U.S. Department of Justice
United States Attorney
Southern District of Florida
99 N.E. 4 Street,
(305)961-9001
December 20, 2007
NEWS RELEASE :
MIAMI
JURY CONVICTS OWNER OF HEALTH CARE FRAUD
Patients Sending Unneeded Medicine Paid for by Medicare to Cuba
WASHINGTON - The
owner of a Miami health care company has been convicted on charges of
defrauding the Medicare program, Assistant Attorney General Alice S.
Fisher of the Criminal Division and U.S. Attorney R. Alexander Acosta
of the Southern District of Florida announced today.
After a four-day
trial in Miami, the federal jury found Eulalia Gonzalez, owner of Rapid
Fast Health, Inc., guilty on five counts - conspiracy to defraud the
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and submit false claims
and pay kickbacks, conspiracy to commit health care fraud, and three
counts of paying kickbacks. Gonzalez faces a maximum sentence of 30
years in prison. She is scheduled to be sentenced on February 28, 2008,
before U.S. District Judge Paul C. Huck.
At trial, convicted
Medicare fraud physician Zabdy Westerburger testified that Gonzalez
paid her cash kickbacks between 2001 and 2004 to write unnecessary prescriptions
for "compounded" aerosol medications and other durable medical
equipment. The Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services stopped paying
for compounded aerosols in June 2007, stating it was medically unnecessary.
The United States introduced three separate video recordings of Gonzalez
paying Westerburger for bogus prescriptions.
Two pharmacy owners
testified that Gonzalez would deliver the false prescriptions to them
and their pharmacies would compound the medications for the purpose
of defrauding Medicare. The pharmacy owners reached an arrangement with
Gonzalez to split any monies paid by Medicare. Medicare paid approximately
half a million dollars based on prescriptions obtained by Gonzalez.
In addition, Gonzalez billed Medicare directly for all other unnecessary
durable medical equipment.
A patient testified
at trial that after she received her $100 a month cash kickback from
Gonzalez, she would send all the medicine to Cuba because she did not
need it. This same patient testified that Gonzalez recruited her and
many other senior citizens to provide their Medicare cards by offering
them $100 per month. Gonzalez would then drive patients to visit Westerburger
and other corrupt doctors where she would buy phony prescriptions.
Trial testimony
established that none of the "compounded" medications, including
Albuterol, Metaproterenol, and Ipatropium Bromide, which were billed
to Medicare were legitimate. These medications are intended to be introduced
into the lung through a piece of durable medical equipment known as
a nebulizer. Medicare pays for such aerosol medication through the Part
B program.
The case was prosecuted
by Assistant Deputy Chief John Kelly and Special Trial Attorney Arianne
Callender of the Fraud Section of the Department of Justice in Washington,
D.C., with the investigative assistance of the U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services, Office of the Inspector General, and the FBI. The
prosecution resulted from the establishment of the Medicare Fraud Strike
Force, a multi-agency team of federal, state and local investigators
in south Florida designed specifically to combat Medicare fraud. The
Strike Force is led by a Kirk Ogrosky, Deputy Chief of the Fraud Section
in Washington and the office of U.S. Attorney R. Alexander Acosta of
the Southern District of Florida.