Dr. Meera Sachdeva, 50, of Summit, Mississippi, and Monica Weeks, 40, of
Madison, Mississippi, each pled guilty to charges of Medicare fraud, U.S.
Attorney Gregory K. Davis, FBI Special Agent in Charge Daniel McMullen, and
Mississippi Attorney General Jim Hood announced.
Sachdeva, who owned and operated Rose Cancer Center in Summit, pled guilty to
submitting claims for chemotherapy services that were supposedly rendered when
she was out of the country. Weeks, who owned and operated The Medical Billing
Group in Madison, pled guilty to conspiracy to commit health care fraud by
covering up false claims made by Sachdeva that were scheduled for an audit.
According to the indictment in this case, Sachdeva is alleged to have billed
for more chemotherapy drugs than she actually purchased from drug suppliers from
2007 to 2011. During the plea hearing, the Assistant United States Attorney told
the court that if the case had gone to trial, the government would have proven
that “[t]he defendant would prepare...chemotherapy treatments by injecting the
prescribed chemotherapy drugs into a bag of fluid that would then be connected
to the patient via a ‘chest port.’ Each patient believed that they were
receiving an amount of chemotherapy medicine that was equal to the amount being
billed to their respective health care benefit programs. The defendant was not
providing each patient with the fully prescribed dosage of many of the billed
chemotherapy drugs.”
Both Sachdeva and Weeks are scheduled to be sentenced on October 1, 2012, by
United States District Judge Daniel P. Jordan, III. Weeks faces a maximum of 10
years in prison, a $250,000 fine, and the forfeiture of a $19,549.52 money
judgment. Sachdeva faces up to 20 years in prison, $750,000 in fines, and the
forfeiture of almost $6,000,000 in illegal proceeds that were previously seized
by the government, as well as the forfeiture of several parcels of real property
located throughout the state.
The case was investigated by the United States Department of Health and Human
Services Office of the Inspector General, the Medicaid Fraud Control Unit of the
Mississippi Attorney General’s Office, and the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
No comments:
Post a Comment