
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
In one of the largest recent Medicare fraud cases, Peter Roussonicolos, a Florida durable medical equipment (DME) company owner, was sentenced to 12 years in federal prison for orchestrating a scheme that defrauded Medicare of more than $61 million.
Here’s how the scheme worked:
The Department of Justice and HHS-OIG highlighted this case as part of their ongoing crackdown on healthcare fraud, waste, and abuse, emphasizing the importance of transparency, compliance, and strong internal controls.
Compliance Takeaways:
The Roussonicolos case is a cautionary tale: shortcuts and “workarounds” to grow revenue may look profitable in the short term, but in regulated industries like healthcare, they often end in criminal convictions, reputational collapse, and financial ruin.
Support the show
4.3
66 ratings
In one of the largest recent Medicare fraud cases, Peter Roussonicolos, a Florida durable medical equipment (DME) company owner, was sentenced to 12 years in federal prison for orchestrating a scheme that defrauded Medicare of more than $61 million.
Here’s how the scheme worked:
The Department of Justice and HHS-OIG highlighted this case as part of their ongoing crackdown on healthcare fraud, waste, and abuse, emphasizing the importance of transparency, compliance, and strong internal controls.
Compliance Takeaways:
The Roussonicolos case is a cautionary tale: shortcuts and “workarounds” to grow revenue may look profitable in the short term, but in regulated industries like healthcare, they often end in criminal convictions, reputational collapse, and financial ruin.
Support the show