Mirza ordered to pay $48,450 in restitution too.
AB Wire
Rehman Mirza, 43, a chiropractor who practiced in Suitland, Maryland, was sentenced last week to seven months in prison and an additional six months in home confinement after earlier pleading guilty to obstructing a criminal health care fraud investigation.
Mirza, of Woodbridge, Virginia, pled guilty in May 2015 in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia. He was sentenced by Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson, who found Mirza’s conduct “egregious†and held that he had “abused a position of public trust.â€
In addition to prison and home confinement, the court ordered Mirza to pay $48,450 in restitution to the D.C. Medicaid program and to perform 40 hours of community service, according to the Justice Department.
The underlying fraud involved D.C. Medicaid payments for home care services to be performed by personal care aides, working for home care agencies. Personal care aides, also known as PCAs, are supposed to assist Medicaid beneficiaries in performing activities of daily living, such as getting in and out of bed, bathing, dressing, keeping track of medication, and so forth.
In order to be covered for such benefits, the beneficiaries must get prescriptions from physicians or advanced practice registered nurses. D.C. Medicaid only reimburses for home care services if a physician determines after a physical examination that the beneficiary has functional limitations impairing activities of daily living. The prescriptions, also known as “intakes,†dictate the frequency and duration of the services to be provided. The prescriptions are translated later into plans of care, which also must be signed by the physician.
In the District of Columbia, a typical prescription, or “intake,†calls for eight hours of personal care services per day for five days per week, or eight hours per day for seven days per week. Over the six-month time span authorized by such a prescription, D.C. Medicaid would pay between $16,952 and $23,732 for personal care services provided to one beneficiary.
Mirza is licensed as a chiropractor in Maryland and Virginia, but is not licensed as a chiropractor in the District of Columbia, and is not licensed as a physician. He worked at Capital Health LLC, d/b/a Capitol Health Chiropractic in Suitland, Md. He was not authorized to prescribe personal care services, and he was not enrolled as a provider in D.C. Medicaid.
According to a statement of offense, signed by the government as well as the defendant, Mirza and others carried out a scheme to defraud the D.C. Medicaid program from approximately November 2012 through at least June 2013.
Personal care aides, working for at least seven home care agencies, brought hundreds of D.C. Medicaid beneficiaries to Mirza, and after brief examinations, Mirza wrote prescriptions and plans of care, listing himself and signing as the “ordering physician†even though he was not a physician and was not legally or medically qualified and could not determine whether the services were medically necessary.
Seeing D.C. Medicaid beneficiaries and signing their intakes and plans of care became Mirza’s primary source of income. Mirza initially was paid $125 for each D.C. Medicaid beneficiary brought to his office by a personal care aide, but he later increased the size of the cash payments to $200. Mirza’s prescriptions, or “intakes,†typically included a diagnosis such as “chronic severe back pain†and called for services for eight hours a day, seven days a week, for six months.
The personal care aides would insist that Mirza write the name of the PCA on the intake before it was sent to the home care agency; it was understood this was so the personal care aides would receive their kickback from the home care agency for each D.C. Medicaid beneficiary the PCA brought to Mirza and then to the home care agency.
During the course of the fraud scheme, Mirza signed hundreds of prescriptions and plans of care, and in exchange collected at least $48,450 in cash payments from personal care aides. Home care agencies used Mirza’s prescriptions and plans of care to support and justify their claims for payment to Medicaid – even though the paperwork was invalid on its face because it was not prescribed or signed by a physician as required.
When Mirza was approached by the FBI in his office and questioned about his role, he denied he had any involvement with Medicaid. After the agents served Mirza with a subpoena for his patient files and other documents, the agents told Mirza they planned to interview his office assistant. After the agents left, Mirza offered to drive his assistant home. During that car ride, Mirza attempted to obstruct the government’s investigation, by attempting to influence his 22-year-old assistant’s statements to the FBI, telling the assistant not to use certain words, encouraging and suggesting that she not be fully truthful, and ensuring that their stories would match so that Mirza would not be “implicated†by his assistant.
For example, Mirza tried to convince his assistant they had nothing to do with Medicaid and instructed the assistant not to say the word “Medicaid†at least ten times during the course of their 45-minute conversation.