MedRide, the state’s largest provider of rides for Medicaid patients, says it is busy trying to get its documentation in ...
A serial Medicaid fraudster was sentenced this week to prison for a $7 million scheme to bill federal health programs for fake medical exams. A state court judge sentenced Imran Shams, a 66-year-old ...
A man the New York Attorney General's Office described as a "serial healthcare fraudster" has been sentenced to between eight and one-third to 25-years in state prison for his role in a Medicaid fraud ...
18hOpinion
Hosted on MSNCommentary: If Federal Healthcare Spending Is a Target, Then So Is Rural AmericaLists of potential healthcare spending cuts to include in a reconciliation bill are circulating on Capitol Hill, and ...
Imran Shams receives 8-25 year prison sentence for a multi-million dollar health care fraud and must pay $7 million restitution.
Dr. Alexander Baldonado, a Filipino-Canadian and U.S. permanent resident, was convicted on 10 counts of health care fraud totaling $20.7 million.
A former clinic owner has been sentenced eight and one-third to 25 years in prison for orchestrating a multimillion-dollar Medicaid fraud scheme involving unnecessary medical tests.
Senator Richard Blumenthal said Friday that what Musk is doing is an “information heist unparalleled in American history.” ...
Customers of MedRide, a non-emergent medical transportation (NEMT) service, opened the company's website on Friday to find Medicaid transportation is "temporarily unavailable." ...
The New York Times also alleged in a Dec. 7 investigation that Acadia, which operates 165 comprehensive treatment centers that provide methadone and other opioid use disorder treatments, fraudulently ...
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