A former social security administrative law judge (ALJ) was
sentenced today to four years in prison for his role in a scheme to
fraudulently obtain more than $550 million in federal disability payments from
the Social Security Administration (SSA) for thousands of claimants.
Acting Assistant Attorney General Kenneth A. Blanco of the
Justice Department’s Criminal Division, Special Agent in Charge Michael McGill
of the Social Security Administration-Office of Inspector General’s (SSA-OIG)
Philadelphia Field Division, Special Agent in Charge Amy S. Hess of the FBI’s
Louisville Field Division, Special Agent in Charge Tracey D. MontaƱo of the IRS
Criminal Investigation (IRS-CI) Nashville Field Office and Special Agent in
Charge Derrick L. Jackson of the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services-Office of the Inspector General (HHS-OIG) Atlanta Regional Office made
the announcement.
David Black Daugherty, 81, of Myrtle Beach, S.C., was
sentenced by U.S. District Judge Danny C. Reeves of the Eastern District of
Kentucky, who also ordered Daugherty to pay restitution of over $93 million to
the SSA and HHS. Daugherty pleaded guilty in May 2017 to two counts of
receiving illegal gratuities.
According to admissions made as part of his guilty plea,
beginning in 2004, Daugherty, as an ALJ assigned to the SSA’s Huntington, W.
Va., hearing office, sought out pending disability cases in which Kentucky
attorney Eric Christopher Conn represented claimants and reassigned those cases
to himself. Daugherty then contacted Conn and identified the cases he intended
to decide the following month and further solicited Conn to provide medical
documentation supporting either physical or mental disability determinations.
Without exception, Daugherty awarded disability benefits to individuals
represented by Conn – in some instances, without first holding a hearing. As a
result of Daugherty’s awarding disability benefits to claimants represented by
Conn, Conn paid Daugherty an average of approximately $8,000 per month in cash,
until approximately April 2011. All told, Daugherty received more than $609,000
in cash from Conn for deciding approximately 3,149 cases.
As a result of the scheme, Conn, Daugherty, and their
co-conspirators obligated the SSA to pay more than $550 million in lifetime
benefits to claimants based upon cases Daugherty approved for which he received
payment from Conn.
Daugherty was indicted last year, along with Conn and Alfred
Bradley Adkins, a clinical psychologist. The defendants were charged with
conspiracy, fraud, false statements, money laundering and other related
offenses in connection with the scheme.
Conn pleaded guilty on March 24, to a two-count information
charging him with theft of government money and paying illegal gratuities, and
was sentenced in absentia on July 14 to 12 years in prison. Conn absconded from
court ordered-electronic monitoring on June 2, and is considered a fugitive. He
remains under indictment. On June 12, Adkins was convicted after a jury trial
of one count of conspiracy to commit mail fraud and wire fraud, one count of
mail fraud, one count of wire fraud and one count of making false statements.
Adkins is scheduled to be sentenced on September 22.
The SSA-OIG, FBI, IRS-CI and HHS-OIG investigated the case.
Trial Attorney Dustin M. Davis of the Criminal Division’s Fraud Section and
Trial Attorney Elizabeth G. Wright of the Criminal Division’s Money Laundering
and Asset Recovery Section are prosecuting the case, with previous co-counsel
including Assistant U.S. Attorney Trey Alford of the Western District of
Missouri and Investigative Counsel Kristen M. Warden of the Justice Department’s
Office of the Inspector General.
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