Fake mental health facility caught by Uncle Sam in Medicare Fraud scheme

The Department of Justice (DOJ) announced that the owner of two adult day care centers had been sentenced for his involvement with efforts to defraud Medicare of as much as $3.2 million. The owner, Glenn English was convicted and will serve eight years in prison and pay $988,529 in restitution. Upon his release, English will serve an additional three years in supervised release.

According to DOJ, English and his co-defendant, Richard Hogan, through their company New Century, operated an adult day care that billed for psychotherapy services. The facility would service mentally disabled individuals and individuals seeking narcotic drugs. The group would then submit bills to Medicare in their names for services that were never provided. The DOJ, states that the two would entice individuals seeking drugs with promises that they could see a doctor who would prescribe them narcotics, on the condition that they signed up for the facility’s psychotherapy program.

Though the group billed Medicare for $3.28 million in false claims, New Century was only paid $988,529. English is responsible for repaying the full amount.