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  1. #1
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    Cuban Fugitives Make Off with Medicare Millions

    Posted on Thu, Jan. 01, 2009
    Fugitives make off with Medicare millions

    BY JAY WEAVER

    Alcides Garcia, former president of a Hialeah medical equipment company, escaped to Cuba in September just before he was to face trial in a $10.7 million Medicare fraud case, according to the FBI.

    Jorge Ramirez, the one-time owner of a Miami clinic that treated blood disorders, was arrested in December and charged with defrauding $42.2 million from Medicare. Ramirez and two codefendants -- Eugenio and Maricel Hernandez, accused of $73 million in Medicare fraud -- had been indicted a year ago. The FBI said they all fled to Cuba.

    Garcia, Ramirez and the Hernandezes are among dozens of Cuban immigrants who continue to evade prosecution by fleeing to their native country. Prosecutors say they bilked the taxpayer-funded health insurance program out of millions through complex Medicare fraud schemes that have been operating with lax oversight in South Florida for over the past a decade.

    ''There are a number of healthcare fraud defendants from Cuba, and after they commit their crimes many of them return home,'' FBI spokesman Judy Orihuela said. ``Once they're in Cuba, it's very difficult for us to get them back -- unless they return.''

    Alcides Garcia is the latest fraud suspect to flee the country. Indicted in June, he's charged with submitting $10.7 million in false claims for powered air mattresses, feeding pumps and other medical equipment that were never provided to patients. His business, A&Y Medicare Supply Inc., collected $2.2 million in Medicare payments from 2002 to 2004.

    In court papers, prosecutor Daniel Bernstein said Garcia submitted his false Medicare claims through All-Med Billing Corp., headed by a Miami Lakes couple convicted last year after filing $420 million in phony claims on behalf of 85 medical equipment companies in South Florida.

    Garcia, who had a $200,000 bond, fled the country to Cuba on Sept. 17 -- 12 days before his federal trial was to start in Miami, according to the FBI.

    His attorney, George Vila, declined to comment.

    The exploding problem of Medicare fraud defendants fleeing the country registered on the chief federal judge's radar screen last March.

    A Miami Herald investigation first spotlighted the phenomenon of Cuban immigrants dominating Miami-Dade's Medicare fraud industry in August. Court records showed that in many instances, fraud suspects were able to easily escape to Cuba before they were charged and prosecuted.

    Originally, The Herald reported there were 56 fugitives -- among some 700 others charged with defrauding Medicare of $272 million in South Florida since 2004. Collectively, the fugitives absconded with at least $142 million in taxpayer funds.

    Only one -- Jorge Ramirez, arrested at Miami International on Dec. 12 after traveling from Cuba -- has been caught. His indictment was unsealed after his arrest.

    Collectively, Ramirez and the Hernandezes filed $115 million in phony Medicare claims for treating patients with blood disorders such as lymphoma. But the services, charged in 2005, were never rendered, according to the indictment. Their three Miami-Dade clinics received at least $11.6 million in Medicare payments, which were laundered through sham companies, the indictment alleges.

    The most notorious among the roughly 60 Medicare fraud fugitives are Carlos, Luis and Jose Benitez, who submitted $119 million in false claims for HIV infusion therapy to the nation's health insurance program.

    The brothers, whose Medicare millions were largely invested in the Dominican Republic, have been jailed in Cuba on immigration violations since September, according to federal authorities. But because the United States has no formal relations with Cuba, there's no indication they might be turned over for prosecution in Miami.

    Last year, U.S. District Judge Federico Moreno raised the issue of scam artists fleeing the country in a memo to magistrate judges in South Florida, cautioning them about flight risks. He also reviewed Medicare defendants' bonds in cases before him, citing the unusual pattern of defendants fleeing after they were charged with Medicare fraud and granted bail.

    In June, Moreno said in court that ``it seems to me that our thinking has to change -- that someone from Cuba can flee back to Cuba just like someone from Mexico.''

    http://www.miamiherald.com/news/miami-d ... 34068.html
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  2. #2
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    Meanwhile it continues to pay for illegal alien organ transplants, birthright citizenship, chemotherapy, dialysis and other treatment denied to Americans with senior citizens and indigent Americans losing their medicare/medicaid benefits. The American people have been told to go to hell and bend over on the way down for the El Shafto Rio Grande.

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  3. #3
    Senior Member swatchick's Avatar
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    This is old news in Miami. The Cubans are often caught scamming like this if they aren't playing doctor as they cannot accept the fact their medical degree is worthless here. Just like the Colombians playing dentist. I really think they need to get rid of the wetfoot dryfoot policy as if criminals often run back to Cuba if they are about to get caught or do get caught committing a crime where there is substantial jail time. My friend writes bonds and told me she no longer will write a bond for a large amount of money for someone who is Cuban or if she has to she will sell it. She had a guy on $100,000 bond take off to Cuba on her. It is obvious that if they think our jails are worse than life in Cuba then they too can wait in immigration lines like everyone else instead of being taken to the front of the line.
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    Senior Member SOSADFORUS's Avatar
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    Wonderful!
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