CAMDEN, N.J. – A retail director for a local candy company
today admitted defrauding New Jersey state health benefits programs and other
insurers out of over $2 million by submitting fraudulent claims for medically
unnecessary prescriptions, U.S. Attorney Craig Carpenito and New Jersey
Attorney General Gurbir S. Grewal announced.
Nicholas Tedesco, 44, of Linwood, New Jersey, pleaded guilty
before U.S. District Judge Robert B. Kugler in Camden federal court to an
information charging him with conspiracy to commit health care fraud.
Nicholas Tedesco’s brother and a leader in the conspiracy,
Matthew Tedesco, pleaded guilty to his role in the scheme on Aug. 17, 2017.
According to documents filed in this case and statements
made in court:
From January 2015 through April 2016, Nicholas Tedesco and
others recruited individuals in New Jersey to obtain very expensive and
medically unnecessary compounded medications from an out-of-state pharmacy,
identified in the information as the “Compounding Pharmacy.”
The conspirators knew that certain compound medication
prescriptions – including pain, scar, antifungal, and libido creams, as well as
vitamin combinations – were reimbursed for thousands of dollars for a one-month
supply. The conspirators also knew that some New Jersey state and local
government and education employees, including teachers, firefighters, municipal
police officers, and state troopers, had insurance coverage for these
particular medications.
An entity referred to in the information as the “Pharmacy
Benefits Administrator” provided pharmacy benefit management services for the
State Health Benefits Program, which covers qualified state and local
government employees, retirees, and eligible dependents, and the School
Employees’ Health Benefits Program, which covers qualified local education
employees, retirees, and eligible dependents. The Pharmacy Benefits
Administrator would pay prescription drug claims and then bill the State of New
Jersey for the amounts paid.
Nicolas Tedesco and others recruited public employees and
other individuals covered by the Pharmacy Benefits Administrator to
fraudulently obtain compounded medications that were not medically necessary.
The prescriptions were faxed to the Compounding Pharmacy, which filled the
prescriptions and billed the Pharmacy Benefits Administrator.
The pharmacy then paid one of Nicholas Tedesco’s
conspirators a percentage of each prescription filled and paid by the Pharmacy
Benefits Administrator, which was then distributed to Nicholas Tedesco and other
members of the conspiracy. Nicholas Tedesco paid individuals with insurance
coverage in cash to reward them for obtaining prescriptions.
According to the information, the Pharmacy Benefits
Administrator paid Compounding Pharmacy over $50 million for compounded
medications mailed to individuals in New Jersey.
As part of the plea agreement, Nicholas Tedesco must forfeit
$782,766.56 in criminal proceeds and pay restitution of at least $2,069,847.42.
He faces a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine, or twice
the gross gain or loss from the offense. Sentencing is scheduled for June 1,
2018.
Fourteen other conspirators – including Matthew Tedesco,
Robert Bessey, Michael Pepper, Thomas Hodnett, Steven Urbanski, John Gaffney,
Judd Holt, George Gavras, Richard Zappala, Michael Neopolitan, Andrew Gerstel,
Timothy Frazier, Michael Pilate, and Shawn Sypherd – pleaded guilty from August
through February 2018 and await sentencing.
U.S. Attorney Carpenito credited agents of the FBI’s
Atlantic City Resident Agency, under the direction of Special Agent in Charge
Timothy Gallagher in Newark, IRS – Criminal Investigation, under the direction
of Special Agent in Charge Jonathan D. Larsen in Newark, and the U.S.
Department of Labor, Office of Inspector General, under the direction of Acting
Special Agent in Charge Peter Nozka in New York, with the investigation leading
to the guilty plea. He also thanked the Pensions and Financial Transactions
Section of the Division of Law, within the Attorney General’s Office, under the
direction of Attorney General Grewal and Division Chief Eileen Schlindwein Den
Bleyker, for its assistance in the investigation.
The government is represented by Assistant U.S. Attorneys
Jacqueline M. Carle and R. David Walk, Jr. of the U.S. Attorney’s Office in
Camden.
18-070
Defense counsel: David Jay Glassman Esq., Philadelphia
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