Investigation
Focused on Fraudulent Medicare and Medicaid Billing Scheme
In San Antonio today, federal and state
authorities arrested 38–year-old Andey Gray, of San Antonio, owner of Crown
Consulting and Billing, as well as 54–year-old Michael Farris and 47–year-old
Sherry Trouten, of Castroville, Texas, directors of Tejas Ambulance, Inc.
(Tejas) in connection with an estimated $2.5 million fraudulent Medicare and
Medicaid billing scheme, announced United States Attorney Robert Pitman, FBI
San Antonio Division Special Agent in Charge, Armando Fernandez, HHS-OIG Dallas
Regional Office Special Agent in Charge Mike Fields, and Texas Attorney General
Greg Abbott.
The defendants are charged in a 13-count
federal grand jury indictment returned on Wednesday and unsealed today. The
indictment charges the defendants with 10 counts of health care fraud and two
counts of theft or embezzlement in connection with health care fraud. In
addition, Farris is charged with one count of making a false statement.
According to the indictment, Farris and
Trouten worked for different ambulance companies—Farris, as director of Medina
Valley Emergency Medical Services (Medina Valley), director of Tejas, and
interim director for Community Emergency Medical Services, Inc. (Community);
Trouten, as an administrator for Community, bookkeeper for Medina Valley, and
business manager for Tejas. Gray, through his business, processed medical
claims for Medina Valley, Community, and Tejas.
The indictment alleges that in March
2011, Farris and Trouten began surreptitiously diverting Medina Valley and
Community incoming calls for service to Tejas Ambulance. Because Tejas
Ambulance was not an authorized Medicare or Medicaid provider, the defendants
began using numbers assigned to other entities, including Medina Valley and
Community, to fraudulently submit claims for ambulance services either
performed by Tejas, or not even performed at all. The indictment further
alleges that the defendants then embezzled those Medicare and Medicaid funds
from Medina Valley and Community, diverting them to Tejas Ambulance and
ultimately, to themselves. As a result of the defendants’ scheme, Medicare and
Medicaid paid just under $600,000 for claims that were not qualified for
reimbursement from Medicare and Medicaid.
Upon conviction, the defendants face up
to 10 years in federal prison per health care fraud related count. Farris is
also subject to a maximum of five years in federal prison upon conviction of
the false statement charge.
This case was investigated by the Texas
Attorney General’s Medicaid Fraud Control Unit together with the Federal Bureau
of Investigation, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office of
Inspector General, and the U.S. Department of Labor, Employee Benefits Security
Administration. Special Assistant United States Attorney Kimberly Johnson is
prosecuting this case on behalf of the government.
An indictment is merely a charge and
should not be considered as evidence of guilt. The defendants are presumed
innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.
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