If you are a physician, nurse practitioner, physician assistant, pharmacist, hospital administrator, or healthcare business owner, and you have received a target letter from a federal prosecutor, been contacted by FBI or HHS-OIG agents, or learned that colleagues or employees are cooperating with a federal investigation, your career, your freedom, and your ability to practice medicine are all at risk.
Federal healthcare fraud prosecutions have increased significantly in the Northern District of Texas, driven by dedicated Healthcare Fraud Strike Forces and sophisticated data analytics that allow the government to identify billing patterns that deviate from peer norms. At Deandra Grant Law, Attorney James Lee Bright has more than 25 years of experience defending clients in complex federal cases, including the document-intensive, data-driven prosecutions that healthcare fraud cases produce.
How Healthcare Professionals Become Federal Targets
Data Analytics and Statistical Outlier Identification
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) and law enforcement agencies use sophisticated data analytics to identify healthcare providers whose billing patterns deviate significantly from their peers. If you bill more frequently for certain procedure codes, if your average patient visit duration appears inconsistent with the services billed, if your referral patterns deviate from norms, or if your patients receive an unusual volume of specific services, your practice may be flagged for investigation. These statistical analyses are the starting point for many investigations but they do not, by themselves, prove fraud.
Whistleblower (Qui Tam) Lawsuits
Under the False Claims Act, current or former employees, business partners, or competitors can file qui tam lawsuits alleging healthcare fraud. These lawsuits are filed under seal and investigated by the government before the target is informed. If the government intervenes in the qui tam action, it frequently leads to criminal prosecution in addition to the civil False Claims Act case. Many healthcare fraud investigations begin with a disgruntled employee or a business dispute that escalates into a federal case.
Patient and Employee Complaints
Reports to the HHS-OIG hotline from patients who believe they were billed for services they did not receive, or from employees who observe billing practices they believe are improper, can trigger federal investigations.
Referrals from Insurance Companies and State Regulators
Private insurance companies and state Medicaid fraud control units may refer suspicious billing patterns to federal prosecutors, particularly when the amounts involved exceed state prosecution thresholds or when the scheme crosses state lines.
The Criminal Charges Healthcare Professionals Face
- Healthcare Fraud (18 U.S.C. §1347): Up to 10 years per count; 20 years if serious bodily injury results; life if death results.
- Wire Fraud (18 U.S.C. §1343): Up to 20 years per count. Charged when electronic billing submissions are involved.
- Anti-Kickback Statute (42 U.S.C. §1320a-7b): Up to 10 years per count. Charged when referral arrangements involve anything of value.
- False Claims (18 U.S.C. §287): Up to 5 years per count.
- Conspiracy (18 U.S.C. §371): Up to 5 years. Charged when two or more people allegedly agreed to commit healthcare fraud.
- Controlled substance distribution (21 U.S.C. §841): Charged in “pill mill” cases when prescribing is deemed outside the usual course of professional practice. Mandatory minimums apply.
Collateral Consequences: Beyond Criminal Penalties
For healthcare professionals, the collateral consequences of a federal healthcare fraud conviction can be as devastating as the prison sentence itself:
- Exclusion from Medicare, Medicaid, and TRICARE. The HHS-OIG can exclude convicted healthcare professionals from all federal healthcare programs. For most providers, this effectively ends their ability to practice.
- Loss of professional license. The Texas Medical Board, Texas Board of Nursing, Texas State Board of Pharmacy, and other licensing agencies will initiate proceedings against a convicted professional’s license.
- DEA registration revocation. For prescribers, a criminal conviction can result in loss of the DEA registration needed to prescribe controlled substances.
- Civil False Claims Act liability. Treble damages (three times the government’s losses) plus per-claim penalties. Civil liability can amount to millions of dollars.
- Reputational destruction. Federal indictments are public. Media coverage of healthcare fraud cases is common, particularly in the North Texas market.
How We Defend Healthcare Fraud Cases
Lee Bright’s defense approach in healthcare fraud cases focuses on the specific weaknesses of the government’s case:
- Challenging statistical analyses. The government’s peer comparison methodology often fails to account for legitimate differences in patient populations, practice specialties, geographic service areas, and clinical decision-making. Lee works with healthcare billing experts and biostatisticians to challenge the government’s data analysis.
- Medical necessity defense. In cases where the government alleges that services were medically unnecessary, Lee works with qualified medical experts in the relevant specialty to demonstrate that clinical decisions were consistent with accepted standards of care.
- Intent and knowledge. Billing errors, coding mistakes, and reliance on billing staff or third-party billing companies are not crimes. Lee examines whether the government can prove the specific intent required for a criminal conviction or is attempting to criminalize billing practices within the range of professional judgment.
- Early intervention. When retained during the investigation phase, Lee can engage with prosecutors before charges are filed, present favorable evidence, challenge the investigation’s factual premises, and in some cases prevent charges from being brought.
Contact Deandra Grant Law
If you are under investigation or have been charged with a federal offense, contact Deandra Grant Law for a free, confidential consultation with Attorney James Lee Bright. Lee has more than 25 years of federal trial experience and is admitted to practice in all four federal districts in Texas, the District of Columbia, the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, and the United States Supreme Court.
Call us at (214) 225-7117 or schedule a free consultation at texasdwisite.com/schedule-an-appointment/. Se habla español: (972) 347-8833.
The defense is ready.
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