Businessman Seth Gillman was sentenced Tuesday to 6 1/2
years in federal prison for masterminding a $20 million hospice care
fraud scheme that exploited some of Illinois' most vulnerable residents.
"I am ashamed of what I did and I am sorry for it and I have no excuse," Gillman told the court, his voice hoarse and cracking.
By paying kickbacks to nursing homes and giving bonuses to
employees who took part in the fraud, Gillman built his Passages
Hospice LLC into the largest such company in Illinois, serving
terminally ill patients in 89 counties and billing Medicare more than $90 million from 2008-2012, government records show.
But
Passages didn't provide much care to many of those patients, and
Medicare was "paying huge sums of money for basically nothing,"
prosecutors wrote in one court filing. Gillman pocketed millions
annually and enjoyed a lavish lifestyle that included corporate
airplanes, luxury sports cars and "ingesting cocaine on a daily basis,"
as Gillman's lawyers put it in one federal court pleading.
"I betrayed the trust of Medicare and I besmirched
the integrity of hospice altogether," Gillman told U.S. District Judge
Thomas Durkin. "I was stupid and I was wrong."
Noting
Gillman's privileged background — he was licensed as both an attorney
and nursing home administrator — Durkin said: "There's nothing that
drove this other than greed."
Under Medicaid rules,
hospice care is typically reserved for patients who are medically
certified to have less than six months to live. But Passages colluded
with nursing homes to designate their patients as close to death —
including many who were not that sick and had years to live.
This higher level care, known as "general inpatient"
services, or GIP, would boost Passages' Medicare reimbursement from an
average of about $150 per day to well over $600 for each patient.
Gillman
then paid himself a $75-per-day "bonus" for each patient elevated to
GIP — he took $1.2 million in bonuses in 2009 and 2010 alone, court
records show, in addition to his $320,000 annual salary. And he passed
out smaller bonuses to other key hospice managers who assisted in the
scheme.
"They would cut deals with nursing homes to give
them a share of the GIP rate," paying the homes about $250 per day for
every patient upgraded to GIP, Assistant U.S. Attorney Stephen Lee said
in court.
Federal investigators named several of those
nursing home chains in court documents, but none has been charged. Lee
said Tuesday that Gillman waited until last year to begin cooperating
with authorities who were trying to build additional cases. "This was
far too late to be effective."
Starting in 2008, Gillman berated and fired nurses who
challenged his fraud attempts, and several former employees filed
whistleblower lawsuits. Federal agents finally raided Passages' Lisle
offices in 2012, and Gillman was indicted two years later. The hospice
firm collapsed financially and ceased operations. Several key Passages
employees have also been convicted in the case.
In
addition to Passages, Gillman also ran his family's nursing home
company, Asta Healthcare. The Tribune's 2009 "Compromised Care"
investigation found that Asta consistently failed to notify state
officials that they were housing sex offenders who molested elderly and
disabled patients.
In the wake of the Passages prosecution, Gillman gave up his stake in Asta as well, records show.
In court Tuesday, Lee recommended a 10-year sentence. Gillman's attorney, Edward Genson,
asked for three years in prison, asserting that Passages actually did
provide extra assistance to hundreds of patients. He said Gillman got
into the hospice business because he is religiously devout, altruistic
and caring, but he "went out of control. ... He was drinking. He was
involved in drugs."
Previously, Gillman pleaded guilty to
one count of felony health care fraud. Gillman on Tuesday also agreed
to an $18 million civil judgment to be paid to the federal government,
as well as to paying $9 million in restitution to Medicare.
Durkin,
however, noted that authorities have little chance of collecting that
money because Gillman says he is broke. "In my mind it's fool's gold,"
Durkin said.
Taxpayers weren't the only victims of
Gillman's fraud scheme. In some cases, the families of former patients
told the Tribune that Passages employees misled them into believing that
their loved ones had serious or terminal illnesses — when they didn't.
"They
lied to me about everything. I could never comprehend anyone being that
cruel," said Cynthia Chadwick, 65, of Watseka, Ill., who was told by
Passages in 2012 that her younger sister needed hospice care because she
had terminal cancer and would die in six to eight weeks.
"She
never had cancer. Never ever," Chadwick told the Tribune. "It really
indicated to me how low down they were, using a deaf and blind person.
That's despicable."
In addition, Passages employees told the Tribune they were not paid for their final months' work.
"He
owed a lot of people a lot of money," said Sonya Anderson, an assistant
director of nursing at Passages. "Elderly people, people that are dying
— and you take advantage of them? That's low."
Another
former Passages employee, clinical director and nurse Karen Wilson, said
outside of the courtroom Tuesday that she was glad to see Gillman
sentenced to prison, but added: "I think he deserved more."
Full Article & Source:
Hospice CEO gets 6 1/2 years for fraud scheme
that's it? 6 1/2 years? pay back all the money and stop blaming addictions for criminal minds rot in your cage
ReplyDeleteHe should be made to work in prison and pay this money back. Now with that being said there are other hospice who do the same. Vita's hospice along with River Oaks Nursing home the staff Dr there, and a Dr out of the now closed Osteopathic Hospital in Fort Worth, Tx and a court appointed professional Guardian, conspired to put my Mom in hospice when she was not terminal. She was originally in the Nursing home for back therapy and was stable. No therapy was ever given but Medicare was billed for it. Mom was made to fit the critiria for hospice by lies. She was given unnecessary psych meds, sleeping meds and more to a total of 19 with morphine for no diagnosis that led to her death after only 6 weeks. If the government really wants to make cuts to medicare they can save money and lives by investigating these rogue Hospices. Nursing Homes, Guardians, Drs who are all in it for the profits.(Greed)
ReplyDeleteSeth Gilman is scum! 6 1/2 years is a slap on the wrist. As a former employee of passages, I have watched my coworkers lose their homes and much more because of this jerk. Staff paid their insurance premiums andSeth Gilman and his cohorts pocketed the money and employees thought tbey had insurance when in fact, they were uninsured. We did not receive our last months pay. He is a smooth talker and he can make you believe anything. This man steals from everyone he comes in contact with.
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