11 charged in Russia-based plan to defraud Medicare out of billions

New York, New York - Federal prosecutors charged 11 people Friday in a Russia-based scheme to bilk Medicare – the American health insurance program for the elderly and disabled – out of $10.6 billion through fraudulent billing for expensive medical equipment.

Federal prosecutors charged 11 people in a Russia-based scheme to bilk Medicare out of $10.6 billion through fraudulent billing for expensive medical equipment.
Federal prosecutors charged 11 people in a Russia-based scheme to bilk Medicare out of $10.6 billion through fraudulent billing for expensive medical equipment.  © IMAGO / imagebroker

The "transnational criminal organization" orchestrated a "multi-billion-dollar health care fraud and money laundering scheme" that included purchasing dozens of medical equipment companies from prior legitimate owners to perpetrate the fraud, according to the indictment dated June 18.

More than a million Medicare recipients had their personal information stolen and used by the defendants to file for billions of dollars in claims from Medicare and its supplemental insurers, prosecutors said in the filing.

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The claims were filed through medical equipment providers that the group had purchased, but no equipment was ever sent out for the payments.

Medicare paid "approximately $41 million as a result of the fraudulent submissions" and supplemental insurers are estimated to have paid out $900 million more between 2022 and 2024, prosecutors wrote.

The scheme was organized by Imam Nakhmatullaev, who is based in Russia, officials said, and managed the other defendants who were in Estonia, the Czech Republic, and the US.

The fraud was identified after "hundreds of thousands of Americans reported their concerns to Medicare and its contractors after receiving explanation of benefit forms that reflected them purportedly receiving" equipment that they neither sought nor received, the indictment said.

Cover photo: IMAGO / imagebroker

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