Massive fraud makes Medicare a lousy modelPublished: 2009-11-26 09:02:24Author: Ron Smith | Baltimore Sun | October 30, 2009In what must be considered a monumental understatement, Attorney General Eric H. Holder told
CBS News' "60 Minutes" that more oversight of
Medicarefunds is needed. I'll say, considering what we have learned about the
scope and ease of stealing billions of dollars from the American
taxpayer by means of fraudulent claims for care that never happened. To
Mr. Holder's credit, his agency has been frantically cracking down on
this thievery for some time now, resulting in the indictments of dozens
of criminals in Miami, Detroit, Los Angeles and elsewhere. Still, this
is merely the tip of what turns out to be a gargantuan iceberg.
The problems of health care - and the prospects for some effective
reform of the systems we have to pay for it - are front and center as
Washington's legislative geniuses work their magic behind closed doors,
crafting "reform" they say will provide health insurance for those who
lack it while somehow reducing the skyrocketing costs of providing it.
However, what's happening in the Medicare rip-off is not a comforting
augury of what lies ahead if government manages the entire medical
bureaucracy. After all, Medicare is a government-run insurance program
begun in 1965 that pays for the health care needs of 46 million elderly
and disabled Americans. According to the "60 Minutes" story Sunday, it
also is a honey pot for enterprising criminals who steal tens of
billions from the system every year.
As one might expect,
organized crime has moved enthusiastically into this business, which is
safer and more profitable than any number of other criminal
enterprises, such as prostitution, drug smuggling and gambling rings.
But, as a busted Medicare scammer identified only as "Tony" told CBS
correspondent Steve Kroft, it requires no great criminal genius to
steal millions from Medicare. He said it's "like taking candy from a
baby." In his case, he set up a number of health care businesses in an
office building, obtained ID numbers of doctors and patients and sent
bills to Medicare for expensive medical devices, such as artificial
limbs and fancy wheelchairs. He says he made $20,000 to $40,000 a week,
money sent directly to his bank account from the government.
The
ease of this larceny has, according to Justice Department prosecutor
Kirk Ogrosky, made the Medicare fraud businesses a "way bigger"
criminal industry in South Florida than the drug businesses. It's so
easy to steal in this way that even slugs that might have been in the
very lower rungs of the crime business have discovered that instead of,
say, stealing cars, they might as well help themselves to millions of
dollars by defrauding Medicare. No more effort, much more profit.
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