Pfizer Inc., the owner of Wyeth Pharmaceuticals Inc., will pay $491 million to resolve allegations of off-label marketing of the drug Rapamune.
Mark Campbell, the whistleblower and a former Wyeth sales representative, alleged that Wyeth illegally marketed, for over a decade, the transplant drug for uses that had not been approved by the U.S.
AccMed Healthcare Systems, LLC, also knows as the Florida Spine Care and Pain Center, have resolved allegations that it violated the False Claims Act.
The U.S. Attorney’s Office said the settlement involves Bao Pham, D.O, allegedly submitting false claims between 2004 and 2008 for non-reimbursable procedures and services by up-coding and unbundling medical services provided to beneficiaries of Medicare and Federal Office of Workers Compensation programs.
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, located in Boston and one of the world’s leading teaching hospitals, will pay over $5 million to settle allegations of improper Medicare claims.
The U.S. Attorney’s Office said the hospital improperly filed claims from 2004 to 2008 for inpatient admissions for patients who stayed overnight with congestive heart failure,
Zachery Wolfson, the son of Mitchell Wolfson, the chief medical officer and founding partner of Park Avenue Medical Associates (“PAMA”), reportedly filed a False Claims Act complaint that led to the New York company settling Medicare fraud allegations for $1 million.
The Department of Justice alleged that PAMA billed for psychiatry services for patients whose dementia or cognitive disorders actually made them unable to benefit from psychotherapy.
In a 25-page rebuke of the allegations that Lance Armstrong defrauded the government when he took sponsorship dollars from the Postal Service with the understanding that there would be no use of performance-enhancing drugs, Armstrong says that the Postal Service should have known that he was doping.
“Instead,
The U.S. Federal whistleblower statute enables individuals known as whistleblowers to unveil fraud within the government. Enacted in the 1860’s and significantly modified in the mid-1980’s, this statute has thus far led to the recovery of more than $30 billion for the U.S. Government in the last three decades alone by giving incentives and protection to those with information and willingness to blow the whistle on the unlawful activity.
CyTerra Corporation, a defense contractor and maker of IED sensors for the US Military, has agreed to pay $2 million to resolve civil-fraud allegations. The whistleblowers in the case, two former finance executives with the company, alleged that CyTerra inflated the costs of labor and materials to increase the company’s profits.
The DOJ has recently announced that the Doctors Hospital of Augusta, LLC has agreed to pay $1,020,000 to settle allegations that they submitted or caused the submission of false claims to the TRICARE and Medicare programs. The Doctors Hospital of Augusta, LLC is owned and operated by HCA Inc. and Radiation Oncology Associates,
Fifty-five health care facilities in twenty-one states have agreed to pay a total of over $34 million to settle allegations of submitting false claims to Medicare for minimally invasive kyphoplasty procedures. Kyphoplasty is used to treat specific spinal fractures frequently caused by osteoporosis. The settling hospitals were accused of booking patients for costly inpatient procedures rather than standard,
On July 1, New York Supreme Court Justice O. Peter Sherwood denied a motion to dismiss a lawsuit against Sprint Nextel Corp. for deliberately not collecting or paying millions of dollars of taxes for its cell phone service. The suit was brought by New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman who alleged,