Fourteen Additional Defendants Have Been Charged To Date
PITTSBURGH, Pa. – Two residents of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania,
were sentenced in federal court for conspiracy to defraud the Pennsylvania
Medicaid program, United States Attorney Scott W. Brady announced today.
United States District Judge Cathy Bissoon sentenced Autumn
Brown, 31, and Brenda Lowry Horton, 48, to five years of probation, including
six months of home detention, for their roles in a years-long conspiracy. Brown
and Lowry Horton were also ordered to pay restitution to the Pennsylvania
Medicaid program in the amount of $68,917.80 and $67,107.32, respectively.
During their respective plea hearings in December 2018, the
defendants admitted that they were employees of one or more related entities
operating in the home health care industry—Moriarty Consultants, Inc. (MCI),
Activity Daily Living Services, Inc. (ADL), and Everyday People Staffing, Inc.
(EPS). Each of these entities was owned or controlled by Arlinda Moriarty. MCI
and ADL were approved under the Pennsylvania Medicaid program to offer certain
services to qualifying Medicaid recipients ("consumers"), including
personal assistance services (PAS), service coordination, and non-medical
transportation, among other services. Between in and around January 2011 and in
and around April 2017, MCI, ADL, and another related entity (Coordination Care,
Inc.), collectively, received more than $87,000,000 in Medicaid payments based
on claims submitted for these services, with PAS payments accounting for more
than $80,000,000 of the total amount.
During that time, the defendants admitted that they
participated in a wide-ranging conspiracy to defraud the Pennsylvania Medicaid
program for the purpose of obtaining illegal Medicaid payments through the
submission of fraudulent claims for services that were never provided to the
consumers identified on the claims or for which there was insufficient or
fabricated documentation to support the claims. The Court was further advised
that the defendants conspired with, among others, various office workers at the
companies, including Tiffhany Covington and Tia Collins. As part of the
conspiracy, the defendants admitted that they fabricated timesheets to reflect
the provision of in-home PAS care they provided to consumers but that, in fact,
never occurred. In addition, at Arlinda Moriarty’s direction, certain
co-conspirators, including Lowry Horton, stopped using their own names as the
attendant on timesheets and instead used the names of "ghost"
attendants, some of whom permitted their names to be used in exchange for a
kickback of resulting fraudulent salary payments. Brown admitted that she
allowed her name to be used in this manner and that she received a portion of
the fraudulent proceeds from Ms. Covington. Lowry Horton further admitted that,
as part of the conspiracy, she and others paid kickbacks to consumers in
exchange for the consumers’ agreement to sign—or allow their names to be forged
on—false timesheets.
To date, 16 people have been charged with offenses related
to the conspiracy.
Assistant United States Attorney Eric G. Olshan and Special
Assistant United States Attorney Edward Song are prosecuting this case on
behalf of the government. The Federal Bureau of Investigation, Pennsylvania
Office of the Attorney General – Medicaid Fraud Control Unit, Internal Revenue
Service – Criminal Investigation, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
– Office of Inspector General, and United States Postal Inspection Service
conducted the investigation of the defendants.
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