Five Physicians, Six Others Charged in Sacramento-Based Medicare Fraud Scheme

Five physicians and six others have been indicted by a grand jury for their roles in running an alleged $5 million Medicare fraud scheme, according to a report by the KXTV News.

From Feb. 2006-Aug. 2008, physicians and staff at three clinics in and around Sacramento, Calif., allegedly billed Medicare more than $5 million in fraudulent claims for treating patients who were not sick. Vardges Egiazarian, MD, the alleged leader of the scheme, admitted healthy patients were paid $100 per visit in exchange for allowing the clinic to bill for its services. In some cases, services were billed for dates when the beneficiary was deceased, according to the report.

Dr. Egiazarian and another physician at the clinic, Derrick Johnson, MD, pleaded guilty last year. Dr. Egiazarian was sentenced in November to six-and-a-half years in prison and required to pay $1.5 million in restitution. Dr. Johnson has not yet been sentenced.

Last week, a grand jury extended healthcare fraud charges to five additional physicians and six others who knowingly committed healthcare fraud. Those indicted include: Alexander Popov, MD, Ramanathan Prakash, MD, Emilio Cruz III, MD, Lana Le Chabrier, MD, Sol Teitelbaum, MD, Migran Petrosyan, Khachatur Arutunyan, Shushanik Martirosyan, Zoya Belov, Nazaret Salmanyan and Liw Jiaw Saechao.

Read the KXTV News' report on the Sacramento Medicare fraud scheme.

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