patient’s illness or injury. The United States also alleged that Millennium’s provision of free point of care urine drug test cups to physicians—expressly conditioned on the physicians’ agreement to return the urine specimens to Millennium for hundreds of dollars’ worth of additional testing—violated the Stark Law and the Anti-Kickback Statute. The Stark Law and the Anti-Kickback Statute generally prohibit laboratories from giving physicians anything of value in exchange for referrals of tests.
Millennium has also agreed to pay $10 million to resolve False Claims Act allegations that it submitted false claims to federal health care programs from Jan. 1, 2012, through May 20, 2015, for genetic testing that was performed routinely and without an individualized assessment of need.
The False Claims Act allegations resolved were originally brought in lawsuits filed by whistleblowers under the qui tamprovisions of the False Claims Act, which allow private parties to bring suit on behalf of the government and to share in any recovery. Under the act, the United States can elect to intervene in an action filed by a whistleblower, as it did, in part, with respect to several of the qui tamactions regarding urine drug testing allegations.

Here the press release

Un whistleblower riceverà circa 18,1 milioni di dollari, parte della sanzione che un ospedale del Sud Carolina pagherà agli Stati Uniti.

Il Dipartimento di Giustizia USA ha annunciato che ha concluso un contenzioso del valore di 237 milioni di dollari con un ospedale del Sud Carolina, per servizi a pazienti indirizzati da medici che avevano una relazione finanziaria con l’ospedale, cioè venivano compensati con partecipazioni o utili in rapporto ai pazienti che indirizzavano.
Il Governo riceverà 72,4 milioni di dollari.
La Stark Law prescrive che i medici siano pagati secondo il valore medio di mercato, e non in rapporto al volume dei pazienti indirizzati all’ospedale.
Invece, l’ospedale pagava gli specialisti esterni secondo il numero di pazienti da indirizzare, in tal modo superando la retribuzione media, e pagava loro i profitti con parte di quanto riceveva dal programma sanitario del Governo.
Il valore della truffa è stato stimato dalla Corte d’Appello in 237 milioni di dollari, con sentenza del 2 luglio 2015.
L’illegittimità è stata segnalata da un medico che ha rifiutato di sottoscrivere il contratto, e che ora riceverà circa 18 milioni di dollari.
In allegato la sentenza del 2 luglio.
United States Resolves $237 Million False Claims _appello02072015

A whistleblower will receive approximately $18.1 million, share of the payment ($72,4) that United States will receive from South Carolina Hospital.

The Department of Justice announced that it has resolved a $237 million judgment against Tuomey Healthcare System for illegally billing the Medicare program for services referred by physicians with whom the hospital had improper financial relationships. Under the terms of the settlement agreement, the United States will receive $72.4 million and Tuomey, based in Sumter, South Carolina, will be sold to Palmetto Health, a multi-hospital healthcare system based in Columbia, South Carolina.
“Secret sweetheart deals between hospitals and physicians, like the ones in this case, undermine patient confidence and drive up healthcare costs for everybody, including the Medicare program and its beneficiaries,” said Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Benjamin C. Mizer, head of the Justice Department’s Civil Division. “This case demonstrates the United States’ commitment to ensuring that doctors who refer Medicare beneficiaries to hospitals for procedures, tests and other health services do so only because they believe the service is in the patient’s best interest, and not because the physician stands to gain financially from the referral. The Department of Justice is determined to prevent the kind of abuses uncovered in this case, and we are willing to take such cases to trial to protect the integrity of the Medicare program.”
The judgment against Tuomey related to violations of the Stark Law, a statute that prohibits hospitals from billing Medicare for certain services (including inpatient and outpatient hospital care) that have been referred by physicians with whom the hospital has an improper financial relationship. The Stark Law includes exceptions for many common hospital-physician arrangements, but generally requires that any payments that a hospital makes to a referring physician be at fair market value for the physician’s actual services, and not take into account the volume or value of the physician’s referrals to the hospital.
The government argued in this case that Tuomey, fearing that it could lose lucrative outpatient procedure referrals to a new freestanding surgery center, entered into contracts with 19 specialist physicians that required the physicians to refer their outpatient procedures to Tuomey and, in exchange, paid them compensation that far exceeded fair market value and included part of the money Tuomey received from Medicare for the referred procedures. The government argued that Tuomey ignored and suppressed warnings from one of its attorneys that the physician contracts were “risky” and raised “red flags.”
On May 8, 2013, after a month-long trial, a South Carolina jury determined that the contracts violated the Stark Law. The jury also concluded that Tuomey had filed more than 21,000 false claims with Medicare. On Oct. 2, 2013, the trial court entered a judgment under the False Claims Act in favor of the United States for more than $237 million. The United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit affirmed the judgment on July 2, 2015.
“This case reinforces the need for hospitals to abide by the requirements of the Stark Law,” said U.S. Attorney Thomas G. Walker of the Eastern District of North Carolina.
The case arose from a lawsuit filed on Oct. 4, 2005, by Dr. Michael K. Drakeford, an orthopedic surgeon who was offered, but refused to sign, one of the illegal contracts. The lawsuit was filed under the qui tam,or whistleblower, provisions of the False Claims Act, which permit private individuals to sue on behalf of the government for false claims and to share in any recovery. The act allows the government to intervene and take over the action, as it did in this case. Dr. Drakeford will receive approximately $18.1 million under the settlement.
“The type of abusive compensation arrangements at issue in this case is precisely what the physician self-referral law was designed to prevent,” said Inspector General Dan Levinson of of the Department of Health and Human Services-Office of the Inspector General (HHS-OIG). “Patients need and deserve to know that the hospital services they receive are the product of sound medical judgment, rather than motivated by the physician’s financial interests. The extensive litigation and settlement in this case should send a signal to the hospital industry that these tainted financial relationships simply will not be tolerated.”
As part of the settlement announced today, Tuomey will be required to retain an independent review organization to monitor any arrangements it makes with physicians or other sources of referrals for the duration of the five-year Corporate Integrity Agreement.
This case illustrates the government’s emphasis on combating health care fraud and marks another achievement for the Health Care Fraud Prevention and Enforcement Action Team (HEAT) initiative, which was announced in May 2009 by the Attorney General and the Secretary of Health and Human Services. The partnership between the two departments has focused efforts to reduce and prevent Medicare and Medicaid financial fraud through enhanced cooperation. One of the most powerful tools in this effort is the False Claims Act. Since January 2009, the Justice Department has recovered a total of more than $25.3 billion through False Claims Act cases, with more than $16.1 billion of that amount recovered in cases involving fraud against federal health care programs. Tips and complaints from all sources about potential fraud, waste, abuse, and mismanagement, including the conduct described in the opinions of the trial and appellate courts in this case, can be reported to the Department of Health and Human Services, at 800-HHS-TIPS (800-447-8477).
The judgment and resolution of the case were the result of a coordinated effort by the Civil Division’s Commercial Litigation branch, the U.S. Attorney’s Office of the Eastern District of North Carolina and HHS-OIG.
The case is captioned United States ex rel. Drakeford v. Tuomey Healthcare System, Inc., Case No. 3:05-cv-02858 (MBS) (D.S.C.).
United States Resolves $237 Million False Claims Act Judgment against South Carolina Hospital that Made Illegal Payments to Referring Physicians _ OPA _ Department of Justice