FBI announced Monday that American authorities have tracked down a fugitive accused of aiding a mastermind in a $3.7 billion Medicare fraud scheme, and brought them to the U.S. from Turkey.
Ibrahim Khaldoon Hilmi was recently detained by Turkish authorities after he fled the U.S. in May 2025, according to the FBI. The FBI’s Critical Incident Response Group flew out to Turkey and transported Hilmi to the U.S. on Friday through a foreign transfer of custody operation.
FBI.
FBI Director Kash Patel said that the operation was a major victory in the bureau’s effort to track down fugitives accused of stealing taxpayer dollars.
READ: Florida man convicted in $58 million healthcare fraud scheme (June 16, 2026)
“Ibrahim Khaldoon Hilmi is charged with one of the biggest Medicare scams in history — allegedly orchestrating a massive $3.7 billion scheme to defraud Medicare,” Patel said in a statement to Fox News Digital. “He’s been on the run since May of 2025 — but we got him.”
Patel credited FBI Miami, the Department of Justice and Turkish authorities with helping secure Hilmi’s capture and return to the United States.
This arrest is the second high-profile return of an alleged Medicare fraud fugitive in less than a week. FBI had announced on Thursday it had brought back Herbert Kimble, who investigators say had been on the run since 2024 after allegedly orchestrating a separate Medicare fraud scheme worth approximately $1.3 billion.
According to a report by Fox News, the two cases involve roughly $5 billion in alleged fraud targeting taxpayer-funded healthcare programs. Patel said Hilmi’s return demonstrates that suspects accused of large-scale fraud will be pursued regardless of where they flee.
READ: California doctor convicted in $45 million Botox Medicare fraud (May 21, 2026)
“This yet another massive win for this FBI’s war on fraudsters with the White House Task Force led by VP Vance,” Patel said, “and a monumental victory for the Trump administration, showing that any criminal actor who steals from the American taxpayer will be caught, no matter where they try to hide.” He also thanked U.S. Ambassador to Turkey Tom Barrack, saying the case against Hilmi was only possible thanks to his “invaluable” and “tireless work.”
This comes as the Trump administration is sharpening its focus on fraud. Republican leaders like Vice President JD Vance, and Vivek Ramaswamy have been increasingly bringing up the issue of fraud — including Medicaid fraud — as has President Donald Trump. This has come with mixed responses, with some claiming the situation is often being misrepresented.

