
Among the schemes was a major case involving fraudulent claims submitted to private insurer Aflac, expanding the DOJ’s enforcement reach beyond Medicare and Medicaid.
Key Schemes Behind the Charges
This historic takedown revealed a wide array of fraud schemes that should serve as a wake-up call for providers:
Aflac Private Insurance Fraud: One of the most significant cases involved coordinated efforts by doctors and patient recruiters to bill Aflac for medically unnecessary and sometimes unprovided services. In some instances, patients were allegedly offered gift cards to visit clinics, where they were coached to submit false claims for reimbursement.
Opioid Diversion & Pill Mills: More than 15 million prescription pills were illegally distributed through clinics posing as legitimate providers.
Unnecessary Procedures: Elderly patients were subjected to wound grafts and other treatments lacking medical justification, some while in hospice care.
Telehealth Abuse & Genetic Testing Scams: Telemedicine platforms were used to submit high-volume claims for services that were either excessive or never delivered.
Broader Audits: Expect increased reviews of billing practices across all insurer types.
Legal Risk: Providers engaging in questionable billing, even unintentionally, could face federal prosecution.
Compliance Must Be Ongoing: Even well-meaning providers must ensure their staff and systems meet current legal standards.
Compliance audits and billing reviews
Legal support for audits and investigations
Staff training on fraud prevention and best practices