A separate hearing will be held in November to determine the amount of money and property Esformes may be required to forfeit.
Esformes,
who once controlled a network of more than two dozen health care
facilities that stretched from Chicago to Miami, garnered $1.3 billion
Medicaid revenues by bribing medical professionals who referred patients
to his Florida facilities then paid off government regulators as
vulnerable residents were injured by their peers, prosecutors said.
He
housed elderly patients alongside younger adults who suffered from
mental illness and drug addiction — sometimes with fatal results. In
Esformes’ Oceanside Extended Care Center in Miami Beach, “an elderly
patient was attacked and beaten to death by a younger mental health
patient who never should have been at (a nursing facility) in the first
place,” prosecutors wrote in a pre-sentencing memo.
As he handed down the sentence, Judge Robert N. Scola Jr. said the length and scope of Esformes’ criminal conduct were “unmatched in our community. ... Mr. Esformes violated the trust of Medicare and Medicaid in epic proportions."
As he handed down the sentence, Judge Robert N. Scola Jr. said the length and scope of Esformes’ criminal conduct were “unmatched in our community. ... Mr. Esformes violated the trust of Medicare and Medicaid in epic proportions."
But
Scola meted out a punishment significantly less than the 30 years
prosecutors requested, saying Esformes also had an extraordinary history
of helping people in need. Attorneys for Esformes had described him as a
selfless philanthropist who had donated more than $15 million to
synagogues, schools and needy individuals, often anonymously.
Said
Scola: “I think he should get some consideration for his philanthropy,
although it’s dangerous to say because he was stealing money from
Medicare, so people might say he was giving that money to charity. But
the vast majority of the money he made, he made legitimately. More
importantly he was a true friend to people known and unknown to him, and
that is worthy of mitigation."
In
arguing for a 30-year sentence, prosecutors said his yearslong
bribes-for-patients schemes involved the corruption of medical
professionals and government regulators, and entailed grievous injuries
to a massive number of elderly patients.
“Miami
is the epicenter of health care fraud, there was no one like Philip
Esformes, he was king,” prosecutor Allan J. Medina told the judge in
court Thursday.
Many
of his younger, drug-addicted patients spent the daylight hours
wandering the streets of Miami while he collected government payments
for services that were never delivered, prosecutors said.
“Phillip
Esformes used deceptive and calculated means to orchestrate a fraud of
the magnitude that we have not seen before,” Medina said. “People who
needed to get better, who wanted to get better, they had no shot.”
“His
fraud involved thousands of patients, 16 nursing homes, the systematic
payment of bribes, a complex web of bank accounts, and brazen
obstruction of justice to try to prevent it all from coming to light,”
prosecutor Elizabeth Young wrote in a sentencing memo filed with the
court this week.
Esformes,
who has been in maximum security detention for 37 months since his 2016
arrest, called himself a shattered, repentant man when he stood before
the judge. His shoulders drooped beneath his baggy khaki prison shirt as
he began rocking back and forth.
“I
want to apologize to, your honor, the United States. Sorry. And my
community.” As Esformes began to recite the names of his children, he
briefly became incoherent. Groans and cries of “Oh God!” escaped from
his family and supporters in the gallery.
“I’ve lost everything I love and cared about with the utmost intensity," he said. "There is no one to blame but myself, me.”
While
preparing his defense, Esformes told the judge, he had listened
repeatedly to wiretapped conversations that revealed him arranging
bribes. “I am disgusted by what I heard,” he said, at one point pounding
a courtroom podium with his fist. “The Phil Esformes you heard was
reckless ... an arrogant man.”
Esformes said he was studying the Torah and praying for redemption. “I won’t miss that opportunity,” he said.
Prosecutors
said Esformes should be forced to pay $207 million in restitution to
Medicaid and Medicare; attorneys for Esformes sharply questioned that
amount in court Thursday.
Judge
Scola closely questioned prosecutors about how they calculated the
value of the Medicaid proceeds Esformes stole over the years, ultimately
finding the loss to be between $4.8 million and $8.3 million.
Federal authorities arrested Esformes at one of his $2 million estates on the Miami Beach waterfront in 2016 and immediately placed him in the Miami Federal Detention Center.
Federal authorities arrested Esformes at one of his $2 million estates on the Miami Beach waterfront in 2016 and immediately placed him in the Miami Federal Detention Center.
At
the time, he had a net worth of $78.9 million in bank accounts and
investments, and hardly any debts, according to court papers filed by
prosecutors. He maintained a Chicago Water Tower penthouse and a mansion
in Los Angeles.
Esformes
was deemed an extraordinary flight risk in part because he had been
caught on a wiretap offering to help his business partner Guillermo
Delgado flee from the U.S. to avoid prosecution as the federal
investigators closed in on them.
Delgado,
who helped Esformes defraud Medicare for mental health and prescription
drug services, instead helped federal investigators bring Esformes to
justice. He and his brother Gabriel Delgado are now serving prison time.
In
one of Esformes’ crimes, prosecutors said, he used some $300,000 in
stolen Medicare and Medicaid proceeds to bribe the head men’s basketball
coach at the University of Pennsylvania to admit Esformes’ son to the
school.
That
coach, Jerome Allen, pleaded guilty in October to a money-laundering
charge related to the Esformes bribes. He testified as a government
witness against Esformes at the Miami trial. Allen received a
probationary sentence and is now in his third season as an assistant
coach with the Boston Celtics.
The
dozens of nursing facilities Esformes ran with his father and business
partner Morris Esformes for decades earned millions of Medicaid and
Medicare dollars annually despite repeated federal law enforcement
probes and Chicago Tribune investigations alleging substandard care and
incidents when disabled patients were assaulted by fellow residents.
“Instead
of changing his ways or expressing remorse after these settlements,
Esformes simply altered his criminal scheme to avoid detection,”
prosecutor Young wrote in the court filing.
Esformes
sold his Illinois nursing facilities in about 2012 but kept offices in
the Chicago suburbs as he continued to operate homes in Florida with his
father, government records and Tribune interviews show.
Full Article & Source:
Nursing home mogul Philip Esformes sentenced to 20 years for $1.3 billion Medicaid fraud
I cant believe that giving 15 million to charity was a defense for a lighter sentence. What's 15 million compared to the 1.3 billion received fraudulently from Medicaid? Medicaid payments are misused regularly. This is the tip of a very deep iceberg. Where are the watch dogs following the money? This shows how oversight when it comes to free money is needed.
ReplyDeleteIt's the code of The Tribe. My family got screwed by this code in the Orange County Superior Court. My Dad ended up dead due to mistreatment by Kindred Hospital, and my Mom was wrung dry by their legal team. Our lawyer, their lawyers and judge all members. We got no justice at all...nothing! Exactly who are they referring to with that saying "Never Again"?
DeleteNow time to round up Aharon Kibel and Shlomo Rechnitz...the guy that started my Dad's nightmare, who gives so much to Jewish charities that his murder of a few people (actually trading their living bodies for profit)is just an insignificant issue.
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