SAN DIEGO – Two doctors, Carl Lindblad and Susan Vergot,
pleaded guilty in federal court today, admitting that they participated in a
health care fraud scheme that bilked TRICARE – the health care program that
covers United States service members – out of more than $65 million by prescribing
thousands of exorbitantly expensive compounded medications to patients that
they never saw or examined.
Drs. Lindblad and Vergot entered their guilty pleas before
U.S. Magistrate Judge Mitchell D. Dembin.
Both pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit health care fraud. Their
sentencings are scheduled for June 29, 2018 before U.S. District Court Judge
Janis L. Sammartino.
Compounded medications are specialty medications mixed by a
pharmacist to meet the specific medical needs of an individual patient.
Although compounded drugs are not approved by the Food and Drug Administration
(FDA), they are properly prescribed when a physician determines that an
FDA-approved medication does not meet the health needs of a particular patient,
such as if a patient requires a particular dosage or application or is allergic
to a dye or other ingredient.
According to the guilty pleas, a team of individuals worked
to recruit and pay Marines, primarily from the San Diego area, and their
dependents – all TRICARE beneficiaries – to obtain compounded medications that
would be paid for by TRICARE. This
information was sent to Choice MD, the Tennessee medical clinic that employed
Drs. Lindblad and Vergot. Drs. Lindblad
and Vergot then wrote prescriptions for the TRICARE beneficiaries, despite
never examining the patients in person.
Once signed by the doctors, these prescriptions were not given to the
beneficiaries, but sent directly to particular pharmacies controlled by
co-conspirators, which filled the prescriptions and billed TRICARE at
exorbitant prices.
Josh Morgan, a former Marine from San Diego, pleaded guilty
last month to Conspiracy to Commit Health Care Fraud for his role in recruiting
TRICARE beneficiaries to fraudulently receive these prescriptions.
Between December 2014 and May 9, 2015 – the day that TRICARE
stopped reimbursing for compounded medications – Drs. Lindblad and Vergot
authorized 4,442 total prescriptions.
Over this time, their co-conspirators billed TRICARE $65,679,512 for
these prescriptions.
Lindblad and Vergot represent the fifth and sixth defendants
charged in relation to this fraud scheme.
In addition to Morgan, Jimmy and Ashley Collins, the owners of Choice
MD, and CFK, Inc., the owner of a co-conspirator pharmacy, were indicted in
March 2018 on charges of Conspiracy to Commit Health Care Fraud and Illegal
Payments of Remunerations. That case
remains pending.
DEFENDANTS
Case Number 18-cr-0432-JLS
Carl Lindblad
Age: 53
Cleveland, TN
Susan Vergot
Age: 31
Cleveland, TN
SUMMARY OF CHARGES
Conspiracy to Commit Health Care Fraud – Title 18, U.S.C §
1349
Maximum penalty: 10 years’ imprisonment and fine of higher
of $250,000 or double loss amount
AGENCY
Defense Criminal Investigative Service
Naval Criminal Investigative Service
IRS Criminal Investigation Division, Gulfport, MS
Federal Bureau of Investigation - Jackson, MS Field Office
*The charges and allegations contained in an indictment or
complaint are merely accusations, and the defendants are considered innocent
unless and until proven guilty.
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