Criminal Investigative Updates

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Category: Education Benefits Fraud (VBA)
District: Florida, Middle
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Zachary Somers Hiscock (Arizona), Timothy Slater (Illinois), Nikhil Patel (Missouri), Gangadhar Bathula (Virginia), and Arif Hasan Sayed (California) were charged with one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud and ten counts of wire fraud. A sixth conspirator, Kyle Blake Kotecha (Apopka, Florida), was charged by information and signed a plea agreement for his role in the conspiracy. According to the indictment, Hiscock, Slater, Patel, Bathula, and Sayed operated for-profit, non-college degree schools and conspired with Kotecha to violate VA regulations that prohibit predatory practices targeting veterans for their GI Bill tuition benefits. The VA prohibits schools that receive GI Bill benefits from compensating individuals who recruit and enroll veteran students with a portion of the tuition they secure. Despite this ban on commission-based recruitment, the school owners hired Kotecha to target and recruit veteran students to attend their schools and paid Kotecha approximately 25 percent of the benefits the schools obtained. The schools are charged with forfeiting $19,232,390 of GI Bill benefits fraudulently obtained as a result of the conspiracy. Kotecha has agreed to forfeit $3,965,264.34 as an estimate of the amount he personally obtained from the scheme. “These charges serve as stark warning to those who would defraud the Post-9/11 GI Bill education benefits program,” said Special Agent in Charge David Spilker with the VA OIG’s Southeast Field Office. “The GI Bill has served millions of veterans since World War II and the VA OIG, along with our partners, will aggressively investigate fraud committed against this vital program.” This case was investigated by the VA OIG.

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Category: Theft of Government Funds and Fiduciary Fraud (VBA)
District: Texas, Southern
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Clifford Wayne Robertson, of Brenham, Texas, was charged with misappropriating federal grant funding during his tenure as the CEO and executive director of The Warrior’s Refuge, a nonprofit homeless shelter for veterans. Between February and April 2020, Robertson allegedly submitted applications for federal assistance to the VA and Department of Labor, resulting in the award of approximately $1.8 million in grant funds. According to the criminal information, Robertson allegedly did knowingly and intentionally embezzle a portion of the federal grants for unallowable personal expenditures and for counseling services that he never rendered to veterans. The VA OIG, Department of Labor OIG, and Texas Department of Public Safety conducted the investigation.

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Category: CHAMPVA and Other Healthcare Fraud (VHA)
District: New Jersey
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Charles Kasbee Jr., of Palm Beach Shores, Florida, pleaded guilty to an Information charging him with one count of conspiracy to commit healthcare fraud and one count of conspiracy to violate the federal Anti-Kickback Statute. From February 2019 to September 2019, Kasbee and his co-conspirators participated in a scheme to submit claims to Medicare for medically unnecessary cancer genetic screening (CGX) tests. Kasbee used the services of marketing call centers, which employed deceptive telemarketing techniques to obtain Medicare beneficiaries’ personal and medical information. Then, Kasbee and others arranged for CGX testing kits to be sent to the identified beneficiaries.  Once the CGX test kits were completed by the beneficiaries, the kits were shipped to a testing laboratory, which submitted claims for reimbursement to Medicare.  Kasbee received kickback payments exceeding $1,200 for each CGX test resulting in Medicare reimbursement. As a result of this scheme, Kasbee and his co-conspirators caused a loss to Medicare of more than $4.8 million. The VA OIG, FBI, Health and Human Services OIG, and Department of Defense OIG’s Defense Criminal Investigative Service investigated this case.

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Category: False Claims Act Violation
District: Idaho
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Bloom Care LLC and its owners have paid $3,000,000 to resolve allegations that they violated the False Claims Act. Bloom operated urgent care centers in Idaho and New Mexico and it is alleged that Bloom knowingly used the COVID-19 pandemic to submit false claims to federal healthcare programs for medically unnecessary testing. It is also alleged that Bloom inflated the extent of services performed and the complexity of the evaluation required to care for patients. The VA OIG, HHS OIG, and the US Attorney’s Office for the District of Idaho investigated this case. The Idaho Department of Health and Welfare assisted.

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Category: Miscellaneous
District: Pennsylvania, Eastern
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Ahmed Hassan, of Collegeville, Pennsylvania, was sentenced to more than five years’ imprisonment and three years of supervised release for defrauding the VA of more than $500,000. The defendant was also ordered to pay $565,058.70 in restitution. In October of 2024, a federal jury convicted the defendant of 22 counts of wire fraud for misusing his VA position to steal from the agency. From approximately 2013 through October 2017, he drafted and submitted false invoices from a shell company, HT Mechanical, a fraudulent entity he had secretly set up with a partner. “This sentencing demonstrates that those involved in defrauding VA, particularly VA employees in positions of public trust, will be held accountable,” said Special Agent in Charge Christopher Algieri with the VA OIG’s Northeast Field Office. “The VA OIG will continue to work with our law enforcement partners to ensure the integrity of VA’s programs and services.” The VA OIG and the FBI investigated this case.

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