A Mississippi-based nurse practitioner and former owner of a
family health clinic was sentenced to 42 months in prison today for her role in
a scheme to defraud health care benefit programs including TRICARE, the health
care benefit program serving U.S. military, veterans and their respective
family members.
Assistant Attorney General Brian A. Benczkowski of the
Justice Department’s Criminal Division; U.S. Attorney D. Michael Hurst Jr. of
the Southern District of Mississippi; Special Agent in Charge Christopher
Freeze of the FBI’s Jackson, Mississippi Field Division; Acting Special Agent
in Charge Thomas J. Holloman III of IRS Criminal Investigation’s (IRS-CI) New
Orleans Field Office and Special Agent in Charge John F. Khin of the Defense
Criminal Investigative Service’s (DCIS) Southeast Field Office made the
announcement.
Susan K. Perry, 58, of Grand Bay, Alabama, was sentenced by
U.S. District Judge Keith Starrett of the Southern District of Mississippi, who
also ordered Perry to serve three years of supervised release following her
prison sentence and pay $1,375,692 in restitution. Perry pleaded guilty on June 15 to one count
of conspiracy to commit health care fraud. She was charged in October 2017 in a
13-count indictment.
As part of her plea, Perry admitted her role in a scheme to
defraud health care benefit programs by prescribing medically unnecessary
compounded medications to individuals who did not need the medications,
sometimes without first examining those individuals. Perry admitted that she knew that Advantage
Pharmacy, based in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, would submit claims for
reimbursement to health care benefit programs, including TRICARE, for
compounded medications based on the prescriptions she signed, and she further
expected that the health care benefit programs would pay the claims. From approximately January 2014 through April
2015, health care benefit programs, including TRICARE, reimbursed Advantage
Pharmacy approximately $1,375,692 based on the claims submitted by Advantage
Pharmacy in connection with the compounded medications that Perry prescribed.
The FBI, IRS-CI, DCIS, the Mississippi Bureau of Narcotics
and other government agencies investigated the case. Trial Attorneys Kate Payerle and Jared Hasten
of the Criminal Division’s Fraud Section and Assistant U.S. Attorney Mary Helen
Wall of the Southern District of Mississippi are prosecuting the case.
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