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             Indian American doctor gets jail for $13 mn insurance fraud
            
            
            
             Chicago(USA),   Aug 12, 2010: An Indian American doctor has been sentenced to five   years in federal prison for defrauding the government's Medicare and 30   other public and private health care insurance programmes of about $13   million. 
                          
              Cardiologist Sushil Sheth, 50, a former Chicago area physician, was   sentenced Tuesday by US District Judge Rebecca Pallmeyer and ordered to   begin serving the prison term in two months.  
               
              He pleaded guilty a year ago to one count of health care fraud after being charged in January 2009.  
               
              Sheth was also ordered to pay restitution totalling about $13 million,   and he agreed to forfeit property and funds totalling more than $11.3   million that the government seized from him.  
               
              Sheth's medical license was suspended by the Illinois Department of   Professional Regulation in March. His attorney said at the sentencing   hearing that Sheth had surrendered his license.  
               
              Sheth "lied thousands of times to Medicare and other insurers in order   to receive millions of dollars he did not earn for patients he never   treated", the US attorney's office said in a statement Thursday.  
               
              He used the fraud proceeds to live a lavish lifestyle, purchasing a   suburban mansion, property in Arizona, luxury automobiles and investing   in various venture capital opportunities, prosecutors said.  
               
              Sheth regularly submitted claims seeking payment that, when added   together, had him providing more than 24 hours of medical services and   treatment in a single day, they said.  
               
              Sheth admitted that he obtained about $13 million between January 2002   and July 2007, including about $8.3 million from Medicare and some $5   million from other public and private health care insurers.  
               
              He got the money in fraudulent reimbursement for the highest level of   cardiac care when those services were not performed, and then used the   proceeds for his own benefit, prosecutors said.  
               
              Sheth used his hospital privileges at three unnamed hospitals to access   and obtain information about patients without their knowledge or   consent, federal officials said.  
               
              He then hired individuals to bill Medicare and other insurance providers   for medical services that he purportedly rendered to patients whom he   knew he never treated, the officials said.  
               
              Federal agents searched Sheth's Chicago home in June 2007 and seized   more than 600 uncashed cheques from various insurers totalling more than   $6.7 million.  
             
			  
			NRI 
              cardiologist charged for bilking more than 
$13 million in Medicare 
            and insurance 
			  
			 Chicago, Jan 31, 2009 
			  Satnam Singh 
			NRI Dr. Sushil Sheth, cardiologist, 49, charged of 
			  healthcare fraud, who allegedly collected more than $13 million 
			  from Medicare and private insurers for treatment he never provided, 
			  according to U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald.  
			 In court documents filed Jan. 28 in U.S. District 
			  Court in Chicago, Fitzgerald alleges that cardiologist Sushil Sheth, 
			  whose office is in south suburban Flossmoor, obtained patient names, 
			  insurance information and dates during which those patients were 
			  admitted to hospitals where he held staff privileges.  
			 Between 2002 and 2007, Sheth billed $8.3 million 
			  to Medicare and $5.1 million to other insurers for intensive cardiac 
			  care he purportedly provided on multiple days during those stays, 
			  Fitzgerald alleged.  
			Dr. Sheth, hired individuals to bill Medicare and 
			  other insurance providers for medical services he purportedly rendered 
			  to patients he never treated, the release said. According to the 
			  complaint, he faxed handwritten treatment notes to the billers describing 
			  care he gave patients. The notes allegedly were included with the 
			  fraudulent claims. 
			Patrick J. Fitzgerald, United States Attorney 
			  for the Northern District of Illinois said:  
			
              - Health care fraud remains an important priority of federal law 
                enforcement. We will use all of our resources to ensure that dishonest 
                physicians and other medical providers do not profit from cheating 
                Medicare and private insurers
 
			  -  If convicted, each count carries a maximum penalty of 10 years 
			    in prison and a $250,000 fine. The Court, however, would determine 
			    the appropriate sentence to be imposed under the advisory United 
			    States Sentencing Guidelines.
 
			  - The public is reminded that charges are not evidence of guilt. 
			    The defendants are presumed innocent and are entitled to a fair 
			    trial at which the government has the burden of proving guilt 
			    beyond a reasonable doubt. 
 
			  -  The charges seek forfeiture of approximately $13.4 million 
			    and two parcels of real estate in Scottsdale, Ariz. 
 
			  - The Government has seized or restrained approximately $11.3 
			    million in various bank and investment accounts held by Sheth 
			    and his wife.
 
			  -  The government is being represented by Assistant U.S. Attorney 
			    Steven J. Dollear. The case was investigated by the FBI and the 
			    Inspector General’s offices of the Department of Health 
			    and Human Services and the Labor Department.
 
			  - Sheth, of Burr Ridge and whose business office is in Flossmoor, 
			    will be arraigned at a later date in U.S. District Court.
 
		     
			Sheth graduated from Grant Medical College in Mumbai, 
			  India, and received his residency with the University of Bombay 
			  Hospitals, according to Ingalls Health System's Web site.  
			He holds medical license and 19 years of practice 
			  in Illinois. There is no legal or disciplinary action in the past.   
			  
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