Doctor who pocketed $127M cops guilty plea Ligotti billed insurers $746M, faces 20 years
A
Dr.
Those who spent years trying to get authorities to take action against the 48-year-old owner of
But, they said, foot-dragging by the
"It's horrifying that we allow this type of practice in
She bristled at the notion that the only ones who were hurt were insurance companies, who paid thousands of bills Ligotti submitted from
"Is it fraud really?" Kielian asked. "Is it that or is it that he abused his license, he abused people who were seeking help and caused deaths?"
Like all but a handful of those who have been prosecuted since the crackdown on
He instead faced 13 charges, including health care fraud and money laundering.
When he agreed to plead guilty to a single count of conspiracy to commit health care fraud, the other 12 charges were dropped.
But even compared with others who have been prosecuted in the last decade, Ligotti's operation stands out.
The amount of money he raked in far outstrips the
It was far more than the
According to federal prosecutors, Ligotti's operation was massive. He billed insurers
He was able to amass such wealth by serving as medical director for more than 50 sober homes, substance-abuse treatment centers and clinical-testing laboratories in
As medical director, Ligotti fueled the operation. Without his signature on orders, insurance companies wouldn't pay for the tests.
Realizing they needed his help for their illegal operations to thrive, other unscrupulous operators agreed to send their patients to
Kickbacks and bribes fueled the illegal quid pro quo arrangement, prosecutors said.
Ultimately, however, those who benefited from Ligotti's help turned against him, prosecutors said. Those who cooperated in the investigation weren't identified by name.
But one is believed to be
Sentenced to 10 years in prison in 2019 after pleading guilty to conspiracy to commit wire fraud, Snyder has been allowed to remain free so he can testify against others.
Ligotti also served as medical director of Academy Health Solutions in
FBI:
denying it to state regulators
In court papers, FBI agents said Ligotti tried to hide his illegal activities. Worried he was under investigation in 2013, he wrote a letter to state regulators.
"I was astonished and outraged to learn that my name and license may be currently used in an unauthorized fashion by entities involved in the treatment of patients/clients in recovery for drug and alcohol dependence," he wrote.
But, agents said, the letter was a sham. "In the nearly seven years since Ligotti drafted it, he continued to authorize addiction treatment centers and sober homes to order medically unnecessary urine drug tests through the laboratories," they wrote in 2020.
Ligotti also put his
In court papers, Ligotti said he put the house on the market because he got a job in
Ultimately, when he realized he was the target of the FBI investigation, he in 2020 shuttered
By then, Southeast Recovery Advocates' Kielian said, the human cost of Ligotti's operation was enormous. She and grieving mothers who lost children who went to Ligotti for help wrote letters to the state
But, Kielian said, even though it's been more than two years since his arrest, Ligotti's medical license is still active, according to the state
State health officials didn't return an email for comment to explain why Ligotti hasn't lost his medical license.
Kielian said regulators told her that once the FBI gets involved, they let the criminal investigation proceed before acting.
Kielian said she expects parents of Ligotti's patients to testify against him when he is sentenced
"We will be there in force to support every parent who has the guts and courage to stand there and relive the most terrible moments of their lives," she said.



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