Woman Convicted for Role in Nearly $3 Million Health Care Fraud Scheme
Arizona Free Press
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DALLAS—Comfort Gates, 48, was sentenced this afternoon by U.S District Judge David C. Godbey to 72 months in federal prison and was ordered to pay $830,000 in restitution following her conviction at trial in April 2013 on charges stemming from her involvement in the operation of Euless Healthcare Corporation (EHC) and Medic Healthcare Incorporated (Medic). Gates is one six defendants convicted in the conspiracy. Judge Godbey ordered that Gates, a current resident of Houston, surrender to the Bureau of Prisons on January 13, 2014.
Gates, an employee of Medic, and co-conspirator Godwin Umotong, 58, an employee of EHC and Medic, were each convicted at trial on one count of conspiracy to commit health care fraud. Gates was also convicted on two counts of health care fraud and Umotong was also convicted on five counts of health care fraud. Umotong is scheduled to be sentenced on December 2, 2013; he faces a maximum statutory penalty of 10 years in federal prison and a $250,000 fine on each of the counts of conviction. He could also be ordered to pay restitution.
Other defendants in the case who have been convicted and sentenced are listed below. Each was also ordered to pay restitution of amounts ranging from approximately $195,000 to $1.4 million.
Ovsanna Agopian, 58, Houston, 120 months in federal prison
Boghos Babadjanian, 55, of Sherman Oaks, California, probation
Leslie Omagbemi, 56, of Dallas, 30 months in federal prison
Munda Massaquoi, 69, of Houston, 37 months in federal prison
ECH was located on West Bedford Euless Road in Hurst Texas, and Medic, which operated from October 2009 to May 2011, was located on Bonhomme Road in Houston. Agopian, 58, was the operator of both EHC and Medic.
According to documents filed in the case and evidence presented at trial, Agopian, Umotong, Omagbemi, Massaquoi, and Gates conspired together to submit, or cause to be submitted, fraudulent claims to Medicare for diagnostic tests and office visits. Agopian recruited unlicensed doctors to work for EHC and Medic by telling them that they would treat beneficiaries in the beneficiaries’ homes. Medicare does not pay for services performed by unlicensed persons. Nevertheless, these recruits went to beneficiaries’ homes and purported to conduct medical examinations, including ordering diagnostic tests. In total, more than $2.7 million was fraudulently billed, and of that amount, Medicare paid more than $1.3 million.